To Obamas have been on holiday in Bali. Their itinerary has included rafting down the Ayung River and visiting the Jatiluwih rice terraces, after which they are expected to visit Jakarta, the Indonesian capital. Here are 15 reasons to follow them to the vast archipelago.
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1. There’s chaotic Jakarta
Indonesia’s sprawling capital, home to 10 million people, is a “melting pot of cuisines and cultures”, wrote Simon Parker for Telegraph Travel in 2015.
“The old town of Batavia will transport you to Indonesia’s Dutch colonial past while the fashionable Menteng district is a hive of live music venues, exclusive restaurants and hip hotels,” he added. “World-renowned restaurants, bars and nightclubs perch on top of towering skyscrapers, while shoppers can choose from dozens of gargantuan shopping malls.”
2,http://www.blacmera.com/node/428761/webform/componentscheapjordanshoesfreeshipping.com/bolg. The dragons of Komodo
The world’s largest lizards exist on just five Indonesian islands - Komodo,
cheap jordans online, Rinca, Flores, Gili Motang, and Padar. They are truly fearsome, weighing up to 150lbs and possessing toxic bites, allowing them to hunt and kill far bigger animals – even humans.
Komodo dragons: daunting
Stanley Stewart visite...elegraph Travel last year. He wrote: “Our guide Harry Christensen, a proper ocker Aussie who has been sailing these waters for years, told us how the Komodo’s venom induces shock and heart failure in its victims, how it dislocates its jaws like a snake to devour large prey, how it is a miniature replica of a much larger Jurassic ancestor. ‘AMAZING!’ Harry raved, flapping his arms like a man trying to escape his own body. ‘These dragons inspired the legends of King Kong!’”
3. The adventure playground of Sumatra
Named one of Telegraph Travel’s top 20 places to visit back in 2014,
lesser-visited Sumatra...ful hotspot for adventure.
“Most visitors head to see the orang-utan of Bukit Lawang,” wrote Guyan Mitra at the time,
jordans for cheap, “and the army of vigilante elephants which are commissioned to protect the northern rainforest of Tangkahan (seriously). You can join them for their dawn lake-shore bath, and scrub their nails before the morning patrol. Topped off with a cup of strong Sumatran coffee, there are few better ways to start a day."
Sumatra: wild
“The seriously intrepid should consider a trip to Kerinci Seblat, the biggest national park on the island, where you may get to see tigers and the Sumatran rhino, if you’re lucky. Creature comforts are few, but the rewards are high. There’s also hiking across the lunar craters of the volcanoes of Berastagi, lakeside lounging in Danau Toba, diving with whale sharks in Pulau Weh, and surfing off the Mentawaii Islands and Pulau Nias.”
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4. World class diving
Nowhere in the world offers better diving than the Coral Triangle, an area of the Pacific Ocean that includes the waters around Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Papua New Guinea, Timor Leste and the Solomon Islands. One of the best ways to explore it is on a liveaboard boat around the Raja Ampat Islands in Indonesia's West Papua province. Divers will find 75 per cent of all the world’s know coral species, and up to 2,000 species of reef fish.
5. The temples and mountains of Java
It might be the most populous island in the world, with around 140 million residents, but Java has plenty of places to escape the crush. There are 12 national parks to explore – including Unesco-listed Ujung Kulon – and volcanoes – including Bromo and Merapi – to hike up.
Hikers on Bromo
Credit: ANTARA FOTO
Java is also home to
the world’s biggest Buddhish temple, Borobudur, with its intricate lattice stupas set among paddy fields. It’s often crowded, so consider lesser-known sites such as Pawon,
cheap jordans for sale, Mendut, Plaosan Lor and Kalasan, which retain an air of contemplation and peace.
Borobudur
Credit: BigGabig
6. The backpacker haven of Bali
“This is one of very few islands that manage to combine spirituality and hedonism; visitors can witness coming-of-age ceremonies, as well as enjoy sundowners, first-rate dining and chic shopping,”
says Telegraph Travel’s Michelle Jana Chan. “At Ubud, the island’s cultural capital, there are frequent musical and dance performances, as well as galleries selling woodcarving, silverware, textiles, paintings and sculpture. There is trekking around terraced rice fields and two volcanoes in the north, Agung and Batur. Bali Barat National Park is a haven for deer,
cheap authentic jordans, boar and macaques, and the offshore Menjangan Island has dive sites with schools of batfish, giant trevally and jacks.”
7. With its incredible hotels
Bali is the place to go for luxury accommodation. Our top picks include the Four Seasons Resort at Sayan, the Alila Villas Uluwatu, the COMO Shambala Estate, and the Oberoi at Seminyak.
8. And Lombok – Bali without the crowds
Millions of people visit Bali each year seeking a beach paradise,http://www.pocketcram.com/forum/posts/list/0/686814.page#692492cheapjordanshoesfreeshipping.com/bolg, but they may do better looking about 30 miles east, to the lesser-known island of
Lombok, known for its good surf, spectacular beaches and mountainous interior,http://www.enzay-esports.de/index.php?site=forum_topic&topic=22624cheapjordanshoesfreeshipping.com/bolg, or the neighbouring Gili Islands, ringed by coral reefs.
Lombok
Credit: pablitoos - Fotolia
“Until recently the Gili Islands were mainly visited by backpackers paying ?10 a night for simple beach accommodation,” wrote Michelle Jana Chan back in 2012. “Now the biggest island, Gili Trawangan, is going upmarket with the opening of villa resorts, eco-lodges and spa retreats. But there is still a bohemian feel: instead of cars and motorcycles, local transport is by bicycle or horse-drawn carts called cidomos.”
9. There's the indigenous tribes of Kalimantan
“The wild island of Borneo (of which Kalimantan makes up around two thirds) has enchanted adventurers since the days of the Victorian explorers,” says Michelle Jana Chan. “Today, little has diluted that raw experience, and among its attractions are rainforests, indigenous tribes and the orang-utans of Tanjung Puting National Park.”
10. South-east Asia’s biggest national park
Lorentz, a Unesco World Heritage site on the island of Papua, is vast – covering 9,674 square miles – and home to a huge array of ecosystems, including mangroves, rainforest, alpine tundra and equatorial glaciers. Its highest point, Puncak Jaya, is the tallest mountain between the Himalayas and the Andes.
There are 123 mammalian species and 630 species of bird, including many that are endemic to the region. But much of the park remains unexplored – so scientists believe more are waiting to be discovered.
11. The ‘Paris of the East’
This sobriquet has been applied to numerous cities, including Bandung, on the island of Java. Its cooler climate makes it a popular weekend destination for residents of Jakarta; expect an array of fashionable boutiques and a surprisingly large number of Art Deco buildings.
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12. And the cultural hub of Yogyakarta
Java’s second city, Yogyakarta, is the cultural and spiritual hub with all-night shadow-puppet performances, concerts and art exhibitions. It is also the best base for exploring the aforementioned Borobudur and the vast Hindu temple complex of Prambanan, with its principal temples dedicated to Vishnu, Shiva and Brahma and hundreds of surrounding shrines.
13. There are more temples than you could visit in a lifetime
Borobudur and Prambanan are best known, but there are literally hundreds of others, big and small. Bali is home to some of the most picturesque, including Tanah Lot, perched on a sea stack, and Pura Ulun Danu Bratan, which appears to float on a lake.
14. One of the world’s most spectacular lighthouses
This 12-storey gem was built by the Dutch in 1882 on the little island of Lengkuas. It can be reached by boat from Tanjung Kelayang on the island of Pulau Belitung.
Lengkuas
Credit: ALAMY
15. It’s green
51 per cent of Indonesia is forest, making it one of
the world’s greenest countries.
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16. And it’s cheap
Price surveys frequently attest to
Indonesia’s suitability for budget travel. According to the website Numbeo, its Cost of Living Index (which takes into account the price of accommodation,
cheap air jordans, restaurant meals, taxi fares and leisure activities) is 36.33, putting it ahead of south-east Asian rivals Thailand (40.2), Myanmar (51.57), Cambodia (47.29) and Vietnam (39.5). And when it comes to the cost of food and drink its
beaches are among the world’s cheapest.
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Stoke-on-Trent is currently in the national political spotlight thanks to the forthcoming by-election triggered by the resignation of Labour MP Tristram Hunt. But it’s pottery rather than politics that has brought me here – to the factory where BBC Two’s The Great Pottery Throw Down is filmed.
The programme, now into its second series, has raised the profile of Middleport, Britain’s last continuously working Victorian pottery, and of the Stoke area’s wider industrial heritage.
Stoke-on-Trent's grand Victorian train station
Credit: ALAMY
“It seems there’s a lot more interest in pottery among visitors,” says Teresa Fox-Wells, manager of Middleport’s visitor centre. “After all, when you see a dinner plate, you just take it for granted. But when you see how it’s made, it makes you appreciate it more.”
We’re standing in a cobbled yard at the long red-brick factory, a warren of workshops and staircases alongside the Trent and Mersey Canal. “The raw materials came in on barges and the finished products went out on them,” says the ebullient Fox-Wells. “Canals were the motorways of their day.”
The Trent and Mersey’s banks are now returning to nature, with bushes and dog-strollers on the towpath. A narrowboat sails serenely by and its passengers wave. It all helps make Middleport, rescued from threatened closure by a ?9?million grant from The Prince’s Regeneration Trust, an engaging place to visit.
Tourists come to watch craftsmen at work here and at other factories on the city’s ceramics heritage trail – most glamorously, perhaps, at the new and spankingly smart World of Wedgwood. The Wedgwood centre is beyond Longton, the most southerly of Stoke’s conglomeration of six towns… or “The Five Towns”, as the locally born and once immensely popular writer
Arnold Bennett recast them. The people in Fenton, the one he left out, were not best pleased.
Bennett,
cheap jordans, whose 150th anniversary is being celebrated this year, is thought to have based the pottery in his 1902 novel Anna of the Five Towns on Middleport. I’ve brought a copy of the book with me and, as Fox-Wells starts our tour, I read out its description of the fictional slip-house,
cheap retro jordans, where the pottery process begins: “The large whitewashed place was occupied by ungainly machines and receptacles…” The description goes on for pages, evoking dust and noise, the whirring of wheels and the clanking of pistons. It could be the scene in front of us.
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“People who worked here in the Sixties say it’s not much changed,” says Fox-Wells. “Actually, it’s not much changed from the 1880s, never mind the Sixties. They literally never threw anything away.” Hence the storeroom stacked with plaster moulds, 19,000 of them, shelf after shelf of ornate jelly moulds and Dickens characters and Winston Churchill Toby jugs. As we walk around, we see white-overalled craftsmen – jolleyers and jiggerers and other exotic-sounding species – working at dazzling speed.
“We’ve never tried to make a museum of the place,” says Fox-Wells. “This is very much a living, breathing factory.” At its centre is a now-disused bottle kiln, firing clay pottery. Once Stoke had 4,000 of them; there were 2,000 in the Fifties; now less than 50 survive.
Four of them dominate Stoke’s award-winning Gladstone Pottery Museum, a former factory preserved as a fascinating time capsule. It offers evocative film footage, demonstrations and room after room of displays.
These plaster moulds were once used to make Winston Churchill Toby jugs
Credit: GETTY
“We’ve done very well from Throw Down,” says Nerys Williams, the museum’s audience development manager. “A lot of people come partly as a result of the programme, wanting to throw a pot and do things with clay, and they can do that here.”
The Gladstone is complemented by Stoke’s fine Potteries Museum and Art Gallery, which boasts the world’s largest collection of Staffordshire ceramics. Here are posset pots and porringers, harvest jugs and frog mugs and simple but beautiful bowls. There’s what’s arguably the world’s most exquisite chamber pot and part of a collection of 667 “cow creamers” or cow-shaped cream jugs.
Some of the animals are being milked, some are suckling calves, some are simply being cow-like. And, goodness, here’s a “Cottage Ware” milk jug just like my parents had in the Fifties. Staffordshire crockery is part of all our family histories.
A few streets away is the great Stoke success story of recent years – the Emma Bridgewater factory, turning out an annual 1.3?million pieces of the cheeringly colourful “lifestyle brand”. This is the lightest, whitest factory you’ll ever see; some of the machinery is even decorated with trademark Bridgewater polka dots. There are tours, shops, a hands-on decorating studio for all ages, an excellent café and an overall air of calm purpose.
A potter carries mugs on a wareboard in Middleport
Credit: GETTY
“We want to show children that working in a factory isn’t just putting widgets in a box,” says PR and marketing manager Steph Woodhouse. “It can be about craftsmanship and design.”
It’s a far cry from the days when Stoke was a hellhole of industrial smoke with pollution reaching lethal levels. In 1900, the average life expectancy was 46 and one in four children died in infancy. The smoke smothered pedestrians and often make it impossible for them to see where they were going.
“It was appalling,” says Fox-Wells. “People remember that as recently as the Sixties they sometimes had to grope along the street walls.”
The smoke has now gone – as The Great Pottery Throw Down shows.
The essentials
Stephen McClarence stayed at the
Best Western Plus Stoke-on-Trent Moat House Hotel (01782 60998

, which has a parkland setting near the city centre and a good restaurant. Doubles, including breakfast, from ?49.
Middleport Pottery (01782 499766) opens daily from 10am to 4pm. Pre-booked factory tours (Monday to Friday only) cost ?8.50 (?7 under 18s and concessions) and include entry to the Visitor Centre and heritage areas, which otherwise costs ?3/?2.50.
For further information contact
Visit Stoke. ,
cheap jordans free shipping;
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