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Anantara Uluwatu Resort and Spa

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Set on the secluded shores of Bali’s southern coast, on the aptly named Impossible Beach, with its wild waves, limestone cliffs, and secret caves, the Anantara Bali Uluwatu, Resort & Spa is an escapist’s dream. A masterpiece of modern design, the resort comprises of 1.7 hectares of unspoilt land sitting on the edge of a cliff amidst rugged natural beauty and commands sensational ocean views.

Sumptuous suites
Blending seamlessly into its environment, Anantara Uluwatu offers a range of suites each featuring chic minimalist design that frames the natural beauty of the surrounds and offers guests spectacular panoramic vistas of the cascading cliffs and sea. Ocean Suites seem to rise organically from the landscape, giving all of its one-bedroom suites sweeping Indian Ocean views. Even closer to the sea, the low-rise Ocean Front Suites command a prime position near the edge of the resort’s dramatic cliffs. In each suite, modern minimalist architecture serves to frame Bali’s natural beauty, with wide balconies and floor-to-ceiling glass windows. As well as contemporary interior design and a full range of modern amenities, guests have use of an iPod and dock with an iPad available for use in the library, broadband internet and plasma TV with international satellite and DVD.

Pool Villas
Inspired by the island’s beauty, Anantara’s Pool Villas have been created as a modern reinterpretation of a classic Balinese villa. Each two- or three-bedroom Pool Villa is designed to provide the ultimate modern indoor living space, featuring an abundance of natural materials reflecting the tropical surrounds. Inside, hi-tech treats include iPod docking stations, rainmaker shower, living area equipped with Bose hi-fi audio entertainment systems and open-air bath tubs set on the balconies.

The Penthouses
Located on the top floor of the resort’s main building, the Penthouses enjoy a setting at the summit of the hillside. Each of the two Penthouses offers sweeping views of the rolling seas below and its own private pool perched high above it all. The two-level duplex features a master bedroom and bath enclosed in floor-to-ceiling glass windows overlooking the glittering Indian Ocean below. Sliding glass doors reveal the master bath, which continues outdoors with its own soaking tub. A guest bedroom with en suite and richly appointed living area and kitchen complete the amenities on the main floor. Upstairs, space for relaxation continues with added living and lounging areas adjacent to the pool.

Discover some of Bali’s best restaurants
Wine and dine against the backdrop of the impressive Balinese sunset. The Rooftop Restaurant, Bar and Lounge is situated on the top floor of the resort’s main building and this all-day dining restaurant offers a wide range of cuisines served with breathtaking views of the Indian Ocean from the terrace. Start your day with an energising breakfast while you watch the landscape come to life. A separate menu is offered for a light, healthy lunch. Return in time for sundown and a magical dinner. Daily specials and theme dinners ensure that every meal is a new culinary experience.

The stylish Pool Side Restaurant and Bar offer the perfect setting to enjoy your favourite cocktails or try some of the mixologist’s inventive cocktail creations, inspired by the colours and flavours of Bali. Meanwhile, enjoy the chef’s Asian-inspired tapas, wood-fired satays, zesty spring rolls and tantalising bruschetta.

Discover the resort’s secret dining cave or a bespoke dining experience where a private table for two is set up in an exquisite location and comes complete with a private chef and butler offering guests the experience of Anantara’s tailor-made focus and heartfelt service.

Soak up Bali’s beauty
The Anantara Uluwatu offers a variety of experiences and activities that are sure to guarentee a memorable holiday. Guests can opt to spend their time relaxing on the resort’s private secluded beach, or enjoy the exploration benefits afforded by a regular shuttle service to nearby beaches, shopping centres and cultural sites. Delve into the fascinating local culture with Indonesian and western cooking classes, ceramic making classes, Balinese dance classes and temple visits or enjoy free bike rental, kite flying, yoga sessions, watersports, surfing lessons and affiliation with local golf courses.

Invigoration and restoration
Unwinding at the Anantara Uluwatu affords the idyllic pleasure of plunging into the cliff-edge infinity swimming pool, energising at the fitness centre, and rejuvenating body, mind and soul within Anantara Spa’s five treatment suites, reflexology room, sauna and poolside spa cabana.

A world of serenity
The Anantara Spa is set within its own villa and offers a range of Anantara signature treatments that emphasise invigoration and aid in the restoration of guests’ individual beauty, wellness, inner peace and tranquillity. Overlooking pristine untouched rainforest and surrounded by the beauty of Uluwatu’s cliffside setting, each treatment room is designed as your own private enclave, to transport you into a world of serenity.

Additional facilities at the Anantara Uluwatu include a meeting room, wedding chapel, mini theatre and outdoor amphitheatre, a kids’ club, as well as a library offering Wi-Fi, complimentary CD-DVD rental and iPad upon request.





Guide to Indonesia

The size of Indonesia is overwhelming and offers the visitor a very individual experience. Whether shopping, visiting temples, enjoying the beaches and resorts in Bali, or venturing further to discover remote villages or the jungles of Borneo and Papua, the visitor is sure to be amazed by Indonesia's diversity.

Capital and major centres
As the nation's centre of government, busi-ness and industry, the capital Jakarta is a modern society that reflects recent decades of remarkable economic growth. The megacity has a population of nine million and is surroun-ded by the metropolitan area, Jabotabek, with a population of almost 23 million.

The island of Bali – tropical paradise and tourism hot spot – lies off the eastern tip of Java. A rich culture, beautiful landscapes and coastline and rural villages keep visitors returning in droves. The islands of Lombok, Sumba, Flores and others form a chain all the way to the eastern most province, Papua.

Sumatra, the world's sixth largest island, is located to the west of Jakarta. The equator divides it in two just north of Bukittinggi. The scenery in Sumatra is amazing – offering incredible mountains, rivers and almost 100 volcanoes, 15 of them active.

Kalimantan, the southern two-thirds of the island of Borneo, was once – and still is for the most part – a vast, jungle-covered wilderness. Boats and ferries are the main modes of transport, and the native Dayak tribe is a main attraction.

The highland region of Sulawesi offers national parks, and a festive culture that includes the famed funeral festivals of Tana Toraja on the south-western peninsula.

Further east still, in the islands of Maluku previously known as the Moluccas, lie the fabled Spice Islands. Many of these areas are just a two-hour flight from Jakarta, and an exten-sive and convenient network of air services connects the major cities and towns.

The people
The fourth most populous nation in the world, Indonesia's estimated 237 million people speak more than 500 different languages and dialects, and range from city dwellers to sea gypsies. Sixty percent of the people inhabit a mere seven percent of Indonesia's land area on the island of Java, while most of the archipelago remains unexplored.

Nature
Indonesia has one of the world's richest natural environments, offering an incredible diversity of animal and plant life. While a number of species of fauna are familiar to both Asia and Australia, there are many indigenous species in Indonesia such as the orangutan apes of Sumatra and Kalimantan, the giant Komodo dragons – the only ones of their kind in the world still roaming free, the one-horned rhinoceros of Java, the wild banteng oxen, tigers, and many other species now protected in wildlife reserves.

East of Komodo is the island of flowers, Flores,where Komodo dragons can be found along the west coast, the only other place apart from Komodo. Also on Flores is Kelimutu, three coloured lakes in the caldera of a volcano. These lakes change colour depending on the oxidation state of the water and go from bright red through to green and blue.

Papua, once part of the Australian landmass, has kangaroos, marsupial mice, bandicoots, ring-tailed possums, crocodiles and frilled neck lizards. Indonesia has 400 volcanoes and a spectrum of landscapes from lush green mountain slopes to warm sandy beaches; from rice fields to rainforests and mountains topped year-round with snow.

The sights
The most visited islands tend to be Sumatra, Java and Bali, and there is a great diversity of landscapes and cultures in these regions alone. There are also many temples from the Buddhist and Hindu dynasties such as those in Borobudur, Prambanan and the Dieng Plateau, the palaces of the Sultans in Surakarta and Yogyakarta, the Maimoon Palace of the Sultanate of Deli in Medan, and the Hall of Justice in Bali. There are remote villages, the ruins of ancient fortresses and museums, mosques and churches.

Where to stay
Accommodation in Indonesia ranges from deluxe hotels and resorts through to simple economy hotels and 'wisma' (guesthouses) and 'losmen' (rooms to let). Deluxe hotels complete with convention facilities can be found in places such as Medan, Yogyakarta, Surabaya, Bandung, Jakarta, Bali and Makassar, while Jakarta offers a good mix of elegant 5-star hotels and quality three and 4-star establishments. In Bali, accommodation is available in all price categories, in the mountains or along the beach. In Bandung in West Java two old hotels have been restored to their original art deco style. Most hotels in major towns have air-conditioned rooms, but budget hotels are very basic.

Getting around
Indonesia has a huge variety of local transport, with public mini-buses found in cities and villages. Many towns have bemos, three-wheeled pick-ups with two rows of seats down the side, while the bajaj is found only in Jakarta. Becaks, or bicycle rickshaws, operate mainly in the suburbs of Jakarta and Surabaya, and are increasingly being banned from the central areas of major cities. In Bali, Yogyakarta and many other centres you can hire self-drive cars, bicycles or motorbikes. Taxis are available in Jakarta, Surabaya, Bandung, Solo, Semarang, Medan and Bali. Fares are generally low, and most taxis use their meters. If you choose not to use the meter make sure to agree on a price with the driver before you set out for the destination.

Food and entertainment
As with the cuisine throughout Asia, Indonesian food is largely based on rice. Nasi goreng, fried rice with an egg on top, is one of the most popular dishes. Seafood, including fish, lobster, oysters, prawns, shrimp, squid and crab feature prominently in the Indonesian diet and the cuisine is bold, rich in flavour and heavily spiced. Coconut is also very common and is produced for its cooking oil as well as its milk and white flesh that are used as ingredients in many dishes. A rumah makan, 'house to eat' is generally the cheaper equivalent of a restaurant.

Markets are a good food source, especially night markets. Jakarta and Bali have a wide range of excellent restaurants offering all types of cuisine from ethnic Indonesian to Chinese, Japanese, and also Western and European fare.

There's entertainment in Bali almost every day with exhibitions of Balinese dancing either in villages or at hotels.

Activities
Beach resorts offer sailing, surfing, scuba diving and windsurfing. Many areas are legendary for good diving, snorkelling and surfing. Of the 60-plus golf courses in Indonesia, Bali offers three of international standard, including the Greg Norman-designed Bali Nirwana Golf Course.

The more adventurous climber can tackle Mt Bromo in Java or Mt Agung in Bali for a day climb, or try more strenuous climbs such as Gunung Rinjani, the volcano that dominates Lombok. Traditional spectator sports include bull races, bull fights, rowing and unique ram fights, all held during festivals. Silat, a martial art, is regularly performed as a dance or an exercise and is similar to karate. Camp Leaky, in the jungles of Tanjung Puting National Park in Kalimantan, is the site of Dr Burute Galdikas' study of wild orangutans and is the longest continual study by one principal investigator of any wild animal, enabling visitors to witness the rehabilitation of these amazing primates.

On the island of Sulawesi is the impressive Lore Lindu National Park, home to over 200 species of bird, the cuscus, tarsiers, anoa (a rare dwarf buffalo) and babirusa (an animal resembling both a pig and a hippopotamus). The park has been largely untouched by tourism and offers many different treks. Within the park are ancient stone megaliths, waterfalls, hot springs and the large lake of Danau Lindu. Seawalking is a new and popular activity that allows anyone to walk at a depth of three metres along the ocean floor without getting their hair wet or carrying heavy oxygen tanks. The Sea Walker helmets permit close observation of the myriad fish and sea life Indonesia has to offer.

Shopping
While Indonesian cities have air-conditioned shopping centres, supermarkets and department stores with fixed prices, bargaining is customary in smaller shops and particularly in the markets. The wax-and-dye art of batik is one of the country's best-known crafts, and silverwork, wayang puppets and leatherwork are all found in Java. Woodcarvings, leather goods, paintings, clothing, bone work, bronze castings and stone statues are all available in Bali. There is beautiful furniture and home wares for sale or made to order in Kuta, and from a number of warehouses between Seminyak and Ubud. Sumba blankets, the song-kets of Sumatra, the silks of South Sulawesi and the jumpuntan (tie-dyed) items of Palembang can all be found in Jakarta.

Climate
It is hot throughout the year with daily temperatures from 26°C to 33°C with the wet season from October to April. Wear informal, light cotton clothing. In the highlands a sweater may be required. Discreet clothing should be worn at festivals, ceremonies and villages. A sarong or sash may be required for temple visits.

Currency
The rupiah is the currency unit of Indonesia. Most major foreign currencies can be easily changed in city banks, bureaux de change and large hotels. Credit cards are accepted in major hotels and restaurants.