|
Yup, that is the ACTUAL colour of that sky. |
|
James likes this table, therfore he took a picture of it. |
|
Some musicians playing a bamboo version of a gamelon. They play nightly in our lobby. |
|
The pool. |
|
Our hotel. |
|
Low tide |
|
This ship is stationed outside our hotel. |
|
A view of the beach. |
|
James wanted a nice picture of me. Silly boy...
|
|
James and Bintang: a winning combination. |
|
The street outside the hotel. |
|
They played Neil! |
|
Chili Chicken (I forgot the real name). |
|
Seafood Curry (also forgot the name of this dish. Batting 1000). |
After an excellent rest in our comfortable room, we were ready to tackle the day! We started off with our complimentary breakfast , which was, much to our dismay, a vey western style buffet. At least the food was good, and we did find a few non-eggs-and-bacon dishes to try out. We dined outdoors which definitely made up for it!
Once we finished, we decided to go explore the beach. We walked along the boardwalk that connects all the hotels that line the beach – and there certainly were a lot of them. It was still quite early and we watched all the vendors set up their stalls, ready for excited tourists to purchase sarongs, temporary tattoos (those stalls were everywhere), massages, tours, rides on banana boats, and tonnes of other things to buy and activities to participate in. We walked out along a paved jetty and discovered some little crabs playing along the rocks.
It was really windy, but the temperature was just perfect. We went back, grabbed our bikinis and hit the beach – well the pool actually – we didn’t really see anyone swimming in the beach, and it looked a little sketchy. We people-watched and sunned ourselves as much as the equatorial sun would allow, until we decided to go exploring and find a place for lunch.
Crossing the street was a bit of an adventure because of the lack of road-rules, but we managed. The street was lined with restaurants, spas and tour-stalls, with people happily announcing to us that they were selling their wares, and yes, we would like some. They were pleasant when we refused, so it wasn’t so bad.
We found an alley that had a whole bunch of little hole-in-the-wall eateries – I don’t really want to call them restaurants – more like more permanent food stalls. We elected to try this one place that was lined with bamboo walls, lizards crawling up the posts and had a pretty little water-feature in the back. We ate some delicious mixed-meat skewers served with a sticky-spicy sauce and some rice, and chased it was some bottles of Bintang. We grabbed a bag of fried pork rinds for dessert too! The whole meal cost about $10 – very worth the price!
We explored a little further, then returned to the hotel to cool off a bit. By the time we got back, we saw that the tide had gone out quite far. The obvious response to this was “let’s walk out to the water’s edge!” So we did. The neat thing about our walk was the number of tide pools we found. We saw live star fish and little crabs. When we happened across a sea urchin hiding in one o the pools, we kind of lost our nerve, and headed back (see, they were really difficult to see, and we didn’t want to step on any accidently. Yes, we are fully aware of how cowardly this is. I’m cool with that label.)
After our adventure on the high seas, dinner was in order. We walked over to one of the restaurants that lined the street outside of our hotel to look at the full colour menus that each one of them posted. They all pretty much served the same thing, so it was a matter of choosing ambience. We decided on one that had a fantastic soundtrack of acoustic guitar renditions of great hits such as “Sweet Child of Mine” by GNR and “Nothing Else Matters” by Metallica. So romantic. All of these restaurants cater to the huge crowd of European and Australian tourists, so they try to provide familiar foods for them, as well as some dishes under a “Taste of Bali” section (every menu we’ve encountered so far has this section). They handed us an appetiser of “garlic bread” – bread with garlic butter brushed on it – as we sat down. We ordered Nasi Goreng (Fried rice with meat and a fried egg on top) and the noodle version of this, Nasi Lampur (I think I spelled that correctly). The food was pretty tasty, but obviously prepared for a tourist’s palette. But sitting outside in an open-air restaurant (they were all out in the open, with a slight overhang covering part of the restaurant), made up for any lack in flavour. Sitting in the cool evening air watching the stars come out was the perfect ending to our day.