Gijs Heerkens

Silicon Bali 🌴

Today a year ago I was happy to leave Bali, Indonesia. It took me so much time to write about it because this was my biggest travel disappointment ever. The island commonly known as paradise turned out to be the epicenter of the fake-ass Instagram world.

I can’t help but conclude that it’s very overrated. Silicon Bali is the hipster nick name for Bali. It’s very ironic they are using the word silicon here, as I associate it with fake tits.

Bali is full of semi hipsters busy shooting their best instas while the island is losing all of its charm because it’s being flooded by tourists. It made me decide to stop using Instagram altogether.

It goes without exaggeration that there are five times too much people on the island. This makes traffic very, very intens. Even more than Bangkok’s. I went from Canggu to Ubud one day, by Grab (the Asian Uber), which is 28 kilometers and it took 4+ hours. All streets are full of traffic jams all day.

After that I absolutely didn’t want to go any further so I didn’t see the whole island (disclaimer). In this article I’m talking about Canggu, which was Nomad List’s number 1 destination for a long time (currently second) and I don’t understand why.

The best way to get around is by motor scooter, but there is a big catch. Your driving license probably isn’t valid in Indonesia, which makes you uninsured. No one seems to care and everybody rents one anyway. You won’t be the first one getting into an accident in this crazy traffic though, ending up paying for the rest of your life (or worse ☠️).

Add the poor road quality, everyone’s driving style (see video) and the fact that there is no ambulance service in Bali and think again if you really want to rent a motor scooter.

So I didn’t want to take this risk and rented a mountain bike instead. I was literally the only one on a bicycle 😅. But this was the only other option, as lots of streets don’t have side walks. So you are walking on the middle of the road waiting to get hit. And there is no public transport either.

I think tourism is digging its own grave on Bali. You only have to compare Google Streetview’s history to see what’s happening there. Some shots of the main roads in Canggu in 2013 and 2018:

Everything is being stuffed with western entrepreneurs’ buildings to serve western people acting like they are having a great time for their western Instagram friends at home.

If you still want to go though, here are some tips:

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