Most activities have been curbed during BaliтАЩs lockdown тАУ masks are on, dining-in is mostly off, beaches are closed, travel is not allowed.
But curiously, thereтАЩs a loophole of sorts whereby hotel and resort staycations fly under the radar. For a travel writer, this is obviously like offering thick, delicious, gloopy honey to a bee. ItтАЩs especially so when BaliтАЩs newest and much-anticipated Desa Potato Head Studios opens a 15-minute drive away from my digs. Get in the car Thelma, weтАЩve got a job to do.
Anyone who has been to Bali will have either been to Potato Head Beach Club, or wished they had, such is its cool. Plonked on Petitenget Beach, Seminyak, with a phenomenal fa├зade comprising 6600 antique shutters, this is a beats and babes haven, a poolside festival where peeps sporting bikinis, showy tats and pretty bling lounge on daybeds, order from a zero-waste menu and sip cocktails from coconuts.
Given the current lockdown, the beach club is closed and this once crazy-popular stretch of beach is tellingly quiet тАУ turtles are literally hatching in the sand out the front of the club, the security guards charged with getting them into the ocean before the local dogs sniff them out. ┬аBut next door, Desa Potato Head Studios, a 168-room hotel, has quietly and confidently opened at 50 per cent capacity with assurances of giving their guests a Covid-safe stay.
It hasnтАЩt been an easy ride for Desa. The Indonesian-owned hotel officially opened at the start of last year but summarily closed two months later after being pounded by the first Covid shockwave. To say that management has had to pivot since then is an understatement. ItтАЩs more like a pirouette. Masks, hand san and temperature checks on arrival are the new front-of-house normal. Behind the scenes thereтАЩs raft of checks and compliance going on including daily Covid swabs for staff, 24-hour room vacancies between guests, in-room emergency kits and WHO-standard sanitisation and housecleaning practices.┬а
As a guest in one of the beautiful oceanfront studios, the vibe is cleverly and intentionally more about having everything at your fingertips, rather than being contactless or low touch. Designed for longer-term digital nomad residents as much as short-term guests, the suites are open-plan with cleverly demarcated тАШroomsтАЩ that ensure an uber-cool stay-at-home (if you have to) experience.
Guests can immerse in the wooden Japanese style hot tub before sauntering over to the lounge chairs where the modular coffee table opens with a fully equipped cocktail bar. They can hit an office deadline at the desk perched behind the double bed, then settle onto the couch to watch Headstream, Potato HeadтАЩs own streaming station. Even the narrow balcony with pool and garden views, functions as two тАШroomsтАЩ with a lazy blue-striped hammock on one side and seats for sunset drinking on the other.
When guests do decide to hear the call of the waves and venture outside, space is at a socially distanced premium. The fastidiously constructed four-storey building is elevated leaving a huge open-air expanse at ground level for check-ins, al fresco breakfasts, art installations and quiet meanderings. Along the beachfront, the pool stretches 95 metres тАУ the number of cabanas here has been halved so that thereтАЩs at least two or three metres between your snoozing self and the next posse of sunbathers.
A second swimming pool, located on the rooftop, will open in the near future, possibly to in-house guests only. Up here thereтАЩs also Sunset Bar, which promises to be SeminyakтАЩs go-to drinking venue when the lockdown eases. For me, the morning rooftop yoga classes were entirely suited to a Covid world тАУ lots of space, few people, blue skies and the sound of rolling waves. Masks not required.
See also:┬а
тАУ9 holidays weтАЩre going on when weтАЩre double vaxxed
тАУGrim reality of travelling in Bali right now
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тАУ11 hottest hotel restaurants in Australia