Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Bali: Paradise in Indonesia

Bali: Paradise in Indonesia

Author: b bagus

Bali island is a part of Indonesian archipelago. Located just east of the island of Java, it has long been the primary focus of Indonesia's flourishing tourist industry. Bali is one of the province in Indonesia, divided into nine region from west to east, they are Jembrana, Tabanan, Denpasar, Badung, Gianyar, Klungkung, Bangli, Karangasem and Buleleng region.

The Island of Bali attracts by far the most tourist attention in Indonesia and worlwide, drawing in more than a million visitors every year. As a result, the island has become very much a mainstream destination, offering all the comforts and facilities expected by tourists. Find your own desired, all you need is provided from the traditional ways to modern life.

Bali also known as "The Island of God" or "The Island of Thousand Temples" because of most people (Hindus) have a place to pray to the God in each theirs living place.

Located firmly in the tropical zone, Bali enjoy fairly constant year-round temperatures, averaging 26 degrees centigrade in the shade. Best time to visit is from april through september and november through january, i believe you wont miss those moment than freezing in your country, sun always shine during that months. Share with uniquely culture and generous local people. what you waiting for, prepare yourself to sun and sand, i guarantee you won`t back to your country. just enjoy the best place to live.....

to view full information of travelling guide in bali just simple visit http://www.balitravelandtourism.com

About the Author:

a son of balinese people, care to improve his potential hometown resources. since born his life is surrounded by tourism activities and now he is writing his experinces to the world by http://www.balitravelandtourism.com

Article Source: ArticlesBase.com - Bali: Paradise in Indonesia

The Largest City in Indonesia

The Largest City in Indonesia

Author: Douglas Scott

Located on the northwest coast of the island of Java, is Jakarta it has an area of 661.52 kilometere square and a population of 8792000. It was formerly known as Jayakarta Batavia and Sunda Kelapa and is the capital of the island and largest city in Indonesia.



Central Jakarta offers more convenient places for tourists to stay whilst visiting. With an abundance of hotels in the area to suit all budgets,it also has a wide selection of restaurants, bars and brothels and shopping malls. Jalan Jaksa is the main backpackers street.



International airlines, including KLM and Lufthansa, fly into Jakarta, as do several domestic airlines. A toll road links the airport to the city and the journey takes about an hour. There is a good Damri bus service which runs every half hour. Boats are also a popular way of getting around once in Indonesia, many services run from Jakarta to destinations throughout Indonesia.



The tower clock was once returned to England to be repaired under a lifetime guarantee, which up to now has already lasted hundreds of years.



The island of Java has a good rail network, centred in Jakarta. Bus travel is also popular, but Jakartas four main bus stations are all a long way from the city centre it can take longer to get to the bus stop than to take the bus trip itself.



Jakarta is almost always hot and sticky. Average maximum temperatures stay above 30C throughout the year



The nightlife is among the best in Asia. From the upscale X Lounge to the seediest discos, Jakarta caters to all kinds of clubbers. The most famous night life district is Blok M in South Jakarta. While lacking the bikini clad go go dancers of Patpong, the meat market atmosphere is much the same with poor country girls turned pro. Tanamor prides itself as Jakartas best known discotheque. During the month of Ramadhan, all nightlife ends at midnight and some operations close for the entire month.



Jakarta History Museum is the place to go if you are into heavy, carved furniture and other memorabilia from the Dutch period. Among the more interesting exhibits is a series of gloomy portraits of all the Dutch governors general and early drawings and etchings of Batavia. Housed in the old Batavia Town Hall, the museum is probably the most solid reminder of Dutch rule anywhere in Indonesia. The large, bell towered hall was built in 1627 and housed the administration of the city, the law courts, and even Batavias main prison compound.

About the Author:

Douglas Scott writes for The Cheap Car Hire Specialist. and is a free lance writer for Indonesia Rental Site

Article Source: ArticlesBase.com - The Largest City in Indonesia

Paradise Archipelago in East of Indonesia

Paradise Archipelago in East of Indonesia

Author: Alexandra

The archipelago around Sulawesi and Borneo has been described as an ecological 'hot spot'. East of Indonesia Archipelago have much terrain varied, from walls and fringing reef to caverns, big Green Turtles (Chelonia mydas), whitetip, leopard and nurse sharks, schooling barracudas, napoleon wrasses, cuttle fish, spanish mackerel, jacks and batfishes, and ornamentalreef fishes hang out in record densities and diversity.

If the sea has a heart, it lies somewhere in the dynamic mosaic that is the Indonesian archipelago. In this biological hot zone, there are more coral and fish species than anywhere else on Earth. The numbers are staggering: for instance, Indonesia has 83 species of angelfish and butterflyfish, while the whole of the Caribbean supports just seven of each.

This diversity is celebrated in The Sulu-Sulawesi Seas, a new photo-book by German photo-journalist Jürgen Freund. Part of a conservation initiative by the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), the book focuses on the area around Sulawesi, Borneo and the southern Philippines - the epicentre of the hot zone. This is a world where schools of jacks group into seething tornadoes over reef drop-offs, where tiny porcelain crabs seek refuge among the swaying tentacles of a host anemone. Stray from the reefs into a mangrove swamp and you are just as likely to run into a saltwater crocodile, the mightiest of the reptiles.

This region, referred to often as the 'coral triangle' or the 'East-Indies Triangle', encompasses three nations and an area of complex oceanography. All the islands have narrow continental shelves and many are separated from each other by relatively deep waters. Surface currents flow permanently eastwards along the north coast of Sulawesi and southwards along the west coast. To the south of the island there is a strong east-flowing current during the northeast monsoon, which is reversed during the southeast monsoon.

Conditions are ideal for reef development and there are fringing reefs along the shores of most of the smaller islands, and some continuous stretches running for hundreds of miles along the coastline. It doesn't take an expert to see that this is a special place: if you were to do a dive on a Sulawesi reef, then jet off to anywhere in, say, the tropical western Atlantic, the difference would be immediately noticeable. For years, photographers have said that the reefs of the Caribbean are like English gardens compared with the marine jungles of Southeast Asia.

For divers, it's down to the ease of finding certain exotic creatures. The highly cryptic leaf scorpionfish, for instance, can be found all over the Indo-Pacific, but in most places no one bothers to look over areas of exposed coral (their preferred habitat) for suspiciously leafy objects. When you're in the coral triangle, it's always worthwhile looking around for semi-disguised creatures. And if you're observant enough to find one leaf scorpionfish, there are usually others nearby.

Local dive operators are only too aware of the region's super-abundance of marine species. Log on to any website promoting diving in Borneo or Sulawesi and you will find phrases along the lines of 'located in the middle of the ocean's centre for biodiversity' or 'slap-bang in the middle of the ocean's Eden'. It's a strong selling-point, but can be misleading in terms of understanding the true nature of this magical place.

So, why are there so many different corals, fish and invertebrates in this region? Is it, as the websites suggest, some sort of underwater Eden? This has certainly been a popular theory, that the seas from Java to New Guinea represent an underwater 'cradle of evolution' from which all life in the shallow tropical seas originated. According to this approach, places such as Sulawesi have an abundance of species because it has been an evolutionary production line since since an early point in Earth's history. It's an attractive notion and has an appealing symmetry, not least because of parallel theories about the emergence of humans from Africa.

Unfortunately, the 'marine Eden' theory has a wealth of evidence stacked against it. If it is to be believed, all the coral in the world must have originated in and around Southeast Asia - but fossil research on Acropora corals shows that they originated around North Africa, Spain or even other parts of Europe, but not Indonesia. According to Dr Brian Rosen, a scientific associate in zoology at London's Natural History Museum, simple fossil data clearly shows that Southeast Asia was not a long-term cradle of coral development. 'If you look back 40 million years ago, Europe and the Caribbean were the major centres for coral reef diversity, and research in progress increasingly suggests that many reef organisms originated there,' Rosen explained.

So, between about five and seven million years ago, Europe's reef-building coral died out and the Caribbean's managed to stagger along, but by then Southeast Asia had become the hot zone. Rosen maintains that this was not due to any single cataclysmic event, but a long-term series of events which had made it the most attractive option for marine life.

'When environmental conditions change, organisms will go extinct if they cannot cope with the new conditions, stay where they are if they can cope, or if the change is not too drastic or too quick, they will gradually migrate into other regions where conditions are more suitable for them.' Put simply, if life has time to get out, it will do so while the getting out's good.

Most of the conditions and habitats that are found in present-day Indonesia also occur in the Caribbean - so why are there such differences in biodiversity? Dr Rosen - whose study of the issue amounts to a life's work - points out that if the environments are so similar today, then there must be long-term historical issues behind the development of the East Indies triangle.

So, let's look to history. It has been estimated that biodiversity may have accumulated in this region at the same time that extinctions were occurring in other parts of the world during the Pleistocene period (the time in our Earth's history from approximately 1.8 million years ago until about 10,000 year ago). The region is a labyrinth of volcanoes and deep basins that survived the Ice Ages, possibly providing a refuge for numerous species.

At the same time, the massive fluctuations in sea level may have isolated pockets of reef diversity, allowing evolution to follow different paths. When the species were reunited as sea levels rose, they had changed in many subtle - and not so subtle - ways, further adding to their diversity. The tortuous geography of the area has helped to create what Dr Rosen describes as a 'dynamic mosaic' which acts with variations in sea level to create a sort of 'diversity pump'.

Today, the triangle straddles an area in which two great oceans - the Pacific and the Indian - meet. That species from the two oceans come together and mix here is beyond contention. It is simply another of many factors that promoted diversity in the coral triangle. Ask any diver who has seen the currents ripping through Nusa Tenggara, the islands south of Sulawesi which include the famous Komodo Marine Park. It is here that the Pacific flows into the Indian Ocean, a vast movement of water impeded only by a few volcanic islands, around which some of the fastest currents on Earth occur.

Diverse as they may be, the reefs of the coral triangle face an uncertain future. Some 82 per cent of them are estimated to be threatened by human activities in the recent Reefs at Risk report. Human populations are over-using the resources in many areas, while rapid industrialisation and the continuing destruction of the forests on land are causing massive amounts of sediment and pollution to accumulate on reefs. The other major factor is global warming, widely believed to be underlying cause of coral bleaching.

Marine biologist Dr Alexander Mustard is another prominent diver and underwater photographer who has fallen in love with the coral triangle. He maintains that the preservation of Indonesia's marine environment is crucial not just for the region, but for the entire world. 'Anyone who has dived extensively in Indonesia will have seen the impact of dynamite fishing,' he said. 'If you're underwater and an explosion takes place within a few miles, you will literally feel the impact, despite the fact that dynamite fishing has been illegal in Indonesia since 1985.

'Even with the increasing population, there is more than enough protein in the sea to provide for human needs. But instead of harvesting it in a sustainable manner, they are destroying the very environment that supports the life. It's like being an orange farmer and, instead of picking oranges, you chop down the whole tree.'

Yet Jürgen Freund, whose pictures illustrate this article, feels there is still hope for the coral triangle. 'Some fishing communities now actively protect their fishing grounds and coral reefs, and others have mangrove reforestation programs,' he said. 'Once given a chance, the sea can replenish itself. In the Sulawesi Sea northwest of Manado, fishermen can pull a ton of tuna from the sea in two hours, using only simple bamboo fishing rods and small hooks. They could easily take more, but they have a simple philosophy - why take so much when we can keep some fish in the sea for tomorrow?'

More info at www.seasafaricruises.com and www.divingseasafari.com

About the Author:

I'm 28 years old, webmaster in cruises company and manage Diving Sea Safari and Sea Safari Cruises I live in Bali, the paradise island in Indonesia.



Your travelling nit complete before you go to Bali and Indonesia archipelago. Explore all in my sites for more dive and cruise informations.

Article Source: ArticlesBase.com - Paradise Archipelago in East of Indonesia

The Different Kinds Of Visitors Attractions In Indonesia

The Different Kinds Of Visitors Attractions In Indonesia

Author: Jenna Sawin

Indonesia is a land of mountains, volcanoes, dense forests, attractive beaches, spectacular artless beauty, which draws the awareness of assorted tourists throughout the year. With its glorious temples, vast mosques, museums Indonesia is a house of some magnificent Indonesia Tourist Attractions.

Attractions in Indonesia Java- Jakarta - The funds city of Jakarta retains much from the regal Dutch and British periods, with many tenuous grand-technique buildings and the newly restored old part. You can stopover at The National Monument towers, Merdeka Square, The Central Museum, Portuguese Church, Istiqlal Mosque etc. If you want to store, then antiques souk on Jalan Surabaya and batik factories in the Karet are the total place for you. Throughout the island, flunky shows are thespian in which traditional wayang golak and wayang kulit marionettes act out stories based on well-known tradition; performances can sometimes last all night.

Sumatra The instant-major island in Indonesia is Sumatra, which is a house of the volcanic mountain sort, hot springs, unexplored jungle and general plantations. Bengkulu, Gedung Wani and Mount Loeser Reserve are some of the amazing Reserve forests. The current Indonesia Tourist Attractions situated in Sumatra are, Lake Toba, Lingga village, Bukittinggi's Fort de Kock that located close to the zoo, promote, a refurbished rice store and the Bundo Kandung Museum and the most attractive beaches on the east coast.

Sulawesi Popularly known as Orchid Island, Sulawesi is a land of high mountains, hazy valleys and lakes, geysers and hot springs like Karumengan, Kinilow, Lahendong, Leilem and Makule. In the south is Bantimurung Nature Reserve which has thousands of exotic butterflies. The island has geysers and hot springs, the most celebrated of which are at Karumengan, Kinilow, Lahendong, Leilem and Makule. Torajaland is known as the 'Land of the Heavenly Kings' and its people are prominent for their opulently ornamented houses and custom of burying the over in vertical cliffside tombs. Ujung Pandang, formerly Makassar, is celebrated for the Pinsa Harbour where impassive schooners of the notorious Buganese seafarers are moored. Fort Rotterdam, built by Sultan Ala in 1660 to defend the township from pirates, is now being restored. Racing is a general island activity; there is horseracing and bullock-racing and at Ranomuut there races with traditional mount-strained carts.

Bali With its spectacular sallow beaches, green jungle and mountain, Bali is a steamy paradise. The landscape of Bali 'is made up of volcanic mountains, lakes and rivers, terraced ricefields, giant banyans and palm groves and, on the coast, bays rang with colorless grimy beaches. Bali is imminent for its crafts and adventurous activities, which are orderly on the southern beaches. The island deception a rapid detach from the eastern coast of Java, across the Strait of Bali. The tourist areas are in the south, around Sanur Beach and at Kuta, which lies on the other boundary of a narrow cape. The island also has thousands of temples - the extract number has never been counted - ranging from the great Holy Temple at Besakih to small village places of worship.

Lombok It is a land of temples home handicrafts like cane baskets and bamboo fabrics. Lombok is an admired tourist destination where you can call at the Senggigi Beach, Gili Islands, Gunung Rinjani, and Desert Point well known for surfing. The island possesses one of the utmost volcanic mountains in the Indonesian archipelago, Mount Rindjani. The two main towns are Mataram, the assets, and the occupied harbor of Ampenan; both are interesting to explore. The south coasted is tough. The west, with shimmering rice terraces, banana and coconut groves and prolific plains, looks like an addition of Bali. The east is dry, sterile and desert-like in appearance. The north, the area dominated by Mount Rindjani, offers thick forests and dramatic vistas. There are also some glorious beaches, some of pallid sandpaper, others, such as those near Ampenan, of black sand. At Narmada there is a gigantic complex of palace dwellings, achieve with a well containing 'rejuvenating waters', built for a former Balinese queen. At Pamenang, visitors can hire a ship and go diving, entering a fine-water world of brilliantly colored coral and inquisitive steamy fish.

Yogakartas Capital of Java Yogakarta is the centre of educational, cultural and efficient activity. You must see the leading university of Indonesia, the Gajah Mada University and numerous arts centers, markets, galleries, shape shops and bazaars.

Moluccan Archipelago Also known as the Maluku Archipelago, it is made up of 1000 islands, many uninhabited and the surplus so secluded from one another and from the exterior world that each has its own nation and very regularly its own poetry. Halmahera is the biggest island in the Moluccan group and one of the most diverse. Banda, in the medium of the Banda Sea, is regularly termed the initial 'Spice Island' and is notorious as a nutmeg-growing interior. At donate, the islands are prevalent for diving and snorkeling.

Nusa Tengara Archipelago Nusa Penida was at one time a penal colony but now attracts visitors to its dramatic seascapes and beaches. Komodo home to the world's prime and rarest species of screen lizard, while Sumba is famed for its handsome Ikat cloth. Mount Keli Mutu is one of Indonesia's most spectacular relaxed sights, famous for its three cave lakes, who's stunning ensign change with the light of the day. Little since the Bronze Age, yet the islands' inhabitants are legendary as musicians and palm weavers. The Terawangan Islands is a small group with lovely beaches and coral gardens. Lucipara has superb waters for snorkeling. Bone Rated, Kangean, Tenggaya and Tukang Besi is a group of isolated islands in the Flores and Banda seas, epitomizing a sultry paradise.

About the Author:

To learn about asia vacation and imperialism in asia, visit the Facts About Asia website.

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Indonesia - Top 10 Things to Do in Bali, Indonesia

Indonesia - Top 10 Things to Do in Bali, Indonesia

Author: Pinky Mcbanon

Indonesia is a country with many things to do.

Here the ten things to do in Indonesia that everyone will surely enjoy.

1. Pamper yourself - massage anyone? Here in Indonesia, you can indulge with the great massage treats that are truly relaxing and soothing for your tired bodies. There are several massage centers here that offers very relaxing services for everyone. There are specific spas that are exclusive for tourists so one will definitely have a really great time.

2. Visit the Indonesian temples
- when planning a vacation trip to Bali, include to your schedule to visit some of the well known shrines and temples of the place. A temple or two would complete your whole Bali trip.

3. Go Shopping - of course, one's trip to any place in the world will never be complete without the shopping spree. There are hundreds of shops in Bali that are ideal shopping destinations with amazing finds and affordable prices.

4. Check out the traditional dances
- locally known as the "Kecak". Where the ck-ck sound is very fun to hear with accompanying native dances in some Bali public places.

5. See the Cheeky monkeys - these monkeys are pretty famous in Bali. Hundreds of these long tailed monkeys are seen in some parts of Bali that is a center of attraction here. Visitors can also feed these monkeys with bananas that are sold outside the gates from where the monkeys are kept.

6. Watch the beautiful Sunset - the days are quiet very hot in Bali and the perfect time for everyone to stroll outside is when the sun is setting. The beautiful sunset of Bali is very spectacular! Visitors always find time to stop and stare at the setting sun during sunset hours.

7. Run in the rain - Bali always have rains, and it is a great fun experience to dance along the rain. It is more fun when you have your friends with you to join you lose yourself along the dropping waters.

8. Eat - indulge with the delicious Indonesian cuisines that are very mouth-watering and delectable meals that are cooked by the Indonesians.

9. Watch the dolphins
- in Lovina found in the north of Bali is where the lovely dolphins are found. Lots of tourists come to for them to get a chance of holding the dolphins closely and play with them in the waters.

10. Book your next Bali trip
- once you visit this country, you'll definitely be back for more so it is ideal for everyone to book their next Bali trip right after your first trip.

About the Author:

Her blogs and websites focuses on stay-at-home moms, dads and students who wants to work at home, build homebased business http://www.mommyisworkingathome.com

Visit her Interesting Site on Asian Travels and Destinations. Discover Asia's Culture and Great Food! at http://www.goingplacesinasia.com

Article Source: ArticlesBase.com - Indonesia - Top 10 Things to Do in Bali, Indonesia

Dive Pulau Weh, Aceh, Indonesia

Dive Pulau Weh, Aceh, Indonesia

Author: Ben Stokes

After many decades of internal conflict and a devastating tsunami in 2004 the province of Aceh, northern Sumatra, Indonesia finally opens its doors to tourism. With a new airport underway, improved tourist facilities and the very first edition of the Lonely Planet ‘Aceh’ already published the region prepares itself for a new stage in its development of an adventure travel industry.

Aceh is certainly well resourced to sustain an adventure travel industry. Just 1 hr boat ride from the town of Banda Aceh lays the island to dive Pulau Weh, offering world class diving with an abundance of rare indo – pacific marine life. This is the most westerly point of Indonesia. On the island a monument so called ‘kilometer 0’ marks this point and signifies the start of an archipelago that spans through over 17,000 different islands.

Here the reefs have been preserved through fishing laws which are closely adhered to by the local community. The coral life is genuinely pristine and well preserved. Deep oceanic trenches that surround the island bring nutrient rich waters which in turn attract ocean giants such as mantas, whale sharks, mola mola and even the illusive mega mouth shark has been spotted here on more than one occasion. On the fringing reefs that surround the island there’s also an incredible range of macro life, ghost pipefish, leaf fish, star gazers, frog fish and many types of moray. To dive Pulau Weh is certainly a unique experience.

There are also two wrecks. The Sophie Rickmer is 134m long cargo vessel that lies in deep waters just off the township of Sabang. With the straight bow lying at over 50m it does require some decompression procedures but once down you get the chance to meet up with some oversize residents including groupers, morays and sharks. A little shallower at 15m lies the Tug Boat, this is a dive to look for macro life with pipefish, sea horses and scorpion fish not uncommon finds.

The island offers many attractions for those who prefer to stay above the surface, still actively volcanic there’s hot springs to relax in, jungle trails to the high peaks and lots of wild life to see along the way including long tail macaques, monitor lizard and sea eagles.

Pulau Weh is likely to appeal to the adventurous diver, one that likes to step off the path and experience not only pristine diving where few have finned before but also the cultures and traditions of the country they are there to visit.About the Author:

After ten years of worldwide dive travel and professional employment we created a travel company that seeks to enter Asia's most remote and exciting locations for experiences above and below the surface: Dive Safari Asia. For photos, video footage, destination guides and details of our tours visit Diving Asia.

Article Source: ArticlesBase.com - Dive Pulau Weh, Aceh, Indonesia

Indonesia - Enjoy Surfing at Indonesia's Ulu Watu Surfing Beach!

Indonesia - Enjoy Surfing at Indonesia's Ulu Watu Surfing Beach!

Author: Pinky Mcbanon

The Uluwatu Surfing beach in Indonesia is truly a very spectacular and ideal place to go surfing. The beach is located in the South of Bali and is a very famous tourist attraction site. Thousands of surfers come here often and also kite boarders and snorkels and other water sports enthusiasts.

There are lots of villas around the beach where the surfers can stay and rest after a whole day of surfing. They offer very nice and comfortable accommodations that everyone will enjoy. The Uluwatu beach is a public access beach. The beach over looks the very magnificent view of the sea with its clear blue waters and watches the surfers surf along the waves of the waters.

The beach can be reached by plane in the Ngurah Rai International Airport. The amazing waves of the shore give every surfer the best surfing weathers and perfect winds. Surfers are truly amazed with beauty and features of the places making them get back to the place from time to time.

The vast beauty of the beach is what makes the Uluwatu beach a famous tourist attraction site in Indonesia not only for surfers but all beach lovers and water sports aficionados coming from different parts of the globe.

What is more fascinating here is the beach offers surfing schools for the ones that wants to try out surfing but does not have quiet the knowledge to try it hand in the waters. There are very well trained surf guides that will help the beginners in learning this kind of fun sport.

The waters here might have been truly made for surfing because its winds and features best describes what the surfers are looking for, for a great place to do exhibit their surfing techniques. One can always have the bast surfing time in Uluwatu beach that is rarely to find in other beaches.

Visit the beach together with your friends and family and even your surfing teams to do surfing and indulge with the fun and lively experience of being in this very amazing Uluwatu beach resort. This is truly a place where Indonesia is solely known for and definitely one of the country's most precious jewels. Visit here any time of the year, so what are you waiting for? Book now!

About the Author:

Her blogs and websites focuses on stay-at-home moms, dads and students who wants to work at home, build homebased business http://www.mommyisworkingathome.com

Visit her Interesting Site on Asian Travels and Destinations. Discover Asia's Culture and Great Food! at http://www.goingplacesinasia.com

Article Source: ArticlesBase.com - Indonesia - Enjoy Surfing at Indonesia's Ulu Watu Surfing Beach!