Amlapura
- Tirtagangga
The
village is also home to a few families and priests known as Brahm
ana Buddha. These are followers of a Hindu cult, the Budha Kasogatan,
which differs slightly from the Shiva dominant in Bali . Their
presence in the village is said to date back to the 16 th century
when Danghyang Nirartha, a revered Hindu leader, invited a young
Javanese priest of the Budha Kasogatan cult to attend a ceremony
in Bali . To test his capacities, the local villagers buried a
noisy goose under the ground and asked the visitor to guess the
source of the clamour. The legend says that the priest identified
the noisy beast as a dragon, making everyone laugh at his expense
until a fuming dragon jumped out of the cage. The young priest
tamed the dragon, which in Budha Kasogatan cult is the vehicle
of holy men to the afterlife, and thus gained acceptance in the
local community. The village was renamed Budakeling from Buddha
and Keling, the priest's village in east Java ( story by Ida Wayan
Oka Plating ).
From
the eastern end of Budakeling, a small road climbs up for about
8km towards Tanah Aron . Located at an altitude
of 900m on the slope of Mt. Agung , the site offers a sweeping
view to the south and, on a clear day, to Lombok . It hosts a
monument to Bali 's independence fighter and their leader,
Ngurah Rai. You can also reach it by driving 3km northwards from
Tirtagangga to Abang, where a small road on the left leads to
Pidpid, 3km up in mountains, and then finish on foot for another
3km.
The
Amlapura – Muncan Road

The
road heading west out of Amlapura offers pleasant views and several
interesting stops. Five kilometres after Amlapura, before the
Bali Aga village of Bebandem and its famous
livestock market, you can find the road leading to Budakeling
and Tirtagangga on your left. About 3km further, a small road
on the right leads to Jungutan. Follow it to be the temple Tirta
Telaga Tista, about 2km from the main road - a scenic walk through
lovely countryside. More modest than the water palace
surrounding
verdant hills
simple
bamboo furniture
including
vegetarian dishes
bungalows
built above
brick
shops decorated
treks
into highland
small
road climbs
This
lower temple