CANDI
DASA
A
Get-Away Seaside Resort
Candi
Dasa is a new but rapidly growing beach resort located
on the black sand coast of Karangasem Regency. It is the
perfect base for explorations of the area, as well as
a quieter alternative to the southern tourist centers.
Following
the main road from 10ungkung, you cross the border into
Karangasem shortly after the village of Kusamba and the
well known temple of Goa Lawah. The road continues eastward
through coconut groves for several kms before reaching
a turn-off. To the right is a road leading to Padangbai,
a major harbor for ships to Lombok and points east, as
well as for smaller boats to Nusa Penida. It is worth
the 2 km detour to see the picturesque, semi-circular
hills surrounding a sparkling blue bay.
The
village itself has several small hotels and restaurants.
A famous temple, Pura Silayukti, where the Buddhist sage
Mpu Kuturan is said to have lived in the 11th century,
is also located here. The temple's anniversary is on Wednesday-Tliwon
of the week Pahang (consult a Balinese calendar)
Back
on the main road, one arrives at the village of Manggis
a few kins to the east. There is a lovely path from here
leading up to nearby Putung in the hills overlooking the
coast. The path runs through woods and gardens and reaches
Putung after a distance of some 5 kms, where one has a
splendid view across the sea to the nearby islands.
Another
possible side trip is from Manggis east along a small
road through the isolated villages of Ngis and Selumbung.
The road finally rejoins the main road in Sengkidu shortly
before Candi Dasa. It is also possible to continue from
Ngis on to Tenganan.
Candi
Dasa town
Continuing
east another 7 km, past the villages of Ulakan and Sengkidu,
the main road enters Candi Dasa just after the Tengenan
turn-off. The name Candi Dasa was originally applied just
to two small temples, one for Siwa and the other for Hariti,
that overlook a beautiful palm-fringed lagoon by the beach.
Hariti is mainly worshipped by childless parents who pray
for children.
Toward
the end of the 1970s the first bungalows appeared by the
beach here. From 1982 onwards a building frenzy set in,
and is still continuing so that new hotels, shops and
restaurants seem to open almost weekly. As a result, Candidasa
is now encroaching on the l3uitan area to the west - site
of several luxurious bungalow-hotels, which specialize
in snorkeling and diving trips.
Candidasa
today is a bustling seaside resort with the full range
of hotels, home stays, disco-bars, moneychangers, shops
and restaurants. How long the development will continue
is an open question, as the beach is eroding quickly and
the once-spectacular view across the sacred lagoon to
the beach is now blocked by two-story bungalows.
Dance
and music performances for visitors are being developed,
but these do not seem to be of high quality. The main
attraction of the area is as a base from which to visit
the neighboring village of Tenganan, some 5 kms away.
Swimming is only more or less possible at high tide. Despite
these disadvantages, Candidasa enjoys cool breezes and
is a good resting point for trips to the east and north.
Bugbug
and environs
Four
kms to the northeast of Candidasa lays Bugbug, a sizeable
rice-growing and fishing village that is the administrative
center for the sub-district. Along the way, the road climbs
the unexpectedly steep Gumang Hill. 'Mere is a beautiful
panorama from the top of the sea, the Buhu River, rice
fields and Bugbug, with the mountains of Lempuyang and
Seraya in the distance. On a very clear day one can see
Mt Rinjani on Lombok from here.
Bugbug
and the surrounding villages are quite old-fashioned.
Apart from the official village head, there is a council
of elders responsible for all religious affairs. The elders
are not elected, but enter the council on the basis of
seniority. Another atypical feature of these villages
is communal land tenure, and the presence of associations
for unmarried boys and girls which have to fulfill duties
in the context of village rituals.
Two
rituals are especially important. The first takes place
around the full moon of the first Balinese month (between
mid-June and Mid-July). This ritual worship of the village
gods is carried out in the central temple (Pura desa),
and lasts for several days. Most spectacular are the dances
by unmarried boys (abuang taruna) clad in costumes of
White and gold-threaded cloth, with headdresses and keris,
the traditional weapon.
After
the dance there follows the so-called daratan in which
older men in trance carrying keris approach the main shrine
of the temple, to the accompaniment of special music.
Three orchestras play simultaneously: the sacred selunding
(iron met allophones), the gong desa with drums and cymbals,
and a gambang ensemble which has bamboo xylophones and
bronze met allophones.
During
the same full moon period there are similar rituals in
other nearby villages like Asak and Perasi. Perasi lies
just northeast of Bugbug on the main road, and from its
eastern end there is a nice walk through the hills to
the beach. Swimming here is hazardous, since the beach
is not protected by a reef.
A second
major ritual occurs in Bugbug every two years on the full
moon of the fourth month (around October). Four villages
(Bugbug, Jasi, Bebandem and Ngis) participate in a ritual
"war of the gods," which is in fact the enactment
of an old legend:
The
god of Bugbug had three daughters and one son. One of
the daughters was to marry the god of Bebandem. But she
eloped with the god of Jasi. To appease the former, the
god of Bugbug gave his second daughter and son to him,
and the third daughter was married off to the god of Ngis.
The war is to resolve the dispute, and the ritual battle
takes place near the temple on top of Gumang H