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I have been to this temple about ten times. Usually I go to the pilgrimage with my local family members in Bali. I first came here in 2013. It was the most incredible experience, to Toyakepeh Bay, the driver walked around the island to the top of the temple. Walk up about 200 steps, hold a short ceremony at the entrance, and slowly walk through the cave about 4 meters wide. Then you stand in a very large cave, about 20 to 50 meters wide, 15 meters high. There will be water dripping from the top, and you can follow a 500 meter path to five or six different shrines with different prayers and rituals. A small side cave has a very direct ritual where priests are guarding it. At the end of the cave you come to the last great shrine on the mountainside. Look at the Rinjani on Lombok, or the Argonne on Bali. Since then, I have had several very sincere prayers with real priests and friends, mainly because I was fortunate enough to be able to travel from Bali to other islands by yacht. But if I come to this temple, I have to pick a holiday (to go), but note that the beautiful Peneta has been increasingly pillaged by tourism development (not back to the original appearance). It is almost the epitome of the whole of Bali. It has now developed to Penida and it started even before the locals got anything. And the island has no water supply. But it is still surrounded by beautiful seas and dangerous currents
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I have been to this temple about ten times. Usually I go to the pilgrimage with my local family members in Bali. I first came here in 2013. It was the most incredible experience, to Toyakepeh Bay, the driver walked around the island to the top of the temple. Walk up about 200 steps, hold a short ceremony at the entrance, and slowly walk through the cave about 4 meters wide. Then you stand in a very large cave, about 20 to 50 meters wide, 15 meters high. There will be water dripping from the top, and you can follow a 500 meter path to five or six different shrines with different prayers and rituals. A small side cave has a very direct ritual where priests are guarding it. At the end of the cave you come to the last great shrine on the mountainside. Look at the Rinjani on Lombok, or the Argonne on Bali. Since then, I have had several very sincere prayers with real priests and friends, mainly because I was fortunate enough to be able to travel from Bali to other islands by yacht. But if I come to this temple, I have to pick a holiday (to go), but note that the beautiful Peneta has been increasingly pillaged by tourism development (not back to the original appearance). It is almost the epitome of the whole of Bali. It has now developed to Penida and it started even before the locals got anything. And the island has no water supply. But it is still surrounded by beautiful seas and dangerous currents
Entrance fee IDR 50,000 for tourists. You have to wear a sarung else rent one for IDR 10,000.