This Is Why I Moved To Bali and You Can Too..

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  • čas přidán 9. 09. 2024
  • This Is Why I Moved To Bali and You Can Too..

Komentáře • 19

  • @baliwalknshops1517
    @baliwalknshops1517 Před měsícem +1

    It's very nice video

  • @travels129
    @travels129 Před měsícem +1

    No wonder bali is very popular. Has a lot goin for it

    • @BaliLifeWithJLB
      @BaliLifeWithJLB  Před měsícem +1

      Yesterday and lot cooler than the Philippines and Thailand.

  • @endt1mes
    @endt1mes Před měsícem +1

    Nice Jeff, looks so relaxing there. Also camera did very well in the low light.

    • @BaliLifeWithJLB
      @BaliLifeWithJLB  Před měsícem

      Thank you brother, its a good camera for sure.

    • @paulmathewson3840
      @paulmathewson3840 Před měsícem

      What is the camera that you're using mate​ @BaliLifeWithJLB

  • @mrmr314
    @mrmr314 Před měsícem +3

    Well you're off base on any number of counts. Indonesia has been markedly cooler over the past few years due to more wind (especially in Jakarta). But, that seasonal anomaly will swing around again sooner or later. It is screaming hot, especially during June, July and August (dry season). And during musim hujan (rainy season) it pisses down and floods all the time ... delivering lots of mosquitos and sometimes illnesses. Also you are relatively "young" and fit and haven't run out of money yet. You're showing the nightlife but not paying for it. So what you are doing is living cheap - which gets monotonous - or given you have mentioned your travels you have some dough (for now). Wait until you get older and you need health treatments all the time, or if something goes wrong like a hip, knee, shoulder, skin cancer and so-on. And make sure you never have an accident like car, motorbike, pedestrian etc. Indonesia is transient for the visitors - everyone eventually runs out of money or gets bored and leaves - and if you want to live there with the locals you need to speak bahasa Indonesia (which obviously you do not). You are also on a tourist visa only so if you really want to "live" in Indonesia you need to organise it properly and pay for it all (Immigration eventually won't allow you to keep on coming in on simple tourist visas). Because you don't know what you are doing in Indonesia (Bali is just the country's Gold Coast) you will come undone eventually. The locals are indeed friendly but over time only if you are spending money (that's the whole point of them allowing their island to be overrun with foreigners). But enjoy it while it lasts.

    • @leaderx7547
      @leaderx7547 Před měsícem

      "Immigration eventually won't allow you to keep on coming in on simple tourist visas."
      Why not?

    • @BaliLifeWithJLB
      @BaliLifeWithJLB  Před měsícem

      You sound very envious .I have now been here 10 months and the hottest day i experienced was 32c. Most days its 30c. Its much hotter in Thailand and the Philippines. Its now August and June and July was great weather, certainly not ''screaming hot'' lol.
      I moved here last November, but was here for a week in Sept and also October and where I am in Denpasar I have not seen it pour heavily much, and its usually overnight when it does.
      I have found there are far less mosquitoes than Australia and no one i know have gotten Dengue Fever. I am showing the nightlife but not paying for it, lol. I eat in one of the restaurants most nights and a decent meal and coconut is only 15 bucks.
      i have money and with my investments and work i will forever more but you are showing you are poor by what you are saying.
      I live super healthy eating mostly organic food and exercise daily so i don't plan on getting sick and never do. Last time i went to a doctor was in about 1990. Eventually bodies break down wherever you are but responsible people like me look after myself.
      Absolute nonsense statement and bizarre generaliztion about everyone running out of money and getting bored and leaving (you are obviously projecting, this was you). There are 10,ooo's of Aussies living in Bali whether they have a business, work online, live on investments or a pension.
      There are plenty of Indonesians here that speak English but I am learning the language so like every other bizarre statement you have made, you are wrong again.
      I love going to a new country every 2 months and nonsense on them not letting you back in but I am getting with a visa guy soon to work out a different type of visa (wich i can afford and you can't)
      Ha ha, I don't know what I am doing, man are you envious and bitter. No, the people you meet on the street or in social situations are generally more friendly than Western people. So wrong again. Such bitterness dude lol.

    • @BaliLifeWithJLB
      @BaliLifeWithJLB  Před měsícem

      @@leaderx7547 The guy obviously tried to live there and run out of money and is not exactly a positive human, the opposite in fact.

    • @BaliLifeWithJLB
      @BaliLifeWithJLB  Před měsícem

      @@leaderx7547 Will do a video on his comment, pity he couldn't show his face in his avatar and put his name up ..

    • @leaderx7547
      @leaderx7547 Před měsícem +1

      @@BaliLifeWithJLB
      He described Indonesia's climate as a whole. He doesn't seem to know that Indonesia is a big country with different climates. Wikipedia says Bali's average temperature is around 30 degrees all year. Just like you said.

  • @tarzan62
    @tarzan62 Před měsícem +1

    How do the girls compare to Thailand ? Are age gap relationships common ?

    • @BaliLifeWithJLB
      @BaliLifeWithJLB  Před měsícem

      Much better. They love communicating to you where Thais mostly can't speak english and most Filipinas are shy.Yes, but not 30, 40 year age gaps, more like 20 year or less..