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GLOBAL SHANANIGANS

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Banyumala Twin Waterfalls
Banyumala sits in Bali’s volcanic highlands, where ancient ridges and forested slopes have been shaped over millennia. A spring-fed stream breaks over volcanic rock into twin falls, dropping into a clear pool surrounded by dense jungle The water flows steadily year round, filtering through porous stone deep underground. Above it, forests tied to centuries old settlements and sacred lakes still carry both ecological and spiritual weight across the uplands.
Shannon


Maduwe Karang Temple
For over 135 years, Pura Maduwe Karang has stood as a principal temple at the heart of the local agricultural landscape, where ritual practice and farming cycles remain closely interlinked with the fields that surround it. Its carved surfaces form part of a sacred environment layered with imagery that carries stories across every wall. This active temple forms part of a wider pattern along the island’s northern coast where sacred sites are still shaped by the volcanic ground
Shannon


Pura Dalem Agung Buungan
Hidden in the highlands of Bangli, Pura Dalem Agung Buungan is a rare death complex where three distinct sanctuaries function as one unified ritual landscape. Rather than marking death as a single moment, the complex guides the soul through successive stages while allowing different lineage groups to perform parallel ceremonies within a shared cosmology. Rooted in older funerary cycles and ancient traditions, it frames death as an ordered passage through interconnected sacred
Shannon


Beji Selati Sacred Springs
In a misty valley where the Sangsang River snakes through hidden jungle cliffs, Beji Selati is a sacred site used for melukat purification ceremonies. This uniquely Hindu ritual is intended to cleanse spiritual impurities and restore harmony between the individual and the unseen world. Within this setting of flowing water and stone, the experience becomes less about explanation and more about entering a space where nature and ritual are inseparably bound.
Shannon


Kepeng Coin Figurines
Crafted from ancient Kepeng coins once used as currency across Bali, these figurines carry a history that predates their transformation into art. Introduced from China over a thousand years ago and already centuries old by then, the coins were later withdrawn from everyday use. Today they are bound into sacred decorative figures where their worn surfaces and softened edges still hold the weight of time within Balinese ritual life.
Shannon


Yogyakarta
Shaped by the eruptions of Mount Merapi and layered with more than 2500 years of history, Yogyakarta stands at the heart of Java’s spiritual and cultural landscape. Ancient temples, royal traditions and centuries of warfare intertwine across the region, from the soaring spires of Prambanan to the vast stone terraces of Borobudur. Beneath the shadow of the volcano, myths, kingdoms and sacred rituals continue to shape the soul of the city.
Shannon


Grojogan Watu Purbo Waterfall
Though it looks wild, Grojogan Watu Turbo is entirely man made, built in the 1970s as a six tiered dam to control volcanic debris from Mount Merapi. Water thunders over volcanic stone, cascading in precise steps that tame torrents capable of destroying villages. Once purely functional, it now draws visitors with its sheer scale, sharp stone lines and striking cascades tamed by human design.
Shannon
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