Everyday life, Bali
Morning walk in Ubud, near the place we are renting until our house in Kuwum is finished in two or three months.
Early morning view from our terrace has an autumn vibe.
Weather is unusually rainy and “cold”. It is 22 C in the morning and no more than 28 C by day here in Ubud.
Catching fish in low tide. near Segara beach
Boat with an eye.
Morning coffee
Few tourists came back. But it is still quite empty.
These tiles inspired us to look in to them one more time.
In Denpasar they cost 34 euros per square meter. They are hand made and 2 cm thick.
But we found a place where they make them...
...and we can get them for half the price.
How will it look? (Render of a house we bought in Kuwum and is currently under construction)
They can make them in any color. Which means it is on us to decide:
Here is a photoshop of ideas I had before sleep yesterday.
They can also be made in any pattern, The rule is: pattern is mirrored 8 times to make the whole shape. In this way everything is made with only one tile. I made a grasshopper definition to automate the process.
So many options to choose from.
The typical patterns are in classical European style.
But can we make them fit in to tropical enviroment?
...or traditional Bali pattern...
So many posibilities...
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Dragon fruit. Looks very cool, tastes a bit like beetroot, not my favorite.
Little plates, not for humans, but for offering to Gods.
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Quick catch up: For those who do not know the whole story: We moved to Bali for good (with no set return date). We are currently renting a place in Ubud a relatively small village north of main city Denpasar) 300 meters above sea level. It is a culture center for arts and crafts. Climate here is much more agreeable. We bought a house in Kuwum, 200 meters above sea level. It has a similar climate to Ubud, but it is more remote and much, much cheaper (original price was 15.000 euros, with a bit of extra land, bigger windows and few other things we added, we will pay about 20.000 euros)
Size of Bali compared to Slovenia. If Denpasar would have the same location as Ljubljana, the volcanoes (red circles) would be where the Alps are. Our house in Kuwum is as far as “Visoko” near Kranj. Ubud is where “Kamniška bistrica” is. Going from our house to Ubud takes a long time because there is no good connection: kind of like going from Visoko to Kamniška bistrica. What is north of volcanoes is as far in my mind as Austria is: I never even been on that side of Bali. Going to the seaside from our house is 45 minutes. The distance from Visoko to Škofja loka. One advantage of our house over Ubud: we will not have traffic jams, because there are no festivals or tourist events there. It is a plus and minus… We are in the heart of Bali. It takes about 45 minutes to get anywhere that is important (main city, famous beach, volcano, culture centers...) in different directions.
Bali has 3x less Area then Slovenia and has 2.5x more people. 5 million Bali vs. 2 million Slovenia. This makes it 3x2.5= 7.5x denser. Most of its population is in the Denpasar area which is a much bigger city then Ljubljana. Ljubljana has 350.000 people. Denpasar strictly speaking has 800.000, but the area around it has 2.400.000 people. South of Denpasar is half island about twice the size of “Ljubljansko barje”
West of Bali is Java, that one is the size of Italy. Only the leg of Italy, no boot or north Alp part. It is turned east west, not north south. Its population is 150 million people, compared with Italy's 60 million.
Indonesia has 20% of the land area of Europe and 50% of its population. East to West dimensions are comparable. From west Sumatra to east Papua it is like from Portugal to east of Moscow.
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Another morning walk. All within 15 minutes from our place.
I used a lot of mosquito repelant.
And long pants to protect the legs.
And it is all worth it.
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