Born from the carefully guarded travel diaries of industry confidantes, SLOJOURN is challenging how beautiful places are discovered, experienced, and shared.

What you will find below is a sneak peak of what lies within the Platform. We have pulled our ‘Bali Destination Guide’ out so you have a full understanding of what lies within.

You’ve landed in…

INDONESIA - BALI

SLOJOURN was designed for you to immerse yourself into the arms of a destination, slowly. For those wayward travellers who landed here to arrive somewhere else with no expectations, we salute you. We encourage you to navigate your own way across the shores of each place, and if you’re searching for a single story, you can find what you’re looking for here.

“Bali is a hum. An ancient heartbeat wrapped in incense-scented air and volcanic earth. When I curated our Bali edit, I sought spaces where the soul of the island hadn’t been tamed, but invited you deeper - into ceremony, salt, community, and raw beauty.

Each stay honours the sacredness of land and lineage while whispering to the modern traveller’s craving for authenticity. Here, every barefoot step feels intentional. Every slow meal is an offering.

I’ve been travelling to Bali since I was 6 years old, and the changes are a plenty. Welcome to Bali, where luxury is ritual, and slow travel becomes a new way of being.”

Tess Willcox - Founder

From our curators

The compass

This isn’t one destination. It’s an island in conversation with the cosmos.

BENEATH THE SURFACE: Bali is often seen, rarely felt and yet, if you slow down, you discover a whole new world to enter. A single speck in the Indonesian archipelago, Bali holds multitudes: black-sand coastlines, emerald rice terraces, volcanic peaks, and a spiritual infrastructure that weaves the sacred into every offering, ceremony, and carving.

Divided into elemental regions, each with its own pulse, Ubud hums with artistic stillness, the Bukit cliffs lean into surf and swagger, Sidemen folds you into quiet ritual, and the west is where the wild things still whisper. Bali’s climate moves in two sweeping acts: the dry season’s crystalline clarity (May–October) and the wet season’s poetic lushness (November–April), when the skies soften and the jungle breathes louder.

BEST WHEN: May – September (crisp surf mornings, luminous jungle afternoons).

FOR THOSE WHO LOVE: Misty volcano hikes, black sand beaches, ancient ceremonies, and barefoot design sanctuaries.

OFF SEASON MAGIC: October – April shows a wilder, wetter Bali. Expect moody mist, lush rice paddies, empty surf breaks, and a deeper cultural immersion.

HOW TO EXPLORE: Dawn surf rituals. Temple offerings at dusk. Dinners cooked over open fire. Bali is best experienced by those who move slowly, listen deeply, and tread lightly.

Where Earth breathes ritual and saltwater style

There is a Bali most never see.

Beyond the neon lights and influencer haunts, there lies an island still breathing in sacred rhythm - an island where banyan trees are clothed in black-and-white check to honour spirits, where holy water runs in veins through rice terraces, and where surfboards and sarongs share the same salt-stained rituals.

This is the Bali SLOJOURN invites you to discover.

In this edit, we peel back the veneer of tourism and return to the island’s beating heart - through curated sanctuaries where regenerative architecture kisses jungle canopies, where slow feasts unfold under thatched roofs, and where the day’s grandest luxury might simply be the full moon casting silver upon black sand.

Here, on this sacred volcanic island, nature is not a backdrop - she is the architect, healer, and muse. Cradled between sea and sky, the island's spirit is felt in the incense-swirled air, the rhythmic chants echoing through temple courtyards, and the silent exchanges of gratitude between travellers and land.

Our collection celebrates Bali’s living spirit. You’ll stay in spaces where bamboo walls breathe with the monsoon, where community partnerships grow stronger than concrete, and where sacred ceremonies are not staged, but lived. The resorts we curated do not impose themselves upon the landscape, they rise from it, crafted with reverence for ancient wisdom and modern ingenuity alike.

Bali is a dance between reverence and revelry, between fire and water, between the seen and the unseen. It’s a place that asks you not just to look, but to listen. Not just to move, but to be moved. You’ll lose track of time because here, time bends around tide, ritual, and rain.

In Bali, luxury is not excess, it is experience. A barefoot dinner under a thousand stars. A sunrise surf session that feels like a baptism. A single offering laid at dawn, reminding you that every day is sacred if you move slowly enough to notice.

Here, travel is an offering. Connection is currency. Presence is the ultimate privilege.

Welcome to Bali, through the SLOJOURN lens.

BALI’S BEATING HEART

Beneath the woven palm offerings and gamelan rhythms, Bali hums with an ancient frequency, where land, lineage, and spirit form a living trinity. It is a place where every offering, every tide, every chant is a reminder: you do not simply visit Bali; you are invited into its breath.

The ultimate journey

Bali is not a destination to be conquered, it’s a current to be caught.

Begin in Canggu, where The Slow's raw concrete walls hum with ocean salt and artful indolence. Linger over slow breakfasts, barefoot gallery strolls, and surf sessions that stretch into golden hours.

Venture west to Lost Lindenberg, perched in the untrampled village of Pekutatan. Elevated in canopy-like rooms, you'll surf uncrowded breaks and walk secret trails wrapped in mist and frangipani.

Slip south to Further Hotel in Pererenan, a heartbeat away from both wild beach breaks and indie coffee havens. Soundtracked by curated vinyl and coastal breezes, this is where slow surf culture meets soul-fed creativity.

Cliff-hop to Grün Uluwatu, where days unfurl between tidepool rituals and soulful sunsets over limestone cliffs.

End at Nirjhara, where waterfalls sing beneath your balcony, and every design curve feels carved by nature herself. Here, your soul exhales.

Through this journey, let Bali reframe you - through slowness, saltwater, ceremony, and story.

Discover the ultimate 14-day SLOJOURNEY in Bali

16 Days | 5 Iconic Stays | Infinite Wonder

A slow, sensory pilgrimage from coastline to cloud forest, surf break to sacred shrine. This is the kind of trip you feel in your bones. Adventure-rich. Soul-led. Wildly intentional. We go off the beaten path, but never off-purpose.

  • Stay: Lost Lindenberg – Pekutatan
    A modernist jungle sanctuary perched above West Bali’s black sand coast. Think suspended walkways, surf at sunrise, and moon rituals by firelight. A spiritual entry point to wild Bali.

    Must-Do:

    • Sunrise surf session with the on-site surf mentor.

    • Forest-foraged lunch served in the tree lounge.

    • Sacred blessing at Rambut Siwi cliffside temple.

    Not to Miss:

    • Evening fire ritual and drinks under the palms.

    • Post-surf sound healing in the upper canopy spa.

  • Stay: Nirjhara – Tabanan
    A waterfall-wrapped design hotel surrounded by rice fields and volcanic stone. Earthy, refined, and deeply calming - where river energy meets regenerative style.

    Must-Do:

    • Cinnamon oil massage beside the river.

    • Slow cycling loop to Tanah Lot temple at dusk.

    • Meditation class in the bamboo shala.

    Not to Miss:

    • Chef-led garden harvest + zero-waste cooking demo.

    • Outdoor bathtub soak with lemongrass and lime leaves.

  • Stay: Bambu Indah – Ubud
    A bamboo temple to slow living, Bambu Indah is Ubud’s original soul sanctuary. It’s where banyan trees, water temples, and barefoot wisdom meet.

    Must-Do:

    • Guided water blessing at Tirta Empul with a Balinese priest.

    • Permaculture garden lunch under the jackfruit tree.

    • Floating copper bathtub ritual in the jungle spa.

    Not to Miss:

    • Evening storytelling session with the resident healer.

    • Open-air movie night in the jungle cinema (ask - it’s not always listed).
      A bamboo temple to slow living, Bambu Indah is Ubud’s original soul sanctuary. It’s where banyan trees, water temples, and barefoot wisdom meet.

  • Stay:The Slow or Further Hotel – Canggu
    Pick your portal. The Slow is a brutalist cult-favourite with moody playlists and mezcal on tap. Further is softer: slow surf energy, quiet design, and wellness woven into the walls.

    Must-Do (The Slow):

    • In-room vinyl and aperitivo hour.

    • Gallery tour of emerging Balinese artists.

    • Dinner under concrete arches with coconut negronis.

    Must-Do (Further):

    • Cacao ceremony in the stone courtyard.

    • Self-led silent surf lesson at Batu Bolong.

    • Black rice porridge with burnt coconut (off-menu).

    Not to Miss:

    • Morning market walk with the chef.

    • Sunset sketching in the communal workspace.

  • Stay: Grün Uluwatu – Uluwatu
    Your final exhale. Grun is a quiet-luxury sanctuary carved into the cliffs, where sunrise yoga and stone tubs overlook the sea. Stillness, served soft.

    Must-Do:

    • Guided breathwork on the cliff-edge pavilion.

    • Private sound bath in the salt cave spa.

    • Slow breakfast with mountain tea and seascapes.

    Not to Miss:

    • Final journal session in the sunken library.

    • Order the ‘last light’ cocktail - it’s not on the menu, and it’s unforgettable.

Slow moves: navigating the journey

VISAS

Bali offers Visa on Arrival for most nationalities (USD $35, valid for 30 days, extendable once). But always check official channels - rules shift like the tide.

GETTING AROUND

Travelling slow in Bali means tuning into the land. Don’t rush the ride - Bali’s magic lives between destinations.

𓇼 The SLO circuit
Let your hotels coordinate your route in advance. Many work hand-in-hand with trusted drivers who know the scenic routes (and where to stop for jamu and jackfruit).

𓇼 Scooter, but softly
For the confident rider, scooters offer unmatched freedom in Canggu and Ubud. Just be sun-safe, ride early, and don’t trust Google Maps through the rice fields after dark. Also, GET INSURANCE SIS!

𓇼 Chauffeured chic
Private cars are easy to arrange and surprisingly affordable. This isn’t a taxi - it’s your mobile meditation chamber.

𓇼 Air-conditioned rewilding
Transfers between regions (West Bali, Ubud, Uluwatu) take time - 1.5 to 3 hours. Use it. Download that podcast, roll the window down, and let the island unfold.

𓇼 Temple timing
Aim to visit temples in early morning or just before sunset. Not only are the crowds lighter, but the light is cinematic, and the experience feels sacred, not scheduled.

Balinese spirit & story

Bali doesn’t just enchant - it initiates.

The moment your feet brush her volcanic soil, something shifts. Time bends. Breath deepens. This isn’t just a place, it’s a pulse. A living prayer wrapped in hibiscus and incense. To walk through Bali is to move through myth made tangible.

Here, daily life is a ceremony. Offerings of frangipani and rice line every threshold. The smell of clove cigarettes mingles with sandalwood smoke. Gamelan drums echo like a heartbeat from temple courtyards, calling not just the gods - but the ancestors, the spirits, and you.

Bali is Hindu in a sea of Islam. But it is not India’s Hinduism - it is uniquely Balinese: animist, ancestral, elemental. Every river has a guardian. Every tree, a soul. Even the shadows are honoured.

This is a land where duality is sacred. Good and bad. Light and dark. The seen and unseen. The ceremony of Galungan celebrates the return of ancestral spirits. Nyepi, the Day of Silence, is a full-island pause - no planes, no noise, no electricity - so demons pass by undisturbed. Where else in the world does an entire island choose stillness as a spiritual strategy?

Bali’s spiritual fabric is not for spectacle. It’s not staged. It’s not optional. It’s lived. Every woven canang sari. Every trance dance. Every wave bowed to at sunset.

To come here is to be held in an energy older than empires. But to truly receive it, you must arrive with humility. You must learn the names, honour the offerings, and walk softly - because the gods are always watching, and the island remembers everything.

Local voices

Two languages, one soul-stirring island. Here’s how to speak with both respect and resonance.

Bali is part of Indonesia - but its spirit, rituals, and language are distinct. While Bahasa Indonesia is the national language spoken across the archipelago, Balinese (Basa Bali) is the island’s ancestral tongue - rooted in ceremony, caste, and community. Most Balinese speak both. But it’s Basa Bali that lives in prayer, in poetry, in offerings whispered to the gods.

Here’s how to navigate both - because language, here, is more than words. It’s an offering.

𓇼 Bahasa Indonesia | The Bridge

Spoken across all of Indonesia, this is your go-to for market banter, café orders, and friendly exchanges.

  • “Selamat pagi” – Good morning.

  • “Terima kasih” – Thank you.

  • “Sama-sama” – You’re welcome.

  • “Apa kabar?” – How are you?

  • “Permisi” – Excuse me.

  • “Maaf” – Sorry.

𓇼 Basa Bali | The Sacred Thread

This is the heartbeat of the island - the language of ceremony, spirit, and home.

  • “Om Swastiastu” – A spiritual greeting; a prayer for peace and safety. Always say this when entering someone’s home or temple space.

  • “Suksma” – Thank you (deeply heartfelt).

  • “Suksma mewali” – You’re welcome.

  • “Rahajeng semeng” – Good morning (in everyday Balinese).

  • “Rahajeng rauh” – Welcome.

The Energy Behind the Words

Even if you say just one phrase, say it with presence. Balinese culture values energy, intention, and humility over fluency. A soft “Om Swastiastu” at the temple gate, a warm “Suksma” after a meal - these are small acts of respect that ripple deeper than any itinerary.

Because on this island, words don’t just speak. They bless.

We traverse the globe's most STIRRING landscapes, discovering havens where design honours WILDNESS and chicness whispers with intention. Here lies our curated collection of sanctuaries - each one thoughtfully curated where rolling waves meet design poetry, and where dawn's first light paints stories across CAREFULLY considered spaces.

Welcome to… the BALI edit.

Lay your head

BAMBU INDAH

WILDLY PLACED: Sayan Ridge, Ubud.
WHERE ETHEREAL BAMBOO TEMPLES MEET SACRED EARTH ENERGY.
INDULGENCE SPECTRUM: Stays from USD$280 per night.

FURTHER HOTEL

WILDLY PLACED: Pererenan, Bali.
WHERE SOUND, STILLNESS & STUDIO AESTHETICS COLLIDE.
INDULGENCE SPECTRUM: Stays from USD190 per night.

GRÜN ULUWATU

WILDLY PLACED: Uluwatu, Bali.
WHERE SLEEK EARTH FORMS & LIME-WASH LUXURY INTERTWINE.
INDULGENCE SPECTRUM: Stays from USD$240 per night.

LOST LINDENBERG

WILDLY PLACED: Pekutatan, West Bali.
WHERE TREEHOUSE WHIMSY MEETS SURFER FUN.
INDULGENCE SPECTRUM: Stays from USD$490 per night.

NIRJHARA

WILDLY PLACED: Tabanan, Bali.
WHERE RIVERSIDE REST MEETS ECO-MINIMALIST REVERENCE.
INDULGENCE SPECTRUM: Stays from USD$390 per night.

THE SLOW

WILDLY PLACED: Canggu, Bali.
WHERE TROPICAL BRUTALISM MEETS MODERN MUSE ENERGY.
INDULGENCE SPECTRUM: Stays from USD$220 per night.

Yes future

Where legacy leads and regeneration takes root.

Bali’s beauty is undeniable - but its future depends on more than just admiration. Beyond the beaches and temples lies a quiet revolution: of permaculture farmers, coral gardeners, indigenous protectors, and circular thinkers rewriting the story of tourism. Here’s where purpose meets paradise.

  • 📍 Pemuteran & Nusa Penida
    With much of Bali’s reef system threatened by bleaching and over-tourism, initiatives like Biorock Indonesia and Ocean Gardener are restoring coral ecosystems using regenerative technology and community training. Travellers can join snorkelling sessions that directly support reef regrowth, or sponsor coral "babies" to be planted in critical zones.

  • 📍 Jatiluwih & Ubud
    Bali’s iconic rice terraces aren’t just beautiful, they’re part of a centuries-old irrigation and spiritual system known as Subak, recognised by UNESCO. Today, eco-farms like Astungkara Way are blending this traditional knowledge with permaculture to teach regenerative agriculture to local youth and global travellers alike. Walk the fields, plant heirloom rice, and break bread in a way that reconnects you to the land.

  • 📍 Island-wide
    Started by sisters Melati and Isabel Wijsen when they were just teens, Bye Bye Plastic Bags has become a global movement. Their youth-led advocacy pushed Bali to become one of the first provinces in Indonesia to ban single-use plastics. Join clean-ups, attend changemaker talks, or support their wider work in climate education.

  • 📍 Ubud
    Threads of Life is a textile collective that partners with women weavers across the archipelago, preserving endangered techniques and plant-based dyes. Every naturally dyed sarong or wall hanging tells a story of land, lineage, and sustainable livelihoods. Their studio also hosts workshops where visitors can learn about slow fashion from source to stitch.

  • 📍 Taman Beji & Lake Tamblingan
    Bali’s remaining old-growth forests are spiritual strongholds, often protected by Adat (customary law) and local temples. Community-led efforts are underway to safeguard these lands from encroachment and mass tourism. Support local guides, temple keepers, and those who uphold the spiritual ecology of the island, not just its visible beauty.

  • It needs listeners, learners, and long-term allies.

    The future here is not built in haste. It’s whispered through rice stalks, sung by coral, woven into ritual. And it asks us:
    Will you just visit the island - or will you help protect its soul?

We’re in this together

Travel is a dialogue, not a monologue. Every moment spent in Bali is a moment shared - with land, lineage, and local community. SLOJOURN spotlights those who are shaping a better tomorrow.

Each year, we’ll bring you a different cause to support - a grassroots movement that will transform your stay into a ripple of positive change.

ASTUNGKARA WAY

Astungkara Way is planting seeds - literally and metaphorically. This regenerative movement reconnects Balinese youth with ancestral farming practices through slow, sacred agriculture. Based in the rice fields of Ubud, the initiative invites both locals and visitors to walk the Subak Way: an experiential journey through soil, ceremony, and sustainability.

From organic permaculture gardens to community education, they’re building a future where Bali feeds itself with integrity, and where the next generation leads with purpose.

Where to Engage:
𓇼 Walk the Subak Way trail and plant native rice alongside local youth.
𓇼 Join a field-to-table feast in the rice paddies, prepared by local chefs.
𓇼 Support their youth education programs with a monthly or one-time donation.
𓇼 Choose resorts that source produce through regenerative networks.

Why it matters:
Because farming is spiritual. Soil is memory. And future food security starts with honouring the land that fed us in the first place.

Soundscapes

The island doesn’t just whisper, it sings. In waves and wind, in gamelan rhythms and temple bells. Our Bali playlist is a sensory voyage: incense curling at dawn, surf breaks laced with synth, and twilight rituals draped in soul. Press play on sound that moves like the island - fluid, sensual, sacred. This is not background noise. This is atmosphere, emotion, and memory in motion. Let each note guide you deeper into the island’s rhythm.

Styled by SLO

Bali calls for barefoot chic with a resort twist. We’ve curated a shoppable wardrobe to carry you from reef to retreat with ease. Think linen layers, tonal swimwear, shell jewellery, and oversized shades. Our edits pair practicality with effortless coastal chic, so you can move through island time with ease and elegance.

SLOJOURN secrets

  • Deep in Tabanan’s rainforest, this lesser-known temple hosts monthly ceremonies that feel more like dream sequences than religious rites. Go with a local guide who understands the etiquette - this is sacred ground, not a photo op.

  • Ask the right villager, and you’ll be led to a riverside cave steam bath powered by volcanic stones and lemongrass bundles. A post-hike detox used by local farmers, not listed on any spa menu.

  • Book a 1:1 with the legendary Balinese pro-surfer (and style savant). Catch uncrowded breaks near Keramas, then slurp handmade soba at his discreet jungle canteen. Booking is word-of-mouth only.

  • Once a year, the tide and moon align to flood the reef pools under starlight. Locals say it’s a portal. Bring a sarong and someone worth kissing.

  • A residency-style pottery studio perched in the jungle. You can throw clay while cicadas sing, then glaze your work with local volcanic ash pigments. Part art therapy, part chic souvenir.

Local lowdown

  • Canggu if you want wild espresso, slow fashion, and surfboard-shaped flirtations. Sidemen if you want the soul of Ubud without the traffic.

  • Balinese greeting = soft smile, hands in prayer at heart, gentle bow. Don’t wave or fist bump at a temple - it’s weird.

  • Most people default to Bahasa Indonesia’s “thank you”, but “Suksma” is Balinese. Locals will love you for using it.

  • Not just at the beach. Temples, homes, studios - off with the shoes. Pedicures matter. And bring a chic slip-on sandal.

  • Use your thumb or your whole hand. It’s a respect thing. Same goes for touching heads - just don’t.

Perch yourself here

  • Forget the Instagram cafés - this is the place for traditional babi guling (suckling pig), slow-roasted over coconut husks. Sit on the floor. Say “enak banget” when it blows your mind. Pro Tip - make sure you take CASH.

  • Modern Mediterranean with island swagger. Think fire-charred octopus, wood-fired sourdough, and local rock salt martinis. Best spot for a pre-surf crush date or cool dinner with new villa friends.

  • A literal table in the river. Set up by your homestay host. No menu - just grilled fish, wild greens, and rice picked that morning. It’s not a restaurant. It’s a love letter to land.

  • Tropical garden vibes with conscious cocktails and the best turmeric lattes on the island. Come solo, bring your journal, order the dragon bowl, and stay for hours.

  • You haven’t had coffee until you’ve had it grown on volcanic soil at 1,200m elevation. Ask for the pour-over, sit with the farmers, and listen to the mountain speak.

  • Bali’s first natural wine bar, tucked behind an unmarked façade in Berawa. Think: moody lighting, terracotta walls, and a rotating list of funky pét-nats and chillable reds. The owners are ex-London and Copenhagen - it shows. Order the anchovy toast, sit at the bar, and let the staff guide your pour. Cool without trying. Quietly revolutionary.

The don’t miss

  • Yes, it’s popular. But do it differently - book with a female-led guide collective and request the optional crater picnic. Hike at dawn, sip kopi luwak over mist-draped lava fields, and let the silence ruin you (in a good way).

  • Skip Ubud’s overdone temples and head east. Tirta Gangga and Ujung are royal water palaces surrounded by jungle and myth. Arrive early, bring offerings, and wear linen - not activewear.

  • Picture this: sunlight pouring through a collapsed cave roof onto a jungle spring. It’s cinematic. Wear grippy sandals and go mid-morning to catch the light show. Yes, it’s real. No, it’s not crowded if you time it right.

  • A community collective space where expats, artists, and locals meet for coffee, activism, and surprise jazz nights. Think Bali’s version of a speakeasy salon. Don’t dress up. Just show up cool.

  • Most people turn around at the Instagram photo spot. Don’t. Keep walking north past the rice paddies and onto the trail that leads to a secret warung overlooking the riverbend. Order the smoked duck. Watch the light change.

Bali isn’t just a place - it’s a remembering.

It doesn’t ask to be mapped, mastered, or performed. Bali invites you to soften. To listen when the gamelan starts. To rise with the incense. To honour the silence between ceremonies. Let the island shape you. Let the spirits hold you. Let the ritual move through you like warm wind through rice fields.

Go and discover your own Bali.

Your curated SLOJOURN check-list for Bali

  • 𓇼 Let go of the itinerary. Bali unfolds best when you let her lead.
    𓇼 Honour the unseen. The offerings aren’t decoration - they’re devotion. Pause before you step.
    𓇼 Expect to be changed, not just charmed. This island works from the inside out.

  • 𓇼 Linen that breathes – wide-leg pants, oversized shirts, and dresses that can move from temple to beach bar.
    𓇼 A sarong – it’s temple attire, sun shield, beach mat, and fashion moment all in one.
    𓇼 Chic slip-on sandals – you’ll be barefoot constantly. Make it effortless and pretty.
    𓇼 A silk headscarf – for motorbike rides, jungle treks, or unexpected windblown glam.
    𓇼 Natural bug spray, reef-safe SPF, and hydrosols – think island apothecary.
    𓇼 Something incense-scented or ocean-washed to leave behind (ritual-style).

  • 𓇼 Greet sunrise with a beach run or barefoot flow on a cliffside mat.
    𓇼 Try a traditional Balinese boreh wrap at dusk - spice paste, herbal steam, deep exhale.
    𓇼 Join a silent walking meditation through Sidemen’s rice terraces.
    𓇼 Swap gym time for surf school, ecstatic dance, or cold plunge river dips.
    𓇼 Let ceremony be your workout. Carry offerings. Climb to a pura. Stretch your spirit.

  • 𓇼 Start the day with jamu – a turmeric-ginger tonic passed down through Balinese grandmothers.
    𓇼 Dine slow. Say yes to communal feasts and banana leaf meals.
    𓇼 Eat with your hands. Ask about the sambal. Respect the rice.
    𓇼 Visit the morning markets. Buy what’s in season. Let colour guide your plate.
    𓇼 Sip Balinese coffee black, thick, and bold enough to tell your fortune.

  • 𓇼 Book accommodations that support Subak farming, coral restoration, or local artisan cooperatives.
    𓇼 Skip plastic. Bali banned it for a reason - carry a reusable water bottle and tote.
    𓇼 Tip well, tip often. This is a service-led economy. Gratitude is sacred.
    𓇼 Join a beach clean-up, support Bye Bye Plastic Bags, or plant rice with Astungkara Way.
    𓇼 Learn a few words of Balinese - it’s not performative, it’s participatory.