Seasonal Detail :
| |
Jan/Feb |
Mar/Apr |
May/Jun |
Jul/Aug |
Sep/Oct |
Nov/Dec |
| Swell consistency |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Typical Swell Size |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Water Temperature |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
| Equipment |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Air Temperature |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
Regional Information :
Bali
Bali is an Indonesian island located at
8.25′23″S, 115.14′55″ECoordinates: 8.25′23″S, 115.14′55″E, the western most of
the Lesser Sunda Islands, lying between Java to the west and Lombok to the east.
It is one of the country's 33 provinces with the provincial capital at Denpasar
towards the south of the island. The island is home to the vast majority of
Indonesia's small Hindu minority. It is also the largest tourist destination in
the country and is renowned for its highly developed arts, including dance,
sculpture, painting, leather, metalworking and music.
History:
Bali has been inhabited since early prehistoric
times firstly by descendants of a prehistoric race who migrated through mainland
Asia to the Indonesian archipelago, thought to have first settled in Bali around
3000 BC. Stone tools dating from this time have been found near
the village of Cekik in the island's west.
Balinese culture was strongly influenced by Indian, and particularly Sanskrit,
culture, in a process beginning around the 1st century AD. The name Balidwipa
has been discovered from various inscriptions, including the Blanjong charter
issued by Sri Kesari Warmadewa in 913 AD and mentioning Walidwipa. It was during
this time that the complex irrigation system subak was developed to grow rice.
Some religious and cultural traditions still in existence today can be traced
back to this period. The Hindu Majapahit Empire (1293–1520 AD) on eastern Java
founded a Balinese colony in 1343. When the empire declined, there was an exodus
of intellectuals, artists, priests and musicians from Java to Bali in the 15th
century.
The First European contact with Bali is thought to have been when Dutch explorer
Cornelis de Houtman arrived in 1597, though a Portuguese ship had foundered off
the Bukit Peninsula as early as 1585. Dutch rule over Bali came
later, was more aggressively fought for, and was never as well established as in
other parts of Indonesia such as Java and Maluku.
In the 1840s, a presence in Bali was established, first in the island's north,
by playing various distrustful Balinese realms against each other. The Dutch
mounted large naval and ground assaults first against the Sanur region and then
Denpasar. The Balinese were hopelessly overwhelmed in number and armament, but
rather than face the humiliation of surrender, they mounted a final defensive
but suicidal assault, or puputan. Despite Dutch demands for surrender, an
estimated 4,000 Balinese marched to their death against the invaders. Afterwards
the Dutch governors were able to exercise little influence over the island, and
local control over religion and culture generally remained intact.
Japan occupied Bali during World War II during which time a Balinese military
officer, Gusti Ngurah Rai, formed a Balinese 'freedom army'. Following Japan's
Pacific surrender in August 1945, the Dutch promptly returned to Indonesia,
including Bali, immediately to reinstate their pre-war colonial administration.
This was resisted by the Balinese rebels now using Japanese weapons.
On 20 November 1946, the Battle of Marga was fought in Tabanan in central Bali.
Colonel I Gusti Ngurah Rai, 29 years old, finally rallied his forces in east
Bali at Marga Rana, where they made a suicide attack on the heavily armed Dutch.
The Balinese battalion was entirely wiped out, breaking the last thread of
Balinese military resistance. In 1946 the Dutch constituted Bali as one of the
13 administrative districts of the newly-proclaimed Republic of East Indonesia,
a rival state to the Republic of Indonesia which was proclaimed and headed by
Sukarno and Hatta. Bali was included in the "Republic of the United States of
Indonesia" when the Netherlands recognised Indonesian independence on Dec. 29,
1949. In 1950 Bali officially renounced the Dutch union and legally became a
province within the Republic of Indonesia.
The 1963 eruption of Mount Agung killed thousands, created economic havoc and
forced many displaced Balinese to be transmigrated to other parts of Indonesia.
In 1965, after a failed coup d'etat in Jakarta against the national government
of Indonesia, Bali, along with other regions of Indonesia most notably Java, was
the scene of widespread killings of (often falsely-accused) members and
sympathizers of the Communist Party of Indonesia (PKI) by right-wing General
Suharto-sponsored militias. Possibly more than 100,000 Balinese were killed
although the exact numbers are unknown to date and the events remain legally
undisclosed. Many unmarked but well known mass graves of victims are located
around the island.
On October 12, 2002, a car bomb attack in the tourist resort of Kuta killed 202
people, largely foreign tourists and injured a further 209. Further bombings
occurred three years later in Kuta and nearby Jimbaran Bay.
Geography:
Bali lies 3.2 km east of Java and approximately 8 degrees south of the equator.
East to west, the island is approximately 153 km wide and 112 km north to south
(95 by 69 miles, respectively), with a surface area of 5,632 km˛. The highest
point is Mount Agung at 3,142 m (10,308 feet) high, an active volcano that last
erupted in March 1963. Mountains cover centre to the eastern side, with Mount
Agung the easternmost peak. Mount Batur (1,717 m) is also still active. About
30,000 years ago it experienced a catastrophic eruption — one of the largest
known volcanic events on Earth.
In the south the land descends to form an alluvial plain, watered by shallow
rivers, drier in the dry season and overflowing during periods of heavy rain.
The principal cities are the northern port of Singaraja, the former colonial
capital of Bali, and the present provincial capital and largest city, Denpasar,
near the southern coast. The town of Ubud (north of Denpasar), with its art
market, museums and galleries, is arguably the cultural center of Bali.
There are major coastal roads and roads that cross the island mainly
north-south. Due to the mountainous terrain in the island's center, the roads
tend to follow the crests of the ridges across the mountains. There are no
railway lines.
The island is surrounded by coral reefs. Beaches in the south tend to have white
sand while those in the north and west black sand. The beach town of Padangbai
in the south east has both: the main beach and the secret beach have white sand
and the south beach and the blue lagoon have much darker sand. Pasut Beach, near
Ho River and Pura Segara, is a quiet beach 14 km southwest of Tabanan. The Ho
River is navigable by small sampan. Black sand beaches between Pasut and
Klatingdukuh are being developed for tourism, but apart from the seaside temple
of Tanah Lot, this is not yet a tourist area.
To the east, the Lombok Strait that separates Bali from Lombok marks the
biogeographical division between the fauna of the Indomalayan ecozone and the
distinctly different fauna of Australasia that is known as the Wallace Line, for
Alfred Russel Wallace, who first remarked upon the distinction between these two
major biomes. When sea levels dropped during the Pleistocene ice age, Bali was
connected to Java and Sumatra and to the mainland of Asia and shared the Asian
fauna, but the deep water of the Lombok Strait continued to keep Lombok and the
Lesser Sunda archipelago isolated.
(source wikipedia)