Just a quick post tonight to share some of the images of Balinese gardens that I snapped during my two brief visits this year - gardeners' eye candy!
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| This fabulous doorway linked hotel grounds to the beach at Kuta and was just a few doors up from the Ramada, where I stayed for my Kuta conference in June. | 
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| A simpler entrance in the same complex | 
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| I only saw the one example of this beautiful creeper, but I love it so much I thought it warranted two photos. Can anyone help me out with identification? | 
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| Red ginger Alpinia purpurata | 
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| This photo and the next half dozen were taken in the grounds of the Hotel Tugu at Canggu where we stopped for lunch after our visit to Tanah Lot. | 
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| Landscaping in Bali does that 'secret garden' thing so beautifully. | 
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| Yet another of those gorgeous marbled euphorbias. | 
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| This and most of the remaining photos were taken at my final location in Bali, Hotel Puri Santrian at Sanur. | 
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| The Bael fruit tree Aegle Marmelos  looked stunning when  lit up at night.  The fruit are huge and take nearly a year to ripen. The foliage is a larval food source for some of the swallowtail butterflies. | 
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| A bed of plumago | 
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| Water hyacinth | 
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|  I have such a soft spot for these little squirrels. I was holidaying in  Goa in southern India when I received news of the death of my mother in 2005. Their antics were so life affirming while I took in the news and had some quiet time in the grounds of my hotel. | 
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| Spores on the underside of a crows' nest fern. | 
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| I think this is Masoa alliacea, the Garlic Vine. | 
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| Heliconia | 
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| The black and white checked material wrapped around guardian figures is called poleng. The black and white pattern represents the duality of the universe: good and evil equally balanced.  You can read more about Balinese dress and textiles here | 
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| There are pairs of wonderful guardian figures in front of many of the temples, hotels, and courtyards throughout Bali. | 
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| Marigold garlands in the courtyard of restaurant Made's Warung in Semanyak | 
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| Gorgeous banana with patterned upper leaf and red toned underside. | 
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| Spotted this lovely tree at Ulu Watu, but they are used widely in street plantings in Jakarta. | 
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| Erythrina, the Coral tree | 
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| Yellow caesalpinia 'Pride of Barbados' | 
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| Love, love, love these birdcage-shaped lanterns at my hotel in Sanur. If I could have packed five to adorn my poinciana back home in Brisbane, I would have. | 
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| I saw a couple dining in this beautiful pavilion one evening. How romantic! | 
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| Another glorious pink creeper.  I'm guessing this is Congea tomentosa. The pink  blooms appeared to be  bracts rather the flowers themselves like the related blue-flowering Petrea volubilis. | 
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| I love these russet-coloured dragonflies. | 
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| Here you can see that the tips of his wings are transparent. | 
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| Shoreside entrance to one of the hotels at Sanur. | 
Oh, and if you missed Part One, you can catch up 
here !
 
 
Definitely eye candy. I wish plants grew like that here.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely, Ros. My poor garden is looking like a desert after such a dry stretch while I was away.
DeleteMarisa, another lovely post on another beautiful place. I would love to visit Bali one of these days. I could easily get lost in such lovely scenery.
ReplyDeleteThe plants are gorgeous, and the plantings have given me lots of ideas too.
It's definitely as pretty a place as you could ever hope to visit and a veritable gardener's paradise.
DeleteThanks for dropping by, Andrew.
ReplyDelete