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GLOBAL SHANANIGANS

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The Royal Palace of Ubud
In the heart of Ubud, the Royal Palace stands as a stunning showcase of Bali’s rich history and artistic spirit. Built around 1640, this elegant complex of pavilions and gardens offers a glimpse into the lives of the island’s royal family while pulsating with cultural performances and traditional ceremonies that keep Ubud’s heritage alive.
Shannon


Baoguo - Temple of Divine Mountain
Situated at the foothills of Mount Emei, the Baoguo Temple serves as a gateway to one of China's Four Sacred Buddhist Mountains and stands as testament to the rich history and spiritual heritage of the region. Originally founded around 100AD, the current temple complex underwent extensive restoration during the Ming Dynasty in the 16th century, under the watchful eye of Emperor Kanxi.
Shannon


Batuan Temple
In the heart of Batuan village stands Pura Puseh Desa Batuan, one of Bali’s oldest and most spiritually charged temples. Founded in 1020 AD and recorded in Balinese historical texts for over a millennium, it is rooted in something far older, believed to have been built atop a megalithic stone circle, echoing the ancient power of Stonehenge, where ancestral rites were once performed.
Shannon


Wat Rong Khun - The Temple of Light
Radiant in white and adorned with shimmering mirrors, the White Temple embodies the journey toward spiritual purity and enlightenment. Its gleaming surfaces symbolise Buddha’s divine wisdom, while the mirrored mosaics reflect the light of truth that dispels ignorance. Conceived as a visual meditation on the path to nirvana, Wat Rong Khun invites reflection on the struggle between temptation and purity that lies at the heart of the human experience.
Shannon


Bedogol - The Gatekeepers
Across the Island of the Gods, Bedogol are the enigmatic stone guardians that flank the entrances of every temple and family compound, silent watchers frozen in time. Positioned in pairs on either side of a gateway, they hold watch as spiritual protectors, anchoring the threshold between the mundane world and the sacred realm beyond.
Shannon


Cat Cat Village
Cat Cát Village lies in the misty mountains of northern Vietnam, known for its cascading waterfalls, terraced hillsides and narrow stone paths that wind through the valley. The landscape, shaped by water and cloud, gives the village a magical atmosphere that draws travellers seeking both beauty and stillness.
Shannon


Brahmavihara Arama Buddhist Monastery
Perched 300 meters above Northern Bali’s hills, Brahmavihara Arama is the island’s largest Buddhist monastery, offering breathtaking views over rice terraces and the Bali Sea. Though built in the 1970s, this tranquil sanctuary has quickly become a must visit spiritual retreat away from the usual tourist paths.
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


Pawon Temple
Candi Pawon is a mysterious 9th century Buddhist shrine near Borobudur, aligned along a sacred axis and regarded as a jewel of Javanese architecture within the Sailendra dynasty landscape. Though small in scale, it is richly carved with protective figures and celestial beings hinting at a deeper ritual purpose, now lost to time. Despite its modest size, it shows remarkable precision in early stone craftsmanship and holds an enigmatic place within a wider spiritual design.
Shannon


Setia Darma House of Mask and Puppets
Hidden among Ubud’s suburban streets, Setia Darma House of Masks and Puppets transforms traditional architecture and jungle gardens into a stage for centuries of performance, ritual and storytelling. Faces carved from wood and leather occupy the shadows, their features frozen, suspended between beauty and menace. They are not mere decorations. Each functions as an instrument of ceremony, crafted to stir emotion and bridge the mortal world with the spirit of imagination.
Shannon


Ratu Boko Temple
Ratu Boko is a sprawling 1300 year old palace complex of shattered terraces and ruined halls where history and legend collide. Traces of Buddhist meditation meet Hindu ambition, while local tales claim a legendary prince summoned demons to build it overnight. Ancient stones whisper of curses, of King Boko’s tyrannical rule and of a princess turned to stone, leaving the ruins suspended between mortal ambition and the restless echoes of forces beyond the human world.
Shannon


Fangs of the Divine - Hanuman the Monkey King
Hanuman, the fierce Monkey King, prowls through the shadowed corners of Balinese myth, a figure both revered and feared. Far beyond a mere symbol of strength, he embodies a primal force, wild, untamed and relentless in his pursuit of justice. In Bali’s ancient Hindu-Buddhist tapestry, Hanuman’s presence evokes a raw energy, one that bridges the mortal world with darker realms where gods and demons wage eternal war.
Shannon


Poh Gading Waterfall
Spilling into the Petanu River, Poh Gading Waterfall descends over jagged volcanic steps, its channels shaped by human hands. Seasonal rains shift the flow, carving patterns in the rock and guiding water through a series of stepped pools. The ancient valley showcases the subtle interplay of human craft and natural forces, gradually gaining recognition as one of Bali’s up and coming jungle attractions.
Shannon


The Great Temple of Death
Agung Padangtegal Temple is one of the primary temples located within the Sacred Monkey Forest Sanctuary in Ubud, Bali. Established in the late 14th century, the temple serves as a key spiritual site for the local community, dedicated primarily to the worship of Hindu deities and various ancestral spirits. It is considered the main temple of the forest complex and plays a central role in religious ceremonies.
Shannon


The Melukat Ceremony
Over 1100 years ago, Bali’s sacred springs became the stage for Melukat, a ritual of purification where holy waters cleanse body and spirit. According to legend, gods pierced the earth and sacred springs burst forth to awaken fallen warriors. Today, pilgrims step into the crystal clear waters, following ancestral chants from Balinese priests, allowing the sacred flow to connect them deeply with the ritual’s ancient power.
Shannon


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


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


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


Jukut Paku Cliff Temple
Rising dramatically from the steep cliffs above the winding Wos River, Candi Tebing Jukut Paku is carved directly into the rock, its stone contours shaped to inspire devotion and quiet reflection. This 1000 year old cliffside sanctuary belongs to an ancient tradition of Balinese rock cut hermitages, offering seclusion for meditation and worship while immersing visitors in the rhythm and harmony of the natural world.
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
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