Two Kutas and Three Gilis

“I wouldn’t go to Gili Trawangan,” says the guy who’s just showed up at our guesthouse. “It’s like Kuta in Bali. And you can’t get more than ten metres down the main street without someone trying to sell you mushrooms… Well, maybe not you…”

“I don’t know,” I say. “In Phnom Penh, none of the weed dealers seemed particularly bothered I had Z with me.”

In Phnom Penh, in fact, they were verging on persistent. One guy tried three times to sell me weed in the space of an evening. And, walking the streets at night, even with Z in tow, I’d get a couple of offers every two hundred yards.

I am, to be honest, kind of dubious about the Gilis. Three low-lying, tear drop shaped islands off the north-west coast of Lombok, not that far from Bali, they repeatedly make lists of world’s best destinations – they were one of Lonely Planet’s top picks last year.

I’ve heard they are touristy. Know they are, for the area, expensive. And they are also a significant detour away from our ultimate destination, Papua.

But Z is not to be moved.

“Look,” I say. “I’m not sure we really need to go to the Gilis. Particularly with Sumbawa coming up, it feels like all we’re going to be doing for the next fortnight is slobbing around on beaches.”

“And what, exactly,” quoth he. “Is wrong with that?”

“Err,” I begin . . .



We’d stayed longer than I’d intended in Kuta, the little idyll in southern Lombok that couldn’t be more different from its namesake in southern Bali if you paid it.

Kuta, Bali, is rapidly becoming a textbook example of over-development. Package tourists from Australia, in particular, though you’ll find them from all over the world, are funneled through its traffic-clogged streets and eroding beaches at a rate of knots. Often drunk, on motorbikes, and wearing Viking helmets.

If you exclude the tat for sale in the tourist arcades and the offerings still lovingly placed in the shops and stores, there is nary a sign of Bali’s unique culture. You could be in any tropical resort area, in Kuta, Bali, which has all the authenticity of Cancun, Mexico.

It does have some things going for it, of course. The Waterbom water park. And its proximity to the slick beachside luxury and genuinely beautiful spaces of Seminyak beachfront.

Kuta, Lombok? It’s only one island along, but a world away. Cows and goats still wander the beaches, and at weekends the local Sasaks celebrate weddings and festivals in their unique take on Islam, Waktu Telu.

Drive the atrocious road that winds east over a series of headlands, through traditional villages and farmland where buffalo wallow, and flawless bay after flawless bay opens up before you, vast expanses of beaches that you can sometimes have entirely to yourself, where local kids teach themselves to surf on boards and driftwood.

Did we learn to surf? Not entirely. It’s not a skill you master in a day, or even a couple of days.

But we got our skills up to a level where we felt we could brave what we’d heard was a great beginner’s wave that broke right on a beach in West Sumbawa, the next big island across from Lombok.



Now, Paris Hilton is not someone I usually turn to for reference. But she memorably said of Vegas that “The thing about Vegas is it gets old after two days.”

And, at least for us, the Gilis did too. Though I’m not sure whether it’s the islands that are spoilt, or us.

In fairness, if you had a big pile of books and a week or two’s holiday in which to recharge depleted batteries, you could very happily spend it here, in one of any number of Sasak-themed bungalows with tall thatched rooves and floaty white nets draped around day and night beds.

And, obviously, if you’re after shrooms, Gili T is as good a place as any to get high on the beach.

But all three of the islands –- Gili Trawangan, Gili Air and Gili Meno –- are tiny. You can walk all around Gili Air, where we stayed, in an hour or less, and every single stretch of beach is backed by a nearly identical set of bamboo stilt pagodas or lounge chairs.

Although you still can see cows grazing in the coconut groves and men mending their boats around the far side of the island, there’s very little sign of the indigenous culture left, because tourism is the islands’ main industry.

Cutely, there is no motorized transport on the islands. Less cutely, we are routinely assailed by horse carts offering wildly over-priced rides along the dirt paths around the island. And touts for both restaurants and hotels are almost as active as the vendors of bracelets and shoddily made sarongs.



What surprised us most about the islands of the lotus eaters?

Well, the Gilis are touted as a dive destination. And there is a great deal of marine life here, from turtles through to seahorses and enormous puffer fish, though manta rays pass through only a couple of times a year.

But the coral is, honestly, not in the best condition. There’s damage from dynamite fishing. And, apparently, bleaching, too. Which makes snorkelling in the currents between the to-ing and fro-ing boats less rewarding than it might be. At least not compared to Pulau Derawan or north Maluku.

And the food, too. I’d kind of figured that with a tourist density higher than Bali’s and accommodation prices higher than Bali’s, there would be some serious restaurants.

Yes, you can enjoy grilled fish of a zillion species in any one of a number of beachfront places. And, yes, you can drink cocktails based on imported spirits, and enjoy foods branded as organic.

But international class restaurants these are not. And what the land of the lotus eaters really needs is lotuses to eat…

And, as we head out on the little boat from Gili Air to the mainland, where our bike awaits us, we are, frankly, quite ready to leave Lombok behind for fresh adventures.

15 Responses

  1. love the honesty in this post!
    as an australian, i strictly avoid kuta. i definitely agree that it is another version of cancun.
    seems like a similar deal here. can totally understand you guys not being too into it. do like the pic though.

    • Theodora says:

      I’m not surprised. I think Australians find Kuta particularly hard to take precisely because it is full of other Aussies. You get up to Ubud, and it’s mainly Europeans and Yanks — but then we don’t have the idea of Bali as a package tour destination that you do.

  2. You’re quoting Paris Hilton…haha!

  3. i, too, love the honesty. i love Z’s comment, what is wrong with that? LOL!

  4. It’s nice to read a really honest post about the Gilis and the two Kutas. I wonder if there are any beaches left in Asia that actually look like the deserted postcards you buy in stores? And I am a little bit in awe of you learning to surf in your 30’s with your kid looking on … you are amazing! I’m not sure I would have the self confidence to do it in front of my kids … heck my oldest spawn has been using a hockey stick for two days and can already kick my butt so I’m sure even at 6 he’d be better at surfing than me!

    As for Shrooms in Phnom Penh … we never got offered any with kids in tow. Perhaps it’s your home grown haircut that just screams “hard core 90s raver in need of a flashback” ???

    • Theodora says:

      You can find fairly deserted beaches on Lombok, easily. Also on Sumbawa, though I wouldn’t necessarily recommend Sumbawa. The beaches on Pulau Derawan feel fairly deserted. And I suspect there are loads of gorgeous beaches along Flores that are yet to be explored.

      90s raver?! How dare you be so accurate? Ahem. It was only weed I got offered in Phnom Penh, actually. Not shrooms.

  5. izy says:

    you clearly did not eat at Scallywags or Koko here on Gili T – both are amazing, although pricey for Indonesia they’re well below what you’d pay in a first world country, let alone Europe. Excellent food. I agree, though, that there’s not much to do here except lounge around and I think I’ve been here a bit too long! Off to Kuta, Lombok 🙂

    • Theodora says:

      Actually, we did eat at Scallywags — twice. They were trying, and got close, but it wasn’t a patch on some of the restaurants in Ubud. But it was their Gili Air arm, not the Gili T one — so I’ll reserve judgement.

      When you’re in Kuta, check out Astari, up the hill on the dreadful road — really good veggy cuisine — also Family Cafe for Lombok food (the sate are amazing).

  6. Tai says:

    Yeah, I’ve read lots of people bashing Kuta Bali. But I actually dig it. All depends how you look at it. when I lived in Denpasar, Kuta (plus Legian, Seminyak) were the places I used to ride a bike to see sunset. Lots of locals come there too for sunset. It’s a nice pleasant beach, there are lots of decent restaurants, a cinema, magic shrooms and what not. I used to like riding a bike at night along Sunset Blvd, eat pizzas at a small pizzeria on Poppies I run by an Italian from Puglia, go to Apache reggae club with Papuan students (seriously the best natural dancers I’ve seen). I could even find tasty food in Kuta for 50 cents.

    People bash Kuta because they’re looking for wrong things there. Like authentic Bali or something.There is a good deal of shady things happening there. Muggings, rapes on the beach, drug dealing, lots of prostitution. Magic shrooms are used wrong way. I saw drunk backpackers helping themselves to a magig shake at night on the way from one club to another. Big mistake.

    Gili Trawangan, though, is really a trap. An evil place where you curse yourself for coming there the minute you step on the shore. They have maybe 70-80 percent of beach boys on crystal meth. These idle annoying creatures are like stray dogs there. They are everywhere and they are brazen and often quite aggressive. There is one place there where everybody goes to take exstasy. I think it’s run by a Dutch or British expat who is dealing pills big time. There are few quite places and even there you feel trapped. They offer shrooms everywhere but there is no environment to take them. The most bizarre for me was to hear the prayer call from the mosque all the time while walking along semi naked Western girls and local beach boys on crystal meth ogling them from the shady wooden platforms where they hang day in day out.

    • Theodora says:

      Yeah, I’ve heard of women sunbathing not just in bikinis but actually topless by the mosque.

      Kuta has its pleasures, I’d agree, notably Waterbom and the Bali Galeria, and Seminyak’s great for Italian food. I think why I’m so anti-Kuta is that whenever people slag off Bali, which I love, and where we will soon be based, they’re talking from a brief experience of Kuta. Go to Kuta for a couple of days, think they’ve done the island, and then slag it off at immense length.

      This talk of shrooms is making me miss hallucinogens. Stop it 🙂

      • Tai says:

        Ha, If you do take them, don’t pay more than 50 000 rupiah. The bastards are asking 200 000 at first.

        Yeah, of course, I mean, if those people are too lazy to even explore the island, too bad for them. It’s a bit like landing in rue Saint-Denis, staying there for a week whoring and doing drugs and then declaring that Paris is but a filthy town full of aging hookers. Kuta for me is a kinda functional place- the shortest ride to the beach from Denpasar (and Ubud probably). Carrefour is there nearby, Galeria… But for living in Bali, I guess most sane people choose some other place. I miss Bali already, especially those winding roads up to Bedugul, those misty mountains, food. Good luck on your next stay there 🙂

        • Theodora says:

          I love Bedugul! Strawberry Hill is one of the nicest places to stay on the island, I think, particularly for the mountains. Whereabouts are you living now?

          • Tai says:

            Yeah, Bedugul is amazing, also the road up to it, really exhilarating. I will have to come back to Bali and climb Agung. Now temporarily stranded in KL on the way to Papua. I’ll be in Papua till January, so if you decide to go there I would gladly help you with info or contacts 🙂