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Pura Dalem Ubud - The Temple of Death
In the shadowed heart of Ubud stands Pura Dalem, a temple steeped in ancient power and shadowed secrets. One of the area’s most formidable sacred sites, it pulses at the centre of the local spiritual life, a place where worship, dark rituals and otherworldly performances unfold. Its moss clad stone carvings depict guardian spirits and fearsome deities, whispering of life, death and the unseen forces that linger at the edge of perception.
Shannon


Puri Langon Temple
Puri Langon is a privately owned royal compound located in central Ubud. It is the personal residence of Tjokorda Ngurah Suyadnya, better known as Cok Wah, a respected figure in the Ubud royal family. Though it remains a functioning private home, Puri Langon is open to the public free of charge, offering rare access to a lived-in royal space that continues to serve spiritual and cultural functions within the community.
Shannon


Pura Dalem Puri Peliatan
Veiled in shadow and ritual power, Pura Dalem Puri Peliatan is one of Ubud’s most ominous sacred spaces, devoted to death, purification and realms beyond human life. A ceremonial heart for royal funerary rites, it is closely tied to Rangda, the Queen of Demons, whose fierce presence confronts dark forces. As a traditional Dalem temple, it functions as a liminal sanctuary where fire guide souls through the underworld.
Shannon


The Grand Palace of Peliatan
This grand old palace sits peacefully in the heart of Ubud, its centuries old walls steeped in Balinese royal history. Built in the 17th century by the Sukawati dynasty, it was once a centre of power, ritual and sacred heirlooms. Towering gates and intricately carved stone guardians greet visitors, hinting at the palace’s rich cultural legacy, ancient ceremonies and the mysterious forces said to linger in its courtyards.
Shannon


Suwat Waterfall
Air Terjun Suwat plunges 15 metres from jagged cliffs into a deep, clear pool of emerald waters. Mist drifts through the surrounding jungle while the steady roar of the falls blends with birdsong and the rustle of bamboo. The 7-metre-deep pool invites swimming or standing beneath the cascade to experience the full energy of the water, surrounded by lush vegetation and rugged cliffs that give the scene a sense of secluded intensity.
Shannon


Moksa Temple
Honouring the Hindu belief in spiritual liberation and the release from samsara, the continuous cycle of birth, death and rebirth, Pura Moksa is a quietly significant temple that embodies the Balinese understanding of life, mortality and the journey of the soul. Unlike Ubud’s more prominent historic temples, it was established by the local community as a place for personal devotion and meditation, serving primarily as a contemplative sanctuary rather than a site for public ce
Shannon


Pura Agung Jagatnatha
Formed from radiant white coral stone and watched over by guardian statues, Pura Agung Jagatnatha is crowned by a monumental Padmasana that binds earth to sky and radiates authority. Although modern in construction, the temple thrums with ritual energy, its courtyards unfolding like a maze of shadow and light, where incense hangs heavy in the air and each measured step carries a deliberate sense of purpose.
Shannon


Bajra Sandhi Monument
Rising like a shadow over the heart of Denpasar, the Bajra Sandhi Monument looms across Lapangan Puputan Square, a silent witness to centuries of courage and defiance. Its bell shaped crown hums with ritual authority, while its towering form traps grief, sacrifice and unyielding spirit in stone. Beneath its shadow, memory and valor endure.
Shannon


Ganesh - The Remover of Obstacles
In the moss veiled temples of Bali, Ganesha is far more than a familiar Hindu icon, he is a living force who moves between light and shadow. Though his roots lie in Indian Hinduism, Bali’s Ganesha (also known as Batara Gana) has taken on new dimensions, shaped by animist spirits, local rituals and the Balinese understanding of cosmic balance.
Shannon


Gunung Lebah - The Birthplace of Ubud
Rising from the heart of Ubud, Gunung Lebah Temple was founded in the 8th century by the Indian priest Rsi Markandeya as a sanctuary for meditation and spiritual retreat. Nestled at the confluence of the Wos and Pakerisan rivers, where their waters merge to form the sacred Campuhan, the site hums with serene energy, surrounded by forests rich with medicinal plants believed to heal both body and soul.
Shannon


Setia Darma House of Mask and Puppets
Occupying a quiet corner near Ubud, Setia Darma House of Mask and Puppets is where traditional architecture and cultivated gardens frame an extraordinary realm of performance art and ancient storytelling. Faces carved from wood and leather emerge from the shadows, their expressions suspended between beauty and unease. These are not decorative objects but instruments of ritual and narrative, crafted to command attention, stir emotion and blur the boundary between the human and
Shannon


Kebo Edan Temple
Once buried in the rice fields of Pejeng, Kebo Edan Temple, a 13th-century National Cultural Site, rises as a shadowy Tantric sanctuary where grotesque, skull adorned guardians channel transformative death energy, while a divine standoff unfolds as the crazy bull Nandi confronts Shiva in his blood soaked Bhairawa form, radiating destruction, madness and ecstatic power.
Shannon


Elephant Trunk Hill
At the confluence of the Li and Taohua Rivers, Elephant Trunk Hill stands as a silent guardian of Guilin, a natural sculpture shaped by time and legend. Said to be the petrified form of a celestial elephant struck down by the Heavenly Emperor, it blurs the boundary between myth and geology. For over a thousand years, poets and monks have carved their reverence into its stone, honouring its enduring spirit of wisdom and compassion.
Shannon


Suan Dok Temple
Marked by the presence royal ashes, Wat Suan Dok was established in the 14th century on the grounds of a royal garden. Its tranquil exterior belies over six centuries of sacred history. Whitewashed chedis catch the northern Thai sunlight, standing as symbols of devotion, mortality and remembrance. Surrounding the central chedi, royal mausoleums enshrine Chiang Mai’s rulers, underscoring the temple’s role as a spiritual bridge between the living and the departed.
Shannon


Baan Dam - The Black House Museum
In the quiet north of Chiang Rai, where the air hums with memory and shadow, stands The Black House Museum, the unique brainchild of famed Thai artist Thawan Duchanee. This open-air gallery unfolds across tranquil gardens, where forty haunting structures rise like dark prayers. Within their walls, bones, taxidermy, and sacred art merge into a single, unsettling vision, a labyrinth of charred timber and silence, less a museum than a descent into the artist’s soul.
Shannon


Railay Beach
Hidden behind towering limestone cliffs on Thailand’s Andaman Coast, Railay Beach is a secluded paradise reachable only by boat. Nestled between Krabi and Ao Nang, this striking peninsula draws climbers to its rugged cliffs and sun seekers to its golden shores but beyond the postcard perfect scenery lies a rich history and a quiet, enduring spirit that has shaped the land long before it became a travel hotspot.
Shannon


Chiang Rai’s Blue Temple - Wat Rong Suea Ten
Wat Rong Suea Ten, known as the Blue Temple, commands attention with its striking sapphire and gold tones, a bold statement in Chiang Rai’s spiritual landscape. Finished in 2005, it rises on the site of a long-abandoned shrine, quietly reclaiming a space rich in history. Local artist Phuttha Kabkaew envisioned a temple that honours the elegance of traditional Buddhist art while pushing it into a contemporary realm, creating a design that feels both rooted in heritage and unmi
Shannon


Bale Kambang
Floating within the ruins of Klungkung Palace, Bale Kambang rises like a defiant island, a silent witness to centuries of ambition, devotion and blood soaked politics. Built when Bali’s unified kingdom splintered into warring courts, it is more than a royal relic, a fusion of power, spirituality and symbolic mastery. Its ceiling murals depict kings and gods walking the line between the mortal and the divine, while the surrounding waters reflect the cosmic ocean and the fragil
Shannon


Tiger Cave Temple - Wat Tham Suea
Hidden deep within the forest, the Tiger Cave Temple was founded in 1975 by a devoted monk seeking refuge from the world’s distractions. Drawn to the untouched serenity of the jungle, he discovered a secluded sanctuary where the whispers of the trees and the stillness of the air created the perfect environment for deep meditation. Amid shadowed caves and quiet trails, the temple rose as a place where nature, legend and spiritual devotion converge.
Shannon


Khao Sok National Park - Thailand’s Ancient Jungle
Declared a national park in 1980, Khao Sok in southern Thailand’s Surat Thani Province is a primeval wilderness frozen in time. Towering limestone karsts and winding rivers carve through a sprawling rainforest so ancient it once lay beneath a prehistoric ocean. At 160 million years old, Khao Sok’s evergreen rainforest offers travellers a rare glimpse into a world that has survived ice ages, shifting continents and humanity’s relentless march.
Shannon
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