I’ll give you a very short version here. However if you want to know the long version let me know and I have a much more detailed long version that I’d be happy to share with you. - Basu
- It all started about four years (in 1997) on my way back from a business trip to Madras (Chennai). I went to spend a few days in Calcutta before heading back to LA. I ended up having a couple of extra days in hand during my stop over in Singapore from Calcutta. From the first sight, Singapore is very impressive. Cleanliness, orderliness, and efficiency of the city and society make a very big first impression. However, as you come back a few times to Singapore, the most impressive parts of Singapore become a given, and one starts to take it for granted. Then you start observing other things in the city. I came to a pretty quick conclusion; as impressive as the city is, it is not a great place to spend for more than a few days initially, and after that the city seems to possess less and less charm for an occasional visitor.
- Consequently, during my 1997 visit when I had a couple of days to kill, I decided to explore what else is around Singapore. That’s when I discovered Bintan Island, which is only about a 45 minute ferry ride across the Strait of Singapore and is actually a part of Indonesia. This particular island has been developed primarily to make it an attractive resort destination for people living in and visiting Singapore.
- There are half a dozen scheduled departures of modern ferries from the Tanah Merah Ferry Port (TMFP) of Singapore to Bintan Island and back starting around 8:00 am and the last ferry departing out of Bintan Island around 4:00 PM. There is an one-hour time difference between Singapore and Indonesian time. You gain an hour going from Singapore to Bintan Island and lose the hour going back to Singapore.
- I caught a 10:00 AM ferry out of TMFP and landed in Bintan around 10:30 AM. My initial reaction of getting off the Bintan Island Ferry Port (BIFP) was like getting off the plane in a small Caribbean island like Grand Cayman, Barbados, Bahamas, or St. Lucia. There were hotel buses waiting outside to pick up guests and a bunch of taxis waiting. They also had a place for car rental that rented by the hour as well as by the day. I decided to rent a car which comes with a driver. I did not have a lot of time. I needed to get back to the BIFP around 3:00 PM – that gave me about five hours to explore the island. This of course is 1997, a full three years before I became a BAG (Born Again Golfer). Had that exploratory trip taken place today, I’d have planned it totally differently. Somehow I would have figured out a way to fit in a round of golf. If that would have required staying overnight, I just would have suffered from the game of golf and stayed overnight. Anyway, it was before I became a BAG and I was willing to live within the constraints of having only five hours to explore the Bintan Island.
- I had already figured out that all of Bintan Island is nothing more than a collection of resorts. You don’t go there to find Indonesian culture and handcraft, etc. You just go there to frolic in the sun and water (swimming pool and the ocean or to be more accurate the Strait) and play golf. If that is not what you had in mind you have come to the wrong place.
- My goal of exploration of Bintan Island was pretty simple – visit as many resorts as you can and assess each resort’s value proposition as a potential family vacation in the future. In other words, I was being the advance man for a future vacation. I told the driver of the rented car what I wanted to do and he took me to one resort after another. I checked out a total of about six resorts ranging from very basic and inexpensive to an expensive Ritz Carlton type place called Banyan Tree resort. It even has a Club Med. After seeing all the resorts, the one that really caught my attention was the Sedona Hotel and Golf Resort. Again, this was before I became a BAG, golf hardly made an impression on me. It was the overall quality of the hotel, swimming pool, bars, restaurants and most importantly the quality of the beach. Even though it was January, Bintan Island is pretty close to the equator and there is very little temperature difference between summer and winter. Sedona Hotel has a beautifully clean beach because the water was clear and pretty warm. The humid climate of the island makes frolicking pleasurable all year round.
- As if all this were not enough to get me excited about Bintan Island for a future vacation destination, I was really sold on Bintan Island’s rental villas (about 60 of them) which are part of the Sedona Golf Resort complex. These were all California (Rancho Bernardo or Calabasas) style red tiled roof villas between three and four bedrooms right on the beach. The biggest ones have their own swimming pool. I immediately saw its potential for a family vacation. For the longest period of time, I dreamt of this ideal beach front vacation home where I could walk on to the powder white beach with crystal clear warm ocean water; where you can step in the water any time of day or night and the water is always warm, comfortable and inviting. Barbara, Robin and I went around all the nook and crannies of the beaches in Oahu in 1995 looking for this dream beach-front vacation home. We did find a few on one of the best beaches in the US called Kailua beach. Unfortunately, none of them were rentals. The only other time I have come close to finding the dream beach-front vacation home was in Grand Cayman on the famous 7-mile beach. That house in Grand Cayman was indeed a rental home owned by a gentleman in Wisconsin. I even got his phone number in case we ever go back to Grand Cayman for a vacation.
- Needless to say that I have been looking for something just like what I saw at the Sedona Golf Resort on Bintan Island for a long time. Many of you reading this journal may be wondering why am I meandering through many experiences of the past. I just wanted to share with you the journey I have been through looking for places just like the Villas in Bintan Island. I have looked for them all over the world, and they are indeed very special to me. I hope the lofty expectation I have of this vacation experience is met by reality. Only time (the next seven days) will tell. I hope my expectations are met. Otherwise it will be a big disappointment. I don’t foresee any factor screwing things up at this point except for the weather. Right now I saw the Yahoo weather forecast and it reports that it will rain the first day we are there. I hope the weather overall cooperates.
- As part of my exploration and investigation, I requested the hotel front desk to show me each of the Villas to see exactly what they look like inside. There are three different models. I was not able to see all three types of villas but did see two of the three – the biggest one is called Angshoka and the smallest model is called Chempaka. The Angshoka model is a two-story with four bedrooms (officially sleeps seven) and the Chempaka is the one-story, three-bedroom model (officially sleeps four). There was another model that I didn’t see, called Bugenvilla, also a two-story, four-bedroom that sleeps six. I was very please with the over all quality of the furnishing and the lay out of the villas. Looked like Californian architects designed the villas. Needless to say I was sold on these villas for a family vacation.
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