Skip to main content

Bali by the numbers

To breakdown the island into numbers seems anti romantic but sometimes it helps to get your arms around it - how romantic.

So some you might and some you might not - know -


  • It is one of hundreds of islands that make the Indonesian Republic
  • 8 degrees below the equator
  • It is about 2,220 sq miles which is half that of the Big Island of Hawaii (which if you drive it is a round trip of under five hours) - not so in Bali - one point to another can take a day (roads are narrow and congested)
  • It houses close to 5M people most of which clutter around the eastern part since the western thirds is a national park 
  • Housing and constructed buildings tend to be shorter than the tallest temple in town so nothing over five stories was visible for miles making for tightly packed homes that house more than one family in the compound.  
    1. Typically Balinese families stay as joint families.  
    2. They have a family temple right on the edge of their home and visible from the road.
    3. The kids are numbered like the Cat in the Hat books - thing 1, thing 2 etc.  
    4. Except they are named in the delivery sequence - the first offspring is usually Putu (boy or girl); second is Made - yes we know but pronounced Maa Day; third is Nyoman; fourth is Ketut and then they start all over (assuming they want to - literally)
  • They observe one day of complete inaction and silence - usually in March - called Nyepi - literally brings the island to a halt - no sounds, no lights - nothing.  A plane flying over that evening sees a dark blob in the ocean.  It is a time to meditate and reflect.  Some don't eat all day.  The day after Nyepi is the local New Year's Day Festival where they have a big party.
  • Perhaps we can all take that to heart and just do nothing for a Day!

Comments

  1. Sounds like fun, have tried it on occasion, too..good for nothing tht I was.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Of chocolates

I like chocolates. Godiva Dark with Almonds - not sure of the naked woman on the horse to be the icon of some choice cocoa based products but tastes good. Started in Belgium but now owned by some Turks. Cadburys - Fruit and Nut Milk Bars - awesome combination of dried fruit pieces along with a medley of nuts makes your toungue dance - started by a Brit now owen by Kraft USA. Lindt Hazelnut spheres - made by a Swiss confectioner are divine balls that melt in your mouth with a lingering nutty taste Ghirardelli Milk Crisp Squares - crunchy and light these milk squares are easy on the palate but pack some serious calories - all good I say! Originally founded by an Italian who moved around till he landed in SF Bay today also owned by the Swiss Lindt empire.

Columbia SC

 The Palmetto state.  One of the confederate kinds. History dating couple centuries back.  We visited the capital yet again this time to take in the SC State Museum. Occupying the former digs (literally remodeled) of an erstwhile cotton mill this structure is an amazing piece of reimagination.  Four floors of excitement for kids and young at heart alike. Located on the shores of the Congaree River formed when the Broad meets up with the Saluda River, this edifice is approx. 60 years old.  The front of the building has a more modern planetarium that was added about a decade ago.  The museum itself has different areas of interest segregated on each of its four floors. The first floor has gift shop and a diorama of some of the local geography including the swamps and the state beaches with audio guides to help understand what fauna thrives locally. The second floor is all about natural history and showcases animal kingdom that may have survived on this latitud...

But What If We're Wrong?

I attempted to read this book by author Chuck Klosterman backward to forward but it started hurting my brain so I decided to stop and do it like any other publication in the English language.  Start from page 1 and move to the right. Witty, caustic and thought provoking this is a book you want to read if you believe that the status quo might, just might be wrong. At times bordering on being contrarian about most things around us it tries to zero in on the notion of what makes anything believable and certain in our minds.  The fact that there is a fact itself is ironic.  Something analogous to the idea that you can never predict the future because there is no future. Many books and movies have tried to play on this concept - best that I recollect (I think I am) was 'The Truman Show'.  This book by Klosterman attempts to provoke the reader to at least contemplate that what they think they know may be wrong. He uses examples like concept of gravity, and how it ...