![]() ![]() But the No.1 reason to go to Potato Head is to eat at all three of its restaurants. Music fans shouldn’t miss the regular Sun Down Circle happenings – featuring international DJs and local acts, while greenies will be blown away by the venue’s cutting-edge sustainability workshop where polystyrene is recycled into bricks. That pitch doesn’t come from the club’s marketing team but from one of its toughest competitors – the Australian co-owner of Finns Beach Club, Tony Smith.Īrchitecture fans should visit Potato Head at Potato Head Beach Club, in the trendy coastal enclave of Seminyak, to study the dome facade lined with thousands of antique Dutch window shutters. If you come to Bali, you have to go there.” “Potato Head is one of the best beach clubs in the world. ![]() Photo: Mick Curley Best beach club for gastronomes: Potato Head Surfing at night? It’s possible at Finns. With nine bars, five restaurants, live DJ sets 13 hours a day, a day spa, wine cellar, an adults-only rooftop bar, adults-only pool, oceanfront lawn, a massive lagoon pool embedded with semi-submerged circular daybeds, a French al fresco rooftop restaurant staffed by French sommeliers, French chefs and French maître d’s, sushi bar, bakery, Indian restaurant and 170 metres of uninterrupted beachfront facing the sunset, Finns Beach Club has something for just about everyone.īut something Finns, which reopened in May following a multimillion-dollar expansion, offers what most other beach clubs in Bali do not: surfable waves.įrom its location right in front of the Berawa Beach break in the surfing mecca of Canggu, you can even surf here after dark thanks to powerful stadium lights that light up the waves nightly until 10pm. ![]() This barefoot venue – with a day spa, private cabanas, water sports centre, sushi restaurant, pizzeria and bamboo bar – sits so perfectly in its place it seems like the architect and Mother Nature were in cahoots. The view that takes people’s breath away at Karma Beach Club.įrom there, it’s just 60 seconds via a $1 million inclinator down the face of a vertical rainforest inhabited by voracious long-tailed monkeys to paradise – a turquoise lagoon edged by a crescent of white sand home to the Karma Beach Club. That’s the first and only phrase that runs through most people’s minds as they walk along the coral pathways, skip across the wooden footbridge, sashay around the clifftop infinity pool and glance down 100 metres to see – for the first time – the Instagram-breaking 180-degree Indian Ocean views and Technicolor coral reef at Karma Resort on the cliffs of Uluwatu on Bali’s south coast. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |