More Bali Magic - Lovina Beach, Bali, Indonesia

Harmonie
Don and Anne Myers
Sat 23 Oct 2010 03:17
08:09.621S  115:01.149E
 
We expected the official Sail Indonesia Rally stop in Bali to be something special and weren't disappointed.  It was the largest gathering of rally boats since Darwin with at least 50 of the 100 rally boats anchored three or four deep along the long stretch of sandy Lovina Beach.  The locals came out in droves on their motorcycles from the nearby city and surrounding countryside to see the floating collection of yachts rocking quietly on the leftover northerly swell.  They weren't so much interested in us yachties - being from Bali, they've all seen their share of tourists - so we didn't generate the usual excitement.  Completely understandable, especially since we aren't much to look at this far into the boating season with our scraggly hair and crumpled clothes.  The show they put on for us, however, was excellent.  The program lasted four days, during which we were treated to dinners, lunches, a tour of the area, and entertainment every night on a stage set up specially for the rally.  I think we paid $10 per person for the tour, but the rest was free, which has been the case throughout our Indonesian travels with the rally.  Aside from the $210 we paid to cover our visas for three months, we have paid nothing to the Indonesian government.  This after being warned repeatedly about its corrupt nature.  Other boaters we have run into who are not part of the rally have a slightly different tale to tell.  We are pretty sure the rally organizers have more than a bit of pull with all the local governments and have told them if they want us to help promote tourism in Indonesia, it would be best not to try and pad their pockets with our rupiah.
 
The usual boat boys greeted us upon our arrival at Lovina Beach on September 22 after a nine hour motoring marathon from Ambat.  This time the boat boy vehicle was a double outrigger sailing canoe (fitted with a motor) that led us safely past the reef, and later not only delivered, but helped empty the six 30 liter jerry cans of diesel we ordered into our tank.  After that, they didn't bother us.  No more wooden Komodo dragon carvings or pearl necklaces for us.  Instead, the beach was lined with temporary stalls (put up for our benefit) filled with the usual Bali wares - sarongs in traditional and not so traditional Bali prints and men's shirts in very loud patterns and colors.  Naturally we bought one for Don.  It was all of $5 and is covered with a repeating design involving one of the more famous Bali Hindu figures (a scary-looking dragon/dog's head).  Don has already worn it to several rally functions where it's gone over well, but it might not fly in Syracuse, NY.
 
We anchored off Lovina Beach four nights, and then reluctantly left Bali behind and headed northwest to Borneo and the land of the orangutans.
 
 
Traditional music and dance performance by kids from the local orphanage.  We didn't realize the kids were from an orphanage until after the fact.  We thought they were just a really talented group of youngsters who enjoy doing this kind of thing.  Hopefully they do enjoy it, but apparently it's something they do to raise money for the orphanage.  The fifty or so rally boats that were there at the time got together and donated 6 million rupiah.  Not so much really - only $600, but we were told the orphanage was floored by the amount and decided almost immediately to use the money to buy a new cow.  Yup, a new cow. 
 
Over the course of the four days, the entertainment took place on this stage, which was set up on the beach, along with the obligatory covered seating area for the VIPs (us), not two steps away from where we beached our dinghies.  The stage and seating area were all done up in the usual Bali fashion - everything perfectly placed, color coordinated and very pleasing to the eye.  Even the small stone statues at the front of the stage were dressed nicely in traditional waist wraps and black and white plaid sarongs. 
 
 
A close-up of the smallest orphan.  She sat next to the flute playing boys, behind the dancing girls, and kept the rhythm going on an ornamental wooden percussion instrument while she moved her head side-to-side in time to the music and the movements of the dancing girls.  I should mention here that we have not seen an ugly person in Indonesia.  As a people, the Indonesians have to be one of the most attractive in the world.  And no doubt the Balinese win the prize for most beautiful in Indonesia. 
 
 
On our last night at Lovina Beach, the local kindergarteners entertained us.  Think ballet recital with more exotic costumes and more boys, and you'll have it about right.  There were several classes that performed, but this one was our favorite.  The chubby little guy to the right in the back had a habit of leading with his left foot while all the others went with their right.  Completely hilarious.  Just like a ballet recital at home, all the moms in the audience snapped pictures while the teachers peeked out from behind the set to make sure everything was semi in control on stage.  Later on, some of the older girls and boys performed a dance more like hip hop than traditional Balinese.  If we didn't already feel like we were in a different country, watching 10-year girls gyrate to hip hop music might have been our first big clue that we weren't in the Muslim version of Kansas any more.
 
 
Every event we attended was accompanied by traditional dance.  The dancers were always dressed in sarongs and wraps of elegant materials with different textures and colors.   Taken separately, the mass of colors would clash, but put together on a gorgeous Balinese girl, it works.  Surely there is meaning and history behind each piece of clothing worn by a traditional Balinese dancer, but not knowing the history, we could only admire the spectacle.
 
Balinese dancing reminds us of the South Pacific in the way that the feet move quietly while the hips sway sedately, but the sometimes stiff and jerky movements of the upper body (all highly precise and choreographed) remind us we are now in Asia.  Every movement down to the stiff fluttering of a finger is exact.  The facial expressions and head movements are something else.  Sometimes swaying side to side fluidly with the music, the head will suddenly jerk to a stop while the face goes blank and the eyes widen, sending the pupils right and left, leaving those of us in the audience to wonder if the dancer is surprised, frightened or annoyed.  There is usually a story behind every dance, so there is sure to be a reason for the sudden changes in a dancer's _expression_, but even without the story knowledge, we were happy enough to watch and wonder. 
 
 
The running of the bulls.  Balinese style.  A tradition of North Bali - the bulls are decorated with beautifully painted yolk and plow, elaborate headgear and bells strapped to their legs, then driven by a 'jockey' to run.  We were told the running of the bulls is not about speed.  This is Bali, after all.  Instead, the running of the bulls is about the harmonious nature of the bulls' steps.  On a particularly hot and sticky day, we watched three pairs of beautiful bulls jog harmoniously, bells jingling, up and down a soccer field with their jockeys bumping along behind them atop a wooden plank fastened to the makeshift plow.  Once again the deep meaning of the event escaped us, but it was kind of fun to watch - at least until the bulls started sweating up a storm, foaming at the mouth and developing bloody sores where the decorative yolks chafed their skin.  Who says the beautiful (and harmonious) don't suffer for their beauty?
 
 
 
Every event also included traditional music.  This is the traditional band playing at the running of the bulls.  Traditional Balinese music is usually a collection of percussion instruments like these (although the orphanage band did had two electric guitars...).  The sound is like a xylophone, and is usually accompanied by drums of various shapes and sizes.  It takes some getting used to, but tends to grow on you.
 
 
 
A temple in full dress for the full moon ceremony.  A once-a-year event, the full moon ceremony is big on Bali.  This small temple was a short stroll down the beach from where all the boats were anchored.  We happened by at around 5 pm with Claire and Fiona from English boat Sa'Vahn.  A priest and a few other men were standing nearby and were nice enough to explain what the ceremony was all about and what was going to take place that night.  While we were talking, a woman sauntered past with a fruit tower on her head.  She was delivering it to the temple where it, along with the others pictured here, would be offered up to a deity that night.  The men invited all of us to join the ceremony and Claire and Fiona took them up on their offer.  The next day, they reported everyone was more than friendly and even though they had intended to view the proceedings from the outskirts of the gathering, the crowd encouraged them inward and they ended up among the many.  They said there was a fair amount of praying going on, with music and food.  They didn't stay until midnight, when the temple gathering moved to the beach and into a collection of double outrigger sailing canoes in which offerings were taken out to sea and released to the god of the sea? (not sure which entity was being honored) to ensure good luck for the fishermen.
 
In general, we didn't find the Balinese Hindu religion to be intimidating at all.  Although we were surrounded by aspects of it almost constantly (the dances, the music, the stone carvings, the temples, the offerings left underfoot on sidewalks, etc.), the people were happy to share the celebration of their religion with us without insisting we believe in it.  Very refreshing.
 
 
 
Offerings for sale at the market.  Why struggle to make your own offering to appease the spirits when you can simply buy one ready-made?  The young girl here is weaving one of the tiny offering baskets, and will fill it artfully choosing from the piles of flowers and bits of food in front of her, then add it to the pile for sale in the big lined basket in the foreground
 
 
 
We took a tour up into the mountains of northern Bali and stopped on the edge of this monkey forest long enough to say hi to a monkey mom and her twins.
 
 
 
 
Big man in a little man's world.  Elaborately carved stone gates like this one can be found everywhere on Bali.  Many dating back centuries.  The people here are small, but maybe they were even smaller back then?
 
Anne