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GLOBAL SHANANIGANS

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The Dedari Maidens
Long before they appeared in stone carvings and dance traditions, Dedari were imagined as celestial maidens moving between the divine and human realms. Their presence lingers throughout Bali's sacred landscapes, from river valleys and jungle sanctuaries to temple courtyards filled with music and incense. More than mythological figures, Dedari embody an enduring belief that beauty, harmony and spiritual awareness can reveal glimpses of a world that normally remains unseen.
Shannon


Kehen - The Temple of Fire
Pura Kehen rises from Bali’s highlands like an ancient vow carved into stone, once a place where royal officials swore loyalty before the fire god Agni. Those who broke their oaths were believed to be marked by a lingering curse passed through bloodlines. Beneath the ancient banyan’s watchful roots, where offerings once signalled obedience and silence was treated as its own form of confession, the ground still feels bound to what was promised upon it.
Shannon


Pusering Jagat Temple
In the ancient heartland of Bali, Pura Pusering Jagat sits quietly where the earliest ritual landscapes still linger within everyday village life. Often overlooked, this Shiva sanctuary is linked to the sacred network of Bali’s holiest directional temples. Surrounded by prehistoric relics and early Hindu sites, it rests in a valley where meaning appears to have gathered long before written history, shaped by centuries of devotion, shifting belief and continuous ritual worship
Shannon


Dragons of Asia
Across ancient Asia, dragons were not ornament or mythic beasts but frameworks for reading the natural world. They moved through storm and sky as bringers of rain, through rivers as an unbroken force and within mountains where opposing powers were held in balance. In every form, they carried the idea that imperial power was only legitimate when it mirrored the balance of the heavens, with rule drawn from the same forces that shaped the sky.
Shannon


The Ancient Guardians of China
Through the rise and fall of dynasties, ancient Foo Dogs have stood for centuries as guardians of thresholds, long regarded as powerful protectors against evil and inauspicious energies. Placed at ceremonial gates, sacred temples and burial roads, they have remained a constant feature of imperial and religious architecture across China.
Shannon


Barong - King of the Good Spirits
Barong is one of the most iconic and revered figures in Balinese mythology, embodying health, good fortune and divine protection. More than just a mythical creature, Barong is believed to act as a guardian angel, accompanying each person through life and shielding them from harm. He is the leader of the hosts of good and the eternal nemesis of Rangda, the dreaded Widow Queen.
Shannon


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


Garuda - The Immortal Hunter
Garuda, the colossal bird being of Hindu myth, soars through Balinese religious imagination not as a gentle guardian but as a relentless force cutting across the realms of gods, demons and mortals. His wings are said to darken the sky when spread, the violent wind from their beat capable of stripping the leaves from the forests.
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


Kinnari Mythology
In mythic worlds from ancient India to the Southeast Asian archipelago, the Kinnari occupy a quiet place in sacred order. They are celestial winged beings who move along the fault lines between realms, where divine and human realities orbit each other, without ever becoming one reality. In temple stone and court ritual, they are instruments of balance. They exist only in passage, crossing into the human world to mark its distance from the gods, before returning to the order t
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


The Birth of Apsaras - Daughters of the Ocean of Milk
Apsaras, the celestial nymphs of Hindu and Buddhist mythology, are revered for their unparalleled beauty, graceful movements and mastery of dance and music. Adorned with golden skin, fragrant hair and flowing garments, they appear throughout ancient texts as divine attendants in the heavenly courts of gods like Indra, where they serve as entertainers and symbols of spiritual and aesthetic refinement.
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


The Life of Buddha
2600 years ago, Siddhartha Gautama was born into privilege, raised in a world designed to shield him from suffering. When he stepped beyond the illusion, he encountered sickness and death, abandoning everything he had been taught to become. After years of ascetic extremes, he discovered a path to enlightenment rooted in balance and clarity. Through deep meditation under the Bodhi Tree, he awakened. Buddha’s teachings reshaped how civilizations understood suffering, identity a
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
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