Laze on the beach and watch the
sky turn red, yellow, and orange as the sun sinks
behind the towering volcanoes of Java, which appear
on the horizon rising purple from the ocean. At
night fishing fleets head out in their 'jukung',
luring fish into nets with kerosene pressure lanterns
swaying and glowing yellow all along the waterfront.
You can join them for a two- or three-hour late
afternoon trip. Or hire a freelancer and go out
on a sailing excursion, with sailor.
The bay is great for swimming. Lovina's warm sea
laps lazily at the gray-sand shore during the dry
season, quite tame compared to the volatile southern
coasts. Although a little dirty, the wide expanses
of sand are good for sunning (especially at Kalibukbuk),
and beach masseurs are available.
For a reef so close to the beach, the snorkeling,
diving, and boat fishing are above average. The
docile sea and the shallow lagoon make this coast
ideal for beginners and young divers to safely explore
the specialized marine communities of plant and
animals, which live in the intertidal zone.
You don't need to venture far for good snorkeling,
but the best spots are two to three km from shore
where the sea is shallow. The best dive sites lie
closer to Singaraja, where the reef juts farther
out from the beach. You can see fascinating reef
life right from the boat just by sticking your head
underwater.
When snorkeling you'll feel as if you're swimming
inside an aquarium with moray eels, tropical fish,
and pastel corals. As the offshore water is over
your head, use the boat as your island. Wear sneakers,
and watch out for the sharp coral, sea urchins,
and catfish-like fish with poisonous spines. Get
used to wearing your mask in shallow water before
venturing out deeper waters. Start early before
the water gets cloudy.
The sand is so dark it can be difficult to see
the bottom. In February or March no snorkeling or
dolphin trips are offered due to heavy rain and
dirty water. The skippers wait on the beach for
customers. They may provide snorkeling gear. You
can rent 'perahu' from the hotels, or simply swim
out to the reef.
An experience with mixed reviews is 'Breakfast
with the Dolphins'. It's easy to buy a ticket the
day before from boys on the beach. The length of
the tour varying from 2.5 to three hours, depending
on season, boat, captain, and luck. Determine in
advance how many hours you're going to spend snorkeling
versus hours spent dolphin-chasing.
If you don't, you may end up having to bargain
on the boat, paying an additional charge to see
dolphins. When you buy your ticket, give the vendor
your room number and someone will wake you with
a knock on your door 15 minutes before the predawn
departure for the 30- to 60-minute trip to dolphin
territory (one to two km).
Dolphin-watching is very competitive, with dozens
of boats going out at dawn. Most of the motorized
boats can fit four to six people. Big wooden outriggers
can carry up to seven people and are less likely
to pitch and roll than smaller craft. If you're
lucky (about 75% of the time) for a few miraculous
moments your boat will be surrounded by hundreds
of leaping, flipping, blowing dolphins.
Sometimes you find yourself in the midst of 500
or even 1000 dolphins. Watch for different species,
particularly the large, slow swimmers that can weigh
up to a ton. In any event you'll get a boat ride,
tea and 'pisang goreng' breakfast, and snorkeling
on the return trip. Don't let the boatman go in
before the agreed upon time.
A good place to obtain diving information and arrange
trips is Spice Dive (tel./fax 62362-23305) which
has an office in Arya's restaurant in Kalibukbuk.
Staff is conscientious, honest, experienced, and
properly qualified.
Scuba (PADI) certification courses, at all levels,
are also offered. Baruna (tel. 62362-23775), on
the main road in Kalibukbuk, rents snorkeling gear
by the hour, offers surf canoes, and sponsors cruises
to see dolphins, snorkeling trips and Sunset Cruises,
but no courses. Make reservations at your hotel.
Actually, Lovina Beach was the first seaside resort
to appear in the mid-70s, taking its name from a
restaurant that operated from 1953 to 1960 where
Permata Cottages is today. Anak Agung Panji Tisna,
the ruler of northern Bali, named this stretch of
coast after the English word 'love' in 1953. He
is buried today not far from the first hotel he
founded, Tasik Madu, 'Sea of Honey'. The few 'losmen'
that existed in the sleepy early 1970s were demolished
in a 1976 earthquake.
The resort began anew and during the 1980s, new
'losmen' and beach inns appeared. Lovina has since
become the generic term for a whole line of six
small villages and palm-fringed beaches that it
has, touristically speaking, devoured. From east
to west, these include: Pemaron, Tukadmungga, Anturan,
Kalibubuk strip, Kaliasem and Temukus.
The strip starts at about the six-km mark west
of Singaraja to about five km past Kaliasem. Kalibukbuk
has the highest concentration while the fishing
villages of Anturan and Temukus are less densely
packed with restaurants and accommodations and thus
are quieter.
There's a very helpful tourist office on the beach
side of the main Singaraja-Seririt road in Kalibukbuk.
Open Mon.-Thurs. 0700-1730, Friday 0700-1300, Saturday
0700-1730. A clinic lies south of the Lovina Beach
Hotel in Kaliasem. The tourist office can recommend
doctors. The police share the same building as the
tourist office.
Getting There
- On arriving from Kuta, the shuttle
bus lets passengers off at Perama Tourist Service
in Anturan, where passengers are taken to their
hotels free of charge. The Perama shuttle leaves
Kuta for Lovina at 0830 and 1600 (4.5 hours via
Ubud).
- Public 'bemo' from Denpasar's
Ubung Terminal arrive at the Banyuasri station.
From there hop on a 'bemo' to Lovina. Tell the
driver where you're staying and he'll drop you
off as close as possible to it.
- If coming from Amlapura, the
Isuzu bus arrives at Terminal Penarukan to the
east of Singaraja. From there get a 'bemo' through
Singaraja to Banyuasri Station on the western
edge of the city. From dawn to dusk 'bemo' travel
regularly from this station to Lovina on a road
lined with huge trees and emerald-green rice paddies.
- If coming from Surabaya on a
long-distance bus, ask the driver to let you off
along the highway at either Lovina or Kalibukbuk.
Getting Away
- Buses to Singaraja stop in front
of Arya's.
- To Gilimanuk or Bedugul take
a 'bemo'. There's no shuttle service.
- If you're heading to western
Bali or East Java, you don't have to go into Singaraja
to catch a bus. Buy tickets at Arya's or wherever
buses to Surabaya stop to pick up passengers.
- Shuttles run to Ubud, Denpasar's
Ubung Station, Sanur, Kuta or the airport. Shuttles
leave for Kuta at 0700 and 1300 (2.5 hours). For
four or five passengers, drivers offer service
direct to Candidasa or Padangbai via the east
coast. Or catch the shuttle to Kuta where you
transfer to another shuttle heading for Candidasa.
Kuta is the transit point for shuttles to Senggigi
or Mataram.
- Most hotels and homestays can
arrange tickets and provide pickup service.
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