19 Feb 2014

Nirwana Golf Package

Nirwana Bali Golf Country Club
SPECIAL GOLF NIRWANA'S ULTIMATE DAY OUT
WINNER OF BEST GOLF RESORT IN ASIA
BEST GOLF COURSE IN ASIA
BEST PAR - 5 IN ASIA

Nirwana Bali Golf Country Club is a visual masterpiece of dramatic ocean views and lush Balinese landscapes. Greg Norman has designed it golf course, Nirwana Bali Golf Course offers a spectacular challenge and a unique world-class experience for golfers of all skill levels. The golf course that is designed by legendary golfer Greg Norman with hole 18 th is one of the most photographed and challenging golf courses in the world.

Bali National Golf Club

Bali National Golf Club

Bali Golf Course, Nusa Dau Bali GolfNusa Dua Bali Golf and Country Club, voted 'One of Asia's 5 Best Golf Courses'(Fortune Magazine - USA) will offer visitors to Bali a truly unique golfing experience due to the fantastic setting of the course. Golfers will experience three distinct playing environments throughout the 18-hole course. The setting of holes 1 through 9 features creeks, canyons, and native vegetation filled with tropical birds.The golf course architect team of Robin Nelson and Rodney Wright incorporated small hand-built stone walls to terrace the sides of fairways and tees in order to emulate the rice fields terraces of the Bali countryside.

Bedugul and Beratan Lake Tour

Bedugul and Beratan Lake Tour

Bedugul and Beratan Lake Tour is one of Bali Tour Packages to visit places of interest in the regency of Tabanan like Beratan Lake, Ulun Danu Temple, Transitional fruit and vegetable market and Taman Ayun Temple. Bedugul is the name of place located in mountain area encircled by the cold temperature and natural environment with beautiful panorama of Beratan Lake. Your tour is arranged within 8 hours departs from your hotel lobby. The tour is very exciting to visit the tourist destinations in Bali with our professional speaking guide and full air-conditioning car for your enjoyable and comfortable journey. On the way of your tour, the Indonesia lunch menu is served at local restaurant with breathtaking view of rice terrace to complete the tour to be your memorable one.

Benoa aims to be hub port for cruise ships

Benoa aims to be hub port for cruise ships

 

Becoming increasingly popular as a destination and turn-around port, Benoa is aiming to expand its operations to become a hub port for cruise ships.

By being a hub port, Benoa would be an arrival and departure point for cruise ships from around the world, with cruise operators establishing their home base in Bali.

“Cruises would originate from this port and return here after completing their journey,” Ali Sodikin, general manager of Pelindo III Benoa, the company that manages the port, said Wednesday.

Currently, Benoa is a destination port, welcoming cruise ships that drop off passengers to enjoy the island. The passengers then re-embark to continue their journey on the same ship.

The island’s southern seaport has also seen growing popularity as a turn-around port, where cruise ships drop off passengers to vacation in Bali. While these passengers take other transportation modes to leave the island, the cruise ships pick up other passengers before leaving for the next destination.

To become a hub port, the seaport authority first needs to propose a master plan to the provincial administration and Denpasar administration for approval.

According to Ali, the plan had secured approval from the provincial administration. “We are now waiting for approval from the city administration, hopefully we can get it this year,” he told Bali Daily.

The master plan will then be submitted to the Transportation Ministry. Once the ministry has approved the plan, Pelindo and the ministry will jointly improve the facilities to fulfill the requirements to be a hub port.

“The facility improvements will take around 10 months. We are targeting starting operation as a hub port by 2017,” Ali said.

Among facilities that need improvement are the wharf, port basins and channel. “The wharf needs to be expanded to enable three cruise ships to dock at the same time,” Ali said.

Since 2009, Pelindo III has been attempting to attract cruise lines to build their home base in Bali, he added.

Recent improvements to facilities at Benoa have resulted in Bali’s southernmost port seeing an increasing number of visiting cruise ships.

Throughout last year, the port welcomed 41 cruise liners, a slight increase from the 39 in 2012.

This year, 58 cruise operators have confirmed that they would call on the port during their voyage.

Ali attributed the soaring popularity of Benoa among cruise operators to the many improvements undertaken in the ship’s basin, as well as supporting facilities. In fact, Benoa is one of the favorite cruise ports in Indonesia.

Further upgrades are planned at the port this year, including repairing the southernmost pier and building a domestic passenger terminal.

The majority of cruise passengers visiting Benoa Harbor are Australians and Americans, who accounted for some 60 percent of visitors, while the remaining 40 percent is a combination of Europeans and Asians.

In addition to the improved infrastructure — with proper docking facilities, passenger terminal and security system certified by the
International Maritime Organization — the port is geographically strategic. It is close to the island’s famous tourist spots of Kuta, Sanur and Nusa Dua. It is also situated near Ngurah Rai airport and the new toll road.

“Being a turn-around port generates thousands of foreign tourists at once, a positive contribution for Bali’s tourism,” Ali said.

At the beginning of this month, the port welcomed the Silver Shadow from Australia for a turn-around visit, carrying 1,200 passengers. Three days after its arrival, the ship departed carrying other passengers.

from Jakarta Post

A pact to save ‘subak’

A pact to save ‘subak’ 

 As hectare after hectare of productive farmland is lost to housing and hotels each year in Bali, one community is bucking the trend, making a promise to conserve their traditionally irrigated subak rice farms.
Residents of the villages of Bunutan and Tanggayuda, just north of Ubud, are undertaking a pilot project with the Bali Rice Field Conservation Foundation (Yayasan Konservasi Sawah Bali) to dedicate more than 117 productive acres exclusively to rice for the long term.
The owners of the 135 farms in the program will receive regular subsidies from Sawah Bali for signing agreements not to turn their land into building plots, ensuring that the centuries-long practice of subak farming will continue — despite development.
According to Sawah Bali founder Phyllis Kaplan, all the members of Subak Malung, which comprises the two villages, have signed up. The subak was chosen for the pilot due to its proximity to Ubud.
“As these villages are so close to Ubud there is an extreme threat of them being sold off [for non-agricultural development]. They are also very traditional villages that have already gone partially organic,” says Kaplan
“The land-use tool that Sawah Bali will introduce is one utilized successfully for over 40 years in the US to conserve farms. Sawah Bali will replicate the Vermont Land Trust concept to keep the working landscape productive with best-use practices for managing threatened natural resources with competing purposes,” Kaplan said in a press release. “By conserving the farmland and subak, water use will be prioritized for subak, sawah, food production, security and [sacred activities].”
Sawah Bali is currently well funded and has technical partners in land conservation, fund-raising and soil rehabilitation.
Kaplan adds that technical assistance will be given to promote 100 percent organic farming and to plant heritage rice and other value-added crops to increase farm viability.
“Whenever in the future farmers have problems, we have technical assistance for them so they can consult with the appropriate person to address issues, either collectively or as individual farmers,” says Kaplan of the project that she hopes will become a model for the 1,500 or so subak across Bali.
Kaplan says that while many across Bali want to continue farming, market pressures lead them to give up their traditional livelihoods.
Stressors include hefty land tax increases in areas near tourist destinations such as Ubud, diminishing income for farmers, the threat to water access when rice fields are interspersed with buildings and youth who are leaving the field to find work elsewhere.
 It is not too late to halt the destruction of the Balinese agricultural way of life, according to Wayan Rachman, a resident of the village and a “conductor of land conservation” for Sawah Bali.

Wayan says the island is at a tipping point for land conversions, a problem exacerbated by declining incomes and land tax increases due to escalating property values.

“Bali is facing great pressure from tourism. One area of this is the need of investors to build more villas. As a result, farmland, wherever suitable for hotels, villas or restaurants, becomes a target [for conversion]. This not only affects rice fields, but the heritage we have been passing down for centuries,” says Wayan.
While farmland loss is an environmental issue, agriculture is at the center of Balinese religion, culture and heritage, as expressed in the concept of Tri Hita Karana — people, the lands and the gods — and the balance this implies.

Wayan continues. “These transformations of rice farms have brought about an imbalance to this spiritual concept — a concept that suits the Balinese really well. Also, from an economic point of view, there is an interdependence between the land and the people: The land gives food, so we have an obligation to take care of that land by working our rice field.”
The head of Subak Malung, Nyoman Wardika, says the key to a healthy agricultural sector is the harvest.
 We need to increase farming practices and gain technical skills on farming. We need to find ways that we can increase our yields. This is critical, because over time our yields have been declining, while farming costs are very high,” Wardika says. “We believe this project will help us increase our yields through education and technical skills. Every farmer in our subak organization is 100 percent behind this project.”

One farmer, Ketut Pendak, says he is deeply grateful that the village is getting help to preserve its traditional farming lifestyles.

“I am very happy to be a member of this project. Our agricultural culture is not only about income, but is also related to our religious ceremonies. Every Balinese ceremony has rice as offerings, so it is vital we do not lose this land of rice production,” says Pendak, looking out over a green swathe of maturing rice.

Another farmer, Made Anggit, 62, is looking forward to keeping the traditions of the village alive. “I have kids and grandkids and I want to keep the land for them — to go down generation to generation, just like it was for me.
“This land has been in our family from the mid-18th century, so this is my children’s heritage. Selling our land would be like selling your mother.”
Taken from Jakarta Post