We made it to Bali!
Our flight, VA65, ended up being a 7-hour marathon – 7 hours and 8 minutes from gate to gate. We ended up disembarking after 11pm Bali time (1am according to our body clocks).
One interesting note was that the inflight internet on our 737-8 lasted all the way until DPS – I was expecting it to not work once we left Australia.
After disembarking we found ourselves in a very large Arrivals hall. To the left was an absolute ocean of people who were queueing for a Visa on Arrival, and we were very grateful that we already had our Visas and we could go straight to the Smart Gates and Passport Control. We had to be just a little bit assertive to stop people cutting in, in front of us, but we were through in about 10 minutes. Then it was over to the carousels to collect our luggage. The signs announced that our luggage would be on Carousel 6 and it actually turned up on Carousel 5 (why does this happen so often at so many airports?), but at least Virgin’s app gave me notifications that the luggage was on Carousel 5, so we could split up and wait at both carousels and collect the luggage when it arrived.
In lots of areas at DPS there are signs saying that photography isn’t permitted. This is the baggage collection area and hopefully I wasn’t breaking any laws by taking this photo!
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From there it was a walk to Customs and more assertive queuing. We walked past a huge number of people who hadn’t done their Customs Declaration and who were fiddling around in the chaos with their phones and scanning QR codes. For us, though, once we got to the front of our queue, the Customs agent scanned the QR code on our phone and waved us through. No-one looked at our Health Declarations or checked that we’d paid the Tourist Tax, but presumably those were both connected to our Passports.
Given the number of people who didn’t have a Visa and who hadn’t filled in their other declarations, we were grateful for the Smartraveller website that clearly spelled out everything we’d need. In particular, if we had waited until flying in to get our Visas, we may well still be waiting in the queue at the arrivals hall!
I’d arranged a private transfer with our accommodation. The driver sent me a WhatsApp message with instructions on where to meet him, and we ran the gauntlet of what seemed like hundreds of taxi and transfer services before we met our driver. He then took us to his van, loaded us up and we were on our way through the streets of Denpasar.
The post-midnight drive was certainly a revelation. Herds of motor-scooters were ducking and weaving around us as we drove. Many of the drivers and passengers weren’t wearing helmets, and more than once we saw a passenger holding on with one hand, and nonchalantly doing stuff on their phone with the other. The streets were narrow, the dogs were ubiquitous, the traffic was busy (if it was that busy after midnight, what’s it like during the day?) and the drive was slow.
Sorry for not taking more photos but it was dark and I was very weary after our long day!
We arrived at our accommodation just after 1am (3am AEST). Shower, bed, and, for all of us, a sleep that was not quite as deep, nor as long, as we would have liked!