The menu includes dishes from around the globe. Here's just a sampling:
Omelet breakfast.
Bubur Ayam - rice porridge breakfast with chicken and fried shallots.
Three Colour Salad with roasted bell peppers and cheese.
Two Colour Soup - Ginger Carrot in one half of the bowl, Potato Leek in the other half.
Crispy Calimari salad.
For vegetarians (and others!), Zucchini & Eggplant Roulade with Mozarella over tomato sauce.
Baked stuffed mushrooms, topped with cheese.
Balinese Chicken (Pepes Ayam) cooked in banana leaf, served with roasted eggplant. What's the pointy green thing in the middle? That's steamed white rice wearing its "party hat" (at least, that's what I call it!)
Pizza with chicken and spinach.
Tuna Steak with teriyaki sauce and mashed potatoes.
And a dessert...
Homemade Apple Pie.
Sunday, February 19, 2006
Progress on Villa - a Walking Tour
Start at the hotel and come on a walking tour of the first villa.
View from the hotel, looking past the public pool, slightly downhill to the villa.
The roof is almost complete. Well, roofs actually. Over the bathrooms and the kitchen, it's just a simple flat concrete roof.
It's a more traditional Balinese roof with tiles over the Master Bedroom...
... and the spare bedroom and the living / dining area. (How do the construction workers get to the roof? With homemade wooden ladders.)
Now we are standing at the left-edge of the front gate opening, looking in at the front door opening.
Move left several feet and look in through the carport gate toward the Living / Dining area (with future large glass windows and doors) and you can just see the edge of the front door to the far right.
Looking out from the Master Bathroom into what will become a private garden, visible from the bathtub for some serious relaxation!
View as you exit the Master Bedroom / Bathroom garden (there will be a gate) - the path leads to the temple entrance. The outside wall of the temple is the red brick on the right-hand side. Yes, it's a 2-story / 2 part temple.
At the bottom of this photo is the future "infinity edge" of the private pool. So this is the view you will see as you swim toward "infinity".
The upper left corner is a tarp that the workers are using for protection from the sun as they get ready to put in the pool tiles!!!
View of the backyard from the Living / Dining area.
Kitchen counters are starting to go in.
Looking out the back kitchen window (the sill is just at the bottom of the photo), past the pool sun deck (the concrete above the window sill), ignore the construction materials covering future landscaping, and you're looking a the view from the kitchen window.
End of the tour - looking out of the front gate, ready to leave the villa. Turn right to go slightly downhill to the spa.
Or turn left and head back to the hotel.
So................................................................. Have you made your reservations yet? http://www.bhanuswariubud.com/
View from the hotel, looking past the public pool, slightly downhill to the villa.
The roof is almost complete. Well, roofs actually. Over the bathrooms and the kitchen, it's just a simple flat concrete roof.
It's a more traditional Balinese roof with tiles over the Master Bedroom...
... and the spare bedroom and the living / dining area. (How do the construction workers get to the roof? With homemade wooden ladders.)
Now we are standing at the left-edge of the front gate opening, looking in at the front door opening.
Move left several feet and look in through the carport gate toward the Living / Dining area (with future large glass windows and doors) and you can just see the edge of the front door to the far right.
Looking out from the Master Bathroom into what will become a private garden, visible from the bathtub for some serious relaxation!
View as you exit the Master Bedroom / Bathroom garden (there will be a gate) - the path leads to the temple entrance. The outside wall of the temple is the red brick on the right-hand side. Yes, it's a 2-story / 2 part temple.
At the bottom of this photo is the future "infinity edge" of the private pool. So this is the view you will see as you swim toward "infinity".
The upper left corner is a tarp that the workers are using for protection from the sun as they get ready to put in the pool tiles!!!
View of the backyard from the Living / Dining area.
Kitchen counters are starting to go in.
Looking out the back kitchen window (the sill is just at the bottom of the photo), past the pool sun deck (the concrete above the window sill), ignore the construction materials covering future landscaping, and you're looking a the view from the kitchen window.
End of the tour - looking out of the front gate, ready to leave the villa. Turn right to go slightly downhill to the spa.
Or turn left and head back to the hotel.
So................................................................. Have you made your reservations yet? http://www.bhanuswariubud.com/
Update on Spa
Saturday, February 18, 2006
Perspective on Terrorism and Security
I've heard many questions and comments about security in Bali, so I have decided to both share my own experience (all good) and some statistics.
I fully understand people being concerned about traveling to a location where there has been terrorist activity. I understand the heightened concerns, and I appreciate that TSA (the USA Transportation Security Administration) is working with Bali. And I really feel for Australians, Balinese, and others who lost loved ones in the Kuta bombing.
I have been flying in and out of the Bali international airport since the summer of 1995, almost 11 years. The first time, I came about a week after a travel warning because of the “political instability” in Indonesia, and a few days after a student protest demonstration closed down the runways at the airport.
I came in September 2004, after the first Kuta bomb (12-Oct-2002). Including that trip, I have been through that airport on 6 trips since then (so, since I’m in Bali right now, that means a total of 11 times through the airport in 18 months), including a departure only a few days before the Jimbaran Bay bomb (1-Oct-2005). In case the good news didn’t make it to the USA, the terrorists responsible have been caught.
I have also picked up and dropped off people many other times, and I've never had any problems.
Here are some statistics that may help put things into perspective.
The first Kuta, Bali bomb (12-Oct-2002) killed 202 people - yes, horrible!
Death rate for USA for Automobile accidents: 116 per day. (source: (http://www.wrongdiagnosis.com/a/
automobile_accidents_injury/deaths.htm ))
Every 2 days, more people die in USA auto accidents than died in the 2002 bombing.
The Jimbaran Bay, Bali bomb (1-Oct-2005) killed 26 people. A smaller number, but still horrible.
Autos caused 1,731 deaths in Australia in 1988 = 33 per week. (Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2002)
(source: (http://www.wrongdiagnosis.com/a/
automobile_accidents_injury/deaths.htm ))
Every week, more people die in Australian auto accidents than died in the 2005 bombing.
… More details and full text below….
Source: (http://www.vtpi.org/transitrisk.pdf)
“Transit risks tend to receive more attention than automobile risks. Because they are rare, incidents that kill or injure a few transit passengers often receive national or international media attention, while automobile crashes that kill a few people are so common they are considered local news, and injury accidents often receive no media coverage at all. Traffic accidents actually represents a much greater risk than terrorism (Adams, 2005):
On an average day nine people die and over 800 are injured in British road accidents. The 7 July London terrorist deaths represent about six days of normal traffic fatalities.
The 191 people killed 11th March 2004 by Madrid bombers were equivalent to about 12 or 13 days of normal traffic deaths in Spain.
During the 25 worst years of sectarian violence in Northern Ireland, twice as
many people died there in road accidents as were killed by terrorists.
In Israel, the annual road traffic death toll has been two or three times higher than civilian deaths by Palestinian terrorists during the violent years of 2000 through 2003.
The 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks killed about the same number of people as a typical month of U.S. traffic accidents. According to official reports, terrorists killed 25 Americans worldwide in 2002, 23 in 2003, and none in 2004, while about 42,000 Americans died in traffic accidents each of these years.
A study by Wilson and Thomson (2005) calculated that in 29 OECD countries for which suitable data were available, the annual average death rate from road injuries was approximately 390 times that from international terrorism. The ratio road to terrorism deaths averaged over 10 years was lowest for the United States at 142 times. In 2001, U.S. road deaths were equal to those from a September 11 attack every 26 days.
There are several reasons that people react particularly strongly to terrorist attacks (Adams, 2005). Such attacks are designed to be highly visible, producing intense media coverage. The fact that the harm they cause is intentional rather than accidental makes them particularly tragic and frustrating. And they raise fears that such attacks may become more frequent or severe, so risks may increase in the future. For these reasons, it is unsurprising that transit terrorism tends to instill more fear than other risks that are actually much greater overall. That is exactly what terrorists intend.”
Deaths from Automobile accidents injury
source: (http://www.wrongdiagnosis.com/a/
automobile_accidents_injury/deaths.htm)
Death rate extrapolations for USA for Automobile accidents injury: 42,443 per year, 3,536 per month, 816 per week, 116 per day, 4 per hour, 0 per minute, 0 per second.
Death statistics for Automobile accidents injury: The following are statistics from various sources about deaths and Automobile accidents injury:
· Caused 1,224 male deaths in Australia in 1988 (Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2002)
· Caused 507 female deaths in Australia in 1988 (Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2002)
· Caused 1,731 deaths in Australia in 1988 (Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2002)
TSA warning (http://www.tsa.gov/public/display?theme=44&content=090005198019608c):
TSA Finds Security at Bandara Ngurah Rai International Airport Does Not Meet International Standards
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY
Transportation Security Administration
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - December 23, 2005
...TSA representatives have been in Indonesia to help airport authorities bring Bandara Ngurah Rai International Airport up to international standards. The TSA representatives will continue to work with Indonesia and to assist local authorities with correcting security deficiencies at the airport as quickly as possible.
U.S. and foreign air carriers that fly directly between the United States and Indonesia are temporarily providing additional security measures that counter the deficiencies identified at the airport. If proper precautions are carefully observed by both the air carriers and the airport, Homeland Security believes that it is possible to safely conduct air service operations to and from Bandara Ngurah Rai International Airport.
I fully understand people being concerned about traveling to a location where there has been terrorist activity. I understand the heightened concerns, and I appreciate that TSA (the USA Transportation Security Administration) is working with Bali. And I really feel for Australians, Balinese, and others who lost loved ones in the Kuta bombing.
I have been flying in and out of the Bali international airport since the summer of 1995, almost 11 years. The first time, I came about a week after a travel warning because of the “political instability” in Indonesia, and a few days after a student protest demonstration closed down the runways at the airport.
I came in September 2004, after the first Kuta bomb (12-Oct-2002). Including that trip, I have been through that airport on 6 trips since then (so, since I’m in Bali right now, that means a total of 11 times through the airport in 18 months), including a departure only a few days before the Jimbaran Bay bomb (1-Oct-2005). In case the good news didn’t make it to the USA, the terrorists responsible have been caught.
I have also picked up and dropped off people many other times, and I've never had any problems.
Here are some statistics that may help put things into perspective.
The first Kuta, Bali bomb (12-Oct-2002) killed 202 people - yes, horrible!
Death rate for USA for Automobile accidents: 116 per day. (source: (http://www.wrongdiagnosis.com/a/
automobile_accidents_injury/deaths.htm ))
Every 2 days, more people die in USA auto accidents than died in the 2002 bombing.
The Jimbaran Bay, Bali bomb (1-Oct-2005) killed 26 people. A smaller number, but still horrible.
Autos caused 1,731 deaths in Australia in 1988 = 33 per week. (Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2002)
(source: (http://www.wrongdiagnosis.com/a/
automobile_accidents_injury/deaths.htm ))
Every week, more people die in Australian auto accidents than died in the 2005 bombing.
… More details and full text below….
Source: (http://www.vtpi.org/transitrisk.pdf)
“Transit risks tend to receive more attention than automobile risks. Because they are rare, incidents that kill or injure a few transit passengers often receive national or international media attention, while automobile crashes that kill a few people are so common they are considered local news, and injury accidents often receive no media coverage at all. Traffic accidents actually represents a much greater risk than terrorism (Adams, 2005):
On an average day nine people die and over 800 are injured in British road accidents. The 7 July London terrorist deaths represent about six days of normal traffic fatalities.
The 191 people killed 11th March 2004 by Madrid bombers were equivalent to about 12 or 13 days of normal traffic deaths in Spain.
During the 25 worst years of sectarian violence in Northern Ireland, twice as
many people died there in road accidents as were killed by terrorists.
In Israel, the annual road traffic death toll has been two or three times higher than civilian deaths by Palestinian terrorists during the violent years of 2000 through 2003.
The 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks killed about the same number of people as a typical month of U.S. traffic accidents. According to official reports, terrorists killed 25 Americans worldwide in 2002, 23 in 2003, and none in 2004, while about 42,000 Americans died in traffic accidents each of these years.
A study by Wilson and Thomson (2005) calculated that in 29 OECD countries for which suitable data were available, the annual average death rate from road injuries was approximately 390 times that from international terrorism. The ratio road to terrorism deaths averaged over 10 years was lowest for the United States at 142 times. In 2001, U.S. road deaths were equal to those from a September 11 attack every 26 days.
There are several reasons that people react particularly strongly to terrorist attacks (Adams, 2005). Such attacks are designed to be highly visible, producing intense media coverage. The fact that the harm they cause is intentional rather than accidental makes them particularly tragic and frustrating. And they raise fears that such attacks may become more frequent or severe, so risks may increase in the future. For these reasons, it is unsurprising that transit terrorism tends to instill more fear than other risks that are actually much greater overall. That is exactly what terrorists intend.”
Deaths from Automobile accidents injury
source: (http://www.wrongdiagnosis.com/a/
automobile_accidents_injury/deaths.htm)
Death rate extrapolations for USA for Automobile accidents injury: 42,443 per year, 3,536 per month, 816 per week, 116 per day, 4 per hour, 0 per minute, 0 per second.
Death statistics for Automobile accidents injury: The following are statistics from various sources about deaths and Automobile accidents injury:
· Caused 1,224 male deaths in Australia in 1988 (Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2002)
· Caused 507 female deaths in Australia in 1988 (Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2002)
· Caused 1,731 deaths in Australia in 1988 (Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2002)
TSA warning (http://www.tsa.gov/public/display?theme=44&content=090005198019608c):
TSA Finds Security at Bandara Ngurah Rai International Airport Does Not Meet International Standards
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY
Transportation Security Administration
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - December 23, 2005
...TSA representatives have been in Indonesia to help airport authorities bring Bandara Ngurah Rai International Airport up to international standards. The TSA representatives will continue to work with Indonesia and to assist local authorities with correcting security deficiencies at the airport as quickly as possible.
U.S. and foreign air carriers that fly directly between the United States and Indonesia are temporarily providing additional security measures that counter the deficiencies identified at the airport. If proper precautions are carefully observed by both the air carriers and the airport, Homeland Security believes that it is possible to safely conduct air service operations to and from Bandara Ngurah Rai International Airport.
Wednesday, February 15, 2006
Bali's Full Moon
Part of the Bali Hindu tradition includes a prayer ceremony with every full moon. The ceremony starts shortly after sunset. This past full moon was the first time I participated. In honor of the occasion, I took photos the next two nights.
On the first night, she (the moon) was playing hide-and-seek with me.
On the second night, I set up my tripod by the pool. And she was much more cooperative!
And I had fun trying different settings on my camera... "Twilight" and "Candlelight" result in different colors!
On the first night, she (the moon) was playing hide-and-seek with me.
On the second night, I set up my tripod by the pool. And she was much more cooperative!
And I had fun trying different settings on my camera... "Twilight" and "Candlelight" result in different colors!
Thursday, February 09, 2006
My "room-mates"
Tuesday, February 07, 2006
Front Entrance, Spa, and Landscape
As mentioned in the previous post, they continue to add landscaping - and, thanks to the season and Ubud climate, it continues to grow in rapidly.
Here's a new-and-improved view of the front entrance.
Construction has begun on the Spa. Again, please use your imagination. You have just entered the room for your massage, and this is the view you see!
Mt. Agung decided to be completely visible this morning, so I took a new photo.
And here are some of our ""neighbors", relaxing, enjoying the view, or just playing.
Here's a new-and-improved view of the front entrance.
Construction has begun on the Spa. Again, please use your imagination. You have just entered the room for your massage, and this is the view you see!
Mt. Agung decided to be completely visible this morning, so I took a new photo.
And here are some of our ""neighbors", relaxing, enjoying the view, or just playing.
Improved Landscaping, Villa Roof, and more
The hotel staff have been doing more planting.
And the architects added a fountain to the pool (in case you missed it in the day-time shot).
As you can see, I''m trying out night-time photography.
The villa is getting a roof! Here from the inside...
From the outside - the skeleton...
The tiles are going on... Flat ones on the front and back, curved on the sides.
This one requires some imagination... The structure on the right is the master bedroom, the opening will be full-length windows and glass doors. In the middle is the hole that will become the private pool. So, imagine that both the building and the pool are complete. You are now standing in the living room, looking out at the pool. It has an infinity edge that drops off into those beautiful trees!
And the architects added a fountain to the pool (in case you missed it in the day-time shot).
As you can see, I''m trying out night-time photography.
The villa is getting a roof! Here from the inside...
From the outside - the skeleton...
The tiles are going on... Flat ones on the front and back, curved on the sides.
This one requires some imagination... The structure on the right is the master bedroom, the opening will be full-length windows and glass doors. In the middle is the hole that will become the private pool. So, imagine that both the building and the pool are complete. You are now standing in the living room, looking out at the pool. It has an infinity edge that drops off into those beautiful trees!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)