South China Morning Post

BALI BETS ON WELLNESS TO DRAW VISITORS BACK

Island seeks share of US$650 billion global market with experience­s such as local foraged food, yoga and spas as it rebuilds tourism after pandemic

- Joseph Rachman

Crouching between the clear mountain stream and the rice field in Bali’s Ubud, Kasida cupped a tiny jewel-like red onion just pulled from a grassy verge which serves as a pantry for his restaurant Locavore.

The onion is just one of the many types of local produce used at the restaurant that specialise­s in sustainabl­e dining, as food and wellness emerge as a key driver of Bali’s tourism-dependent industry still recovering from the pandemic.

Renowned as the Isle of the Gods, Bali’s reputation as a tourist haven was cemented in the 1980s. It is a party island for young Australian­s – who flood Kuta during the Christmas season – an affordable beach location for families and increasing­ly in recent years, a yoga haven for wellness enthusiast­s.

Yet Bali’s tourist numbers are still well below pre-pandemic levels, according to Indonesia’s Central Bureau of Statistics. The island’s foreign tourist arrivals fell about 16 per cent to 4.4 million between January and October this year from 5.2 million over the same period, before the pandemic, in 2019.

Wellness and new experience­s may well be the island’s springboar­d to a strong rebound.

At Locavore, at the island’s health epicentre of Ubud, customers are fed food foraged from the island, including clovers that taste like citrus, the cemcem leaf, which tastes like green mango, and ground mustard.

“In Bali, foraging is just part of our lives,” said Kasida, who oversees supplies for his restaurant and like many Indonesian­s goes by one name.

Locavore is inspired by Denmark’s legendary threeMiche­lin-star Noma, which uses only hyperlocal ingredient­s and has won multiple awards as the world’s best restaurant.

The Balinese restaurant epitomises the new tourism-based businesses that leverage local resources and internatio­nal appeal to attract tourists seeking wellness experience­s.

The island itself wants a larger slice of the global market for wellness tourism, which was worth about US$650 billion in 2022, according to the Global Wellness Institute.

Last week, Ubud was hailed for its food by the United Nations World Tourism Organisati­on for making the town “a global hub of sustainabl­e gastronomy tourism”.

It is already one of Southeast Asia’s top wellness and eco-tourism destinatio­ns where visitors can indulge in yoga classes, nature hikes, vegan restaurant­s and spa treatments.

“Festivals, spiritual education, seminars, yoga, cooking classes all help drive up [demand and] prices,” said Odeck Ariawan, a veteran of the tourism trade who is credited with establishi­ng Ary’s Warung, Ubud’s first-ever fine dining establishm­ent.

As demand increases for wellness experience­s across Bali, Locavore is seeking to expand into the luxury end of the market.

On Christmas Eve, Locavore will open a new building designed to look like a plant-covered mountain with a roof garden, an undergroun­d mushroom room and a special fermenting chamber.

A project of this nature would not have been possible 10 years ago as evolving tourist tastes have made it viable, according to Koman Suteja, the owner of Locavore.

“It used to be that people came to Bali for the beaches, and Ubud for art and sightseein­g,” he said. “People are now interested in spirituali­ty and wellness … they are interested in new things including new sorts of food.”

Visitors are also younger – in their 20s and 30s – and willing to spend more on their experience­s.

“Older [tourists such as] Singaporea­ns could sometimes be a bit picky,” said Eelke Plasmeijer, Locavore’s Dutch chef. “But the younger ones are more adventurou­s.”

As the wellness-related industry booms in Bali, more tourists have stayed on the island to set up related businesses, said Giotto Castiglion­i, chief operating officer of winemaker Cantine Balita.

Specialisi­ng in organic and natural wines made with Balinese grown grapes, Cantine Balita is owned by Agung Bagus Pratiksa Linggih, the scion of an influentia­l local family.

Other players in the food and beverage industry have also learned to adapt to the local environmen­t to create unique dining concepts.

Koman, who also owns the Komaneka chain of boutique hotels, said: “If tourists want wellness, where better to come than Bali? You have the nature, the beauty, and the traditions but also the infrastruc­ture and expert staff.”

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