Uluwatu Temple.
Pura Uluwatu is located on the cliff top close to the famous surf break on the SW of the Bukit peninsula. Empu Kuturan, a Javanese Hindu priest who built the tiered meru, founded the temple in the 10th century and a shrine here as well as at other key locations longs the Balinese coast. In the 15th Century the great pilgrim priest Dhang Hyang Dwijendra, who established the present form of Hindu-Dharma religion, chose Pura Uluwatu as his last earthly abode: history records that Dwijendra achieved moksa (oneness with the godhead, in a flash of blazing light) while meditating at Uluwatu. The temple is regarded, by Brahman's island wide, as his holy 'tomb'. Legend also tells us that Dwijendra was the architect of the beautiful temple, as well as many other major temples on Bali, Lombok and Sumbawa. In the 17th century Niratha also from Java came to Bali and built temples, adding to Uluwatu.
Behind the main pagoda of Pura Uluwatu's small inner sanctum, a limestone statue of a Brahman priest surveys the Indian Ocean-it is said the statue represents the founding priest Dwijendra. Another shrine within the complex represents the boat on which Dwijendra traveled from, then, Hindu Java. According to legend he arrived at Pura Peti Tenget, north of Kuta.
Uluwatu Beach is known for its surf and, in nearby hostelries, its full moon rage parties. It rages at the temple too but in an orderly way, thanks to the royal house of Puri Agung Jero Kuta, Denpasar, who are the temple's hereditary pangemong (custodians). Hundreds of nobles from this family, and many 'devotees' (pengayah) and village pemangku priests from nearby hamlets, ensure that every seven months (on Anggar Kasih Medangsya by the Wuku Calendar, to be exact) the festival is run efficiently, and most elegantly. The palace is proud of its ancestral role: it manages the awesome logistics with fitting dignity.
Being a popular surfing spot for the very experienced, Uluwatu offers a wonderful vantage point to view a spectacular sunset. Warungs or small restaurants perched on the cliff offer a comfortable spot to survey the vast Indian Ocean beyond and below the 100-meter-high cliffs with panorama on three sides. Monkeys inhabit the temple and cliff face hoping for a banana or some peanuts from the visitors.
Tour Itinerary:
- Pick up at the hotel at 13.00 pm - 13.30 pm
- Visit Uluwatu Temple
- Back to hotel about 19.00 pm
Tour to visit Beratan Lake, Ulun Danu Temple, Fruit and Vegetable Traditional Market, Taman Ayun Temple
Tour to visit Mother Temple of Bali, Kerta Gosa and Bukit Jambul with Rice Field Scenery
Tour to visit Denpasar Traditional Market, Jagatnata Temple, Bali Museum, and Bajra Sandhi Monument
East Bali tour to visit Goa Lawah Temple, Taman Sukasada, Tirta Gangga, and Tenganan Village
Tour to visit Taman Ayun Temple, Jatiluwih Rice Terrace, Batukaru Temple, and Tabanan Hot Water
Visit Barong Dance, Rice Terraces, Holy Spring temple, Kintamani, Elephant Cave Temple, Ubud market and monkey forest
Half day tour to visit Sangeh Monkey Forest, Taman Ayun Temple, and sunset at Tanah Lot Temple
To visit Taman Ayun Temple, Pacung Rice Field, Ulun Danu Temple, Lake Buyan and Tamblingan, Dolphins Watching at Lovina Beach, Kintamani Village, and Elephant Cave.
Tour to visit Tamblingan Lake, Gitgit Waterfall, Lovina Beach, Hot Water Banjar and Blimbing Rice Terrace
Places to visit :Tegalalang, Ubud Monkey Forest, Painting Museum, Ubud Palace, Ubud Art Market
Tour to visit Subak Museum, Soka Beach, Rambut Siwi Temple and Bali West National Park