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Indonesia Destination Information
Bali
The
landscape of Bali, 'Island of the Gods', is made up of volcanic
mountains, lakes and rivers, terraced ricefields, giant banyans
and palm groves and, on the coast, bays ringed with white sandy
beaches. The island lies a short distance from the eastern coast
of Java, across the Strait of Bali. Although its total area is only
2095 sq km (1309 sq miles) the island supports a population of approximately
2.5 million. Unlike the rest of Indonesia, the predominant religious
faith is Hinduism, though in a special form known as 'Agama-Hindu'.
Stretching east to west across the island is a volcanic chain of
mountains, dominated by the mighty Gunung Agung (Holy Mountain)
whose conical peak soars more than 3170m (10,400ft) into the sky.
North of the mountains, where the fertility of the terrain permits,
is an area devoted to the production of vegetables and copra. The
fertile rice-growing region lies on the central plains. The tourist
areas are in the south, around Sanur Beach and at Kuta, which
lies on the other side of a narrow isthmus. Nearby Nusa Dusa
is also a popular tourist area and has a number of reasonably priced
resorts and hotels.
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Jakarta
The
capital city of Jakarta retains much from the colonial Dutch and
British periods, with many fine colonial-style buildings and the
recently restored 'old quarter'. The National Monument towers
140m (450ft) above the Merdeka Square and is crowned with a 'flame'
plated in pure gold. The Central Museum has a fine ethnological
collection including statues dating from the pre-Hindu era. Worth
visiting is the Portuguese Church, completed by the Dutch in 1695,
which houses a magnificent and immense Dutch pump organ. The modern
Istiqlal Mosque in the city centre is one of the largest in the
world. There is an antiques market on Jalan Surabaya and batik factories
in the Karet. Throughout the island, puppet shows are staged in
which traditional wayang gotek and wayang kulit marionettes act
out stories based on well-known legends; performances can sometimes
last all night.
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Java
13km
(8 miles) from Yogyakarta is the Prambanan temple complex,
built in honour of the Hindu gods Shiva, Brahma and Vishnu, which
includes the tenth-century Temple of Loro Jonggrang and said to
be the most perfectly proportioned Hindu temple in Indonesia. At
the temple there are also open-air performances of Ramayana ballet
which involve hundreds of dancers, singers and gamelan musicians.
Perched on a hill to the west of Yogyakarta is Borobudur, probably
the largest Buddhist sanctuary in the world, which contains more
than 5km (3 miles) of relief carvings. The Royal Mangkunegaran Palace
in Surakarta is now used as a museum and has displays of dance ornaments,
jewellery and 19th-century carriages used for royal occasions. Mount
Bromo in the east of Java is still very active, and horseback treks
to the crater's edge can be made from nearby Surabaya. During August
and September Madura is a venue for a series of bullock races which
culminate in a 48-hour non-stop carnival celebration in the town
of Pamekasan.
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Lombok
Only
a 15-minute flight (or a ferry trip) away is Lombok, an unspoilt
island whose name means 'chilli pepper'. Its area is 1285 sq km
(803 sq miles). The island possesses one of the highest volcanic
mountains in the Indonesian archipelago, Mount Rindjani, whose cloud-piercing
peak soars to 3745m (12,290ft). The population of about 750,000
is a mixture of Islamic Sasaks, Hindu Balinese and others of Malay
origin. The two main towns are Mataram, the capital, and the busy
port of Ampenan; both are interesting to explore. The south coast
is rocky. The west, with shimmering rice terraces, banana and coconut
groves and fertile plains, looks like an extension of Bali. The
east is dry, barren and desert-like in appearance. The north, the
region dominated by Mount Rindjani, offers thick forests and dramatic
vistas. There are also some glorious beaches, some of white sand,
others, such as those near Ampenan, of black sand. At Narmada,
reached by an excellent east-west highway, is a huge complex of
palace dwellings, complete with a well containing 'rejuvenating
waters', built for a former Balinese king. At Pamenang visitors
can hire a boat and go skindiving, entering a clear-water world
of brilliantly coloured coral and inquisitive tropical fish
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