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Jembrana
 The
district of Jembrana is a rugged area covering a large
strip of the southwest coast of Bali. The western tip of
the island is separated from East Java by a narrow
strait, serviced by a regular ferry service between
Gilimanuk, and Ketapang.
Legend has it that Bali was once
joined to Java here by a narrow piece of land, until one
day a distinguished Javanese priest of great powers
banished his badly behave son to Bali, drawing a finger across
the connection sands and cutting Bali off from the
"mainland" of Java. Indeed, geological
evidence proves that there was once a land connection.
The strait is lees than three kilometers at is widest
point and in some places reaches only 60 metres.
An enterprising Buginese prince
from Makasar named Kapiten Patimi set himself up during
the 17th century as ruler of Jembrana. He was tolerated
by the Badung royalty, who basically considered Jembrana
as an appendage of their own extensive realm. At the
turn of the 19th Century the Raja of Karangasem, having conquered
both Buleleng and Lombok, proceeded to covet Jembrana,
and actually succeeded in taking over for a stage, much
to the chagrin of Badung.
The Dutch military expedition of
1846-49 enabled the colonials to exert an increasing
degree of control over northern and western Bali. In
1847 the Raja of Jembrana finally relinquished his
kingdom to the Dutch who appointed a "puppet"
member of the royal family a Regent.
Independence
brought increased prosperity to Jembrana, and the narrow
strip of the coastal land is now intensively cultivated.
Large coconut plantations back onto a range of
mountainous jungle. The most important and largest
fishing port in Bali is at Pengambengan just ten kilometers
southwest of the major town of Negara, within view of
the nearby coast of Java. The local fishermen here,
using large motorized perahu, catch quantities of
sardines in the triangular area of Indian Ocean between
Bali and Java known as Selat Bali. There are several
large canneries right on the beach at Pengambengan.
Prawn-breeding is also a small industry with tremendous
potential in this area.
Negara
Negara
is farmed for its bull races, held every year between
July and October. The dates of the events vary from year
to year. Information can be obtained from the Badung
Tourist Promotion Boards office in Denpasar on these.
Water buffalos are used to pull the tiny carts, gaily
decorated for the occasions, at high speed down the race
track. Held to celebrate the end of the rice harvesting
season, the races are judged both on speed and style,
and create and amazing spectacle, enthusiastically
watched by crowds of local people as the bulls thunder
down the narrow mud track, bells ringing and silken
banners flying.
Perancak
The coastal village of Perancak is
named for its ancient temple, Pura Ancak, where he Hindu
priest Dang Hyang Nirartha first set foot on Bali.
Pura
Rambut Siwi
Between the village of Air Satang
and Yeh Embang a side-road leads to the beautiful
coastal temple of Pura Luhur at Rambut Siwi, set on a
cliff top overlooking a long wide stretch of beach.
Asah
Duren
Twenty kilometers inland from
Negara the road climbs into the foothills. At Asah Duren
large clove plantations surround the village. In the
past the principal clove-growing areas in Indonesia were
in Sumatra and Maluku, but in the last decade Bali has
become a major producer.
Bamboo
Music and Folk-Dancing
In the northern part of west Bali,
near the Jembrana border, are a large number of coffee
plantations. This is where the Joged Bumbung music and
dance troupes are thought to have first originated.
Flirtatious dance performances of similar genre are now
popular throughout Bali. One particular group from Tegal
Cangkring were so popular in the 1940’s that they used
to take a wooden ox-cart to performances to carry home
all the coffee they were given. "Bumbung"
means "bamboo tube, and the instruments of the
joged consist of a number of bamboo xylophones. Another
variety of these, known as the Jegog, are specific to
the Jembrana region. These are made of such large bamboo
that the players have to sit on their instruments. The
sound produced by these attractive instruments is mellow
and haunting, very pleasing to the ear.
Potential
in Tourism
As one of Bali’s most isolated
and untouched areas, with its mountainous hills of
virgin jungle, wildlife and stretches of beautiful
beaches Jembrana has a great deal to offer to the
tourist wishing to delve further than the popular resort
areas and experience the beauty of Bali’s natural
scenery. Visitors coming to Bali overland from Java all
pass this way, on the main highway from Gilimanuk to
Denpasar, but until now, due to the distance from the
major resorts, Jembrana has received very little
exposure to tourism.
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