The Best of Uluwatu

Bukit Cafe Tomato Egg Bake and Bacon

Bukit Cafe Tomato Egg Bake and Bacon

Single Fin Sundays

Single Fin Sundays

Single Fin

Single Fin

Fresh juice at the Corner Cafe

Fresh juice at the Corner Cafe

Bukit Cafe Breakfast Burrito 

Bukit Cafe Breakfast Burrito 

Suka

Suka

After two months in our Uluwatu nook, we're sad to leave but feel accustomed to life in Southern Bali and ready to release our "Best of Uluwatu" list to link you with some of our favorites.  Many of these places you'll need; some of them, you'll want; others you'll wonder how you lived without.  We agree on most, but for a few categories you'll see our personal thoughts...overall, you'll can't go wrong in Uluwatu.  

The best motorbike rental company...

  • Ulu's Family, on the right as you turn off towards Single Fin
  • Safe bikes, deals for renting for longer periods of time, personable service

The best place to buy, rent, or customize a surf board...

  • White Monkey Surf Shop

The best nightlife...

  • Single Fin, Sunday Nights
  • You have to get there early to get a table, but even if you can't get one you'll enjoy an epic sunset, bird's eye view of awesome surf, great DJs, and people from all over the world

The best driver...

  • Mario, WhatsApp +62 896-9832-4488
  • Kind, helpful, and so reliable

The best activity coordinator...

  • Agung, WhatsApp +62 896-8393-0428
  • Organized Mt. Batur, secret waterfalls, Gili transport and beyond
  • We met him back in February and he's a gem

The best laundry...

  • Padang Padang Laundry, across from Buddha Soul; this small place accounts for every item when you drop it off, giving you a copy of that record that you bring back for pickup
  • Laundry smells great and is nicely folded, but they get busy and often need two full days

The best dive company...

  • Bali International Diving Professionals
  • Avandy Djunaidi is the Yoda of diving; don't learn anywhere else. (Note: He's not technically in Uluwatu, but he'll arrange transport and he knows underwater Bali better than anyone else.)

The best daytime beach...

  • If it's low tide, get down to Single Fin and head left though the caves.
  • You'll find a secret beach with shipwreck ruins and a lot of privacy

The best sunset...

  • Balangan Beach Sunset Point
  • Use maps.me to get here through the Bingin Beach entrance; the black sands are worth it

The best place to get a book...

  • Yeye's is an Uluwatu staple- great food, beautiful atmosphere, awesome gift shop, and huge selection of books
  • Trade two you've read for one that you want

The best breakfast...

  • Bukit Cafe- anything on the menu
  • Buddha Soul- the chocolate smoothie bowl, and all of their other healthy options, will keep you coming back 
    • Be sure to try Om Burger for lunch (same owner, epic black rice buns)
  • Corner Cafe- There are two, and they're both great.  Cash only, but great prices.

Best juices and smoothies

  • Yoga Searcher- fresh, healthy, organic (you can do yoga in the back and even book villas there)

The best Italian food...

  • La Baracca is a newcomer to the Uluwatu scene, but the owners are from Rome and their food is exceptional (Jay's Pick)
    • Beautiful nighttime ambiance and personable service
  • Rolling Fork is one of our favorite places to enjoy a long, slow, blogging dinner (Chantal's pick)
    • Homemade pasta is a must, and the lava cake will make you wish you started with dessert

The best milkshake...

  • Suka Espresso has pretty much the best EVERYTHING
  • Their Unicorn Milkshake is unbelievable 
    • This isn't about a milkshake, but the Lemme Wrap (chicken wrap) will change your life.

 

Open Waters

If you ever come to Bali and want to get Scuba Certified, you have to find Avandy Djunaidi: the man, the myth, the legend.  He owns BIDP (Bali International Dive Professionals) and has been diving since 1981.  He’s like underwater Yoda, calm but meticulous in his instruction.  He understands the technique, but also the intricate ecosystems and marine life.  And everywhere we went, he was recognized and adored.  We struck gold in having our first scuba experience with him.

We got open water certified at Tulamben, a WW2 wreck of the Liberty.  The story goes that it was a cargo ship, but inside sources revealed that it was actually loaded with guns and quickly cleared when hit by a Japanese submarine.  Now, it’s covered in amazing varieties of coral and sealife.  The clarity is exceptional and it’s surreal to 1. breath under water 2. explore the wreckage and how much life has grown around it.  As with the shipwreck on the beach near Single Fin, it’s a testament that life goes on and heals around all our scars.

Tanks at Tulamben shoreline

Tanks at Tulamben shoreline

One of the hardest things about scuba diving is achieving buoyancy, essentially finding a state of suspension at any depth, almost like an astronaut in the water.  The goal is to use your lungs and air intake to monitor your level, exhaling to go deeper and being able to relax, suspended, without finning in any direction.  As you can imagine, this takes a lot of patience and a lot of practice to learn your body and air intake needs.  I am not a very patient person, and my first dive was incredibly frustrating.  Jay naturally mastered it, no surprise to anyone who knows his natural athletic ability, but it finally clicked for me on the second dive.

There’s a lag time- when you inhale deeply, it takes a second or two for your body to rise.  A few deep exhales, and some patience, and your body will drop.  Underwater, time is magnified and, at first, I didn’t trust those few seconds or give my body time to adjust- I went straight for the quick fix solution, my BC inflatable vest, to get me where I wanted to be.

The metaphor was glaring: life takes time to settle and instant gratification changes may be the norm in our society, but they don’t push us to understand ourselves and grow our own resourcefulness and resiliency. So often, we make a choice in life and watch expectantly for life to quickly make the adjustment (hopefully in our favor) but we have no patience for the lag time.  We have no patience for the long-term plan.  

It’s another lesson in being present.  Breathing in and breathing out, but also taking in what’s around us.  Seeing that remarkable polka dot fish to our right, the brain coral to our left, and not worrying about much else beyond that moment.  We are learning to settle into life, and take it just as it is: with all of its beauty and all of its shipwrecks.

Open Water Certified!

Open Water Certified!