THE BEST TRAVEL SPOT IN INDONESIA, NUSA LEMBONGAN - BALI
NUSA LEMBONGAN - BALI INDONESIA
Nusa Lembongan, a small island
between Bali and Nusa Penida in Badung Strait, is the perfect holiday hideaway
with few visitors and pristine un-spoilt beaches. A low, protected island about
11 km southeast of mainland Bali, measuring only four by three km and ringed
with mangrove swamps, and palms and white sandy beaches. Inland the terrain is
scrubby and very dry, with volcanic stonewalls and processional avenues
crisscrossing the small cactus-covered hills. Overlooking Sanghiang Bay with
its clear blue waters, the Nusa Lembongan Resort offers a panoramic view of
eastern Bali and the majestic silhouette of Mount Agung. Known for its great
surf, the excellent crystal-clear waters also make it a perfect place for
snorkeling and diving. It's still a basic place, but interesting, and there are
some lovely places to stay.
The island is small enough to
explore on foot, offering pristine beaches and coves, majestic views of Mount
Agung, unique Balinese architecture, and the friendliness of a simple country
folk. With a lack of arable land and a severe shortage of tourist attractions,
the island's economy is limited to its underwater wealth-seaweed. A secondary
occupation is catering to visiting surfers. Between Nusa Lembongan and the
adjacent of Nusa Ceningan Island, the population is only 60,000.
There are just two villages on
Nusa Lembongan, the large, spread out administrative center of Lembongan
Village, and Jungut Batu village. Surfers and backpackers hang out in the
latter, about 150 per month, for an average stay of three to five days. The
only other visitors are European, Japanese, and Australian day-trippers on
excursion boats. Jungut Batu offers the island's best accommodations and water
sport opportunities. There's motorcycle traffic between the two villages and
it's easy to get a lift. Both villages are heavily involved in the cultivation
of seaweed. Before government-supported commercial seafood production in 1980,
the people of the island lived on maize, cassava, tuber, beans, and peanuts.
Today most everyone is involved in one way or another with cultivation of "sea
vegetables," and the air is permeated with its smell.
Visit the seaweed gardens at
low tide; they look like gigantic underwater botanical gardens. Two kinds are
grown, the small red pinusan and the large green kotoni. Almost the entire crop
is exported to Hong Kong for use in the cosmetics and food processing
industries. After harvesting, gatherers leave a floating offering of rice and
flowers that gently drifts away on the outgoing tide.
Life on Nusa Lembongan is very
relaxing, with cool breezes, little traffic, no big hotels, no pollution, no
stress, no photocopy machines, and hardly any telephones. Best of all, there
are almost no pedagang acung (pushy vendors) and few thieves. Jungut Batu's
charming "tree house" bungalow-style accommodations with outdoors
open-air 'mandi', rickety wooden furniture, sand floor restaurants and offices
are reminiscent of Kuta Beach 20 years ago. Crops are meager, and the only
fruit available is melon. All other food must be imported from the market in
Denpasar or from the neighboring island of Nusa Penida.
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