Basically, it was about $150 for both days and the short airport pick-up and short tour on the way to Ubud.
Not bad at all.
I thought this was extraordinarily reasonable for the amount of work and attention he and the other driver (I had a different one for the return) gave me.
His usual, infectious smile was such a wonderful addition to his enthusiastic greeting and running commentary throughout the day.
That adds a lot. A surly tour guide can ruin a tour.
Nice to put a face to the name.
took a moment to make some minor adjustments to his dashboard offering before we set off.

Interesting. Even in vehicles. Huh.
But... in an accident, I don't know if I want that flying into my face.
Wow! What a gorgeous view!
(I can't remember if I posted that photo before, but it's with this batch so...?)
Nope! Haven't seen it.
I had asked Dewa to take me to the Ceking Rice Field, but with a grin on his face, he told me he would suggest a “much better place- with a lot fewer tourists”!
Boy, hiring a local guide is sure paying off.
(yes, every place ANY tourists are going to show up, there will be a modest fee to get in)
Define "modest". Like... around $5USD?
(The translation makes me giggle.)
I hate it when it's muddly out.
Actually, while I do get a bit of a kick out of those sorts of things, I always remind myself that
their English is
far better than
my Indonsesian/Balinese.
In a nutshell, rice takes 3 months from planting to harvest.
I had no idea. You could've told me it takes 3
years and I would've believed you.
Each little clump is hand sown during long days of excruciating, back-bending work.
Ugh... I've seen pictures of people bent over in rice paddies... excruciating definitely comes to mind.
The fields are then left “dry” for a short time to let the roots “grab”, then they are flooded
Huh. I just thought they were permanently wet.
The only stage that is machinated is the threshing which is done at another location and returned to the farmer/family for distribution or consumption.
Interesting. I would've thought that the entire process was done "in house".
He estimated that a 2 x 2m plot would produce about a kg. of rice per cycle. His family eats 1 1/2 kgs. of rice every single meal so you can imagine how much rice needs to be grown.
So... Based on a cycle of 3 months, and an average of 30 days/month... they eat 45kgs/month so need 45x(2x2) or about 180 square meters... times 3. So to feed a family 1.5kgs of rice every day, they need 540 square meters. That might sound like a lot but an average football field is about 5,000 square meters. Call it ballpark about 1/10th the size of a football field.

(Newly planted terraces)
Such cool shots!
they are, to be true, very exotic and beautiful.
I highly doubt the locals feel that way about them, however.
Mostly I was trying not to drown in a foreign rice field or at best not make a scene.

Dying, no problem. Dying while looking silly? Problem!
There were zero other tourists to crowd my photos
Perfect.
and that me made about as happy as finding a 15-minute queue for Flights of Passage. (That only happens when you run at rope drop.)
So... you're saying you're blown away and shocked??
I love this shot. Breathtaking... and the scale of the people in the photo! That just elevates it through the roof.
I watched her in silence for a while and she tried pretending not to care if I did. She paid about as much attention to me as a Buckingham Palace Guard might. I gestured to my camera to ask for her photo and she grunted and nodded yes so I snapped a photo or two and continued on
Lady's busy. You're lucky she didn't throw her sandal at your head.
Like this shot with the offering in the foreground.
It may not surprise you terribly that going up was not nearly as easy as going down.
Shocked! Shocked, I say!
As out of shape and weak as I am these days, it’s quite a miracle I made it back out without a rescue crew hauling me back out on a litter.
"We need the evac helicopter at the rice fields... again."
"Not another out-of-shape tourist!"
"Yep. Another one. 8th one this... day."
Looks pretty slippery, too.
I see the flag. Lots of water hazards on this golf course.
Cool mushroom shot!
One, as you may have seen in Instagram, is the famous Bali swings. For about $10, they provide a giant swath of red fabric, harness you onto a huge swing, push you out, then take photos of you for you to purchase.
I have seen that swing. Or one like it at least. Looks kinda fun, but... I don't need to do it.
I was thinking I should start an Instagram for a middle-aged, old fart, travel nut giving tips on how to navigate long plane rides, adventure without breaking the bank, tour while having to apply Voltaren gel to the places that hurt, and needing a bathroom every 30 minutes.
Pretty shot of you.
With that, the rice field stop was over and we set off for the next stop- a beautiful temple outside of town.
