I glimpsed part of a funeral ritual – praying for the soul.
I like the thatched roofs and the Bali dogs wandering around. These dogs are a pretty close relative of the dingo, don’t you think?
I’m returning once again to Bali to view another temple. This one is quite different from the last. It’s not beside a lake but under a volcano…
Pura Besakih (Besakih Temple) sits under Gunung Agung (Mt Agung) – Bali’s highest peak (3,142m – almost 1km taller than Mt Kozzie) and also an active volcano! The volcano last erupted in 1963, and still belches smoke.
So why have they built this mega temple underneath a volcano? Because…
The Balinese believe that Mount Agung is a replica of Mount Meru, the central axis of the universe. One legend holds that the mountain is a fragment of Meru brought to Bali by the first Hindus
– From Wiki
The temple is built on the side of the hill in terraces. This photo was taken at the bottom. Being Bali’s most important temple, it holds up to seventy festivals a year. The locals were in the midst of preparing for a new moon festival when I visited.
We arrive at Cape Reinga. It’s where the Tasman Sea meets the Pacific Ocean. You can see the exact line the opposing currents meet by the way the water changes colour. The lighter coloured water is the Tasman, the darker the Pacific. Cape Reinga also has a lighthouse – a good idea when there are so many treacherous rocks about.