East Nusa Tenggara (Indonesian: Nusa Tenggara Timur – NTT) is the southernmost province of Indonesia. It is located in the eastern part of the Lesser Sunda Islands and includes West Timor. It has a total area of 47,245.82 km, and the population at the 2010 Census was 4,683,827; the latest official estimate in January 2014 was 5,070,746. The provincial capital is Kupang on West Timor.
Restaurants in East Nusa Tenggara
4.5 based on 49 reviews
Only a small walk to get to falls. Do wear sneakers for the walk as it can be a bit uneven. You don’t need to pay for a guide to take you falls as it is 10 minute walk to it. When you get there you can have a swim.
4.5 based on 30 reviews
Bring your best sandals as you will have to go through 20-30 minutes steep and slippery trail. But I can tell you it was worth every effort. The lagoon was deeply enchanting with its peaceful surrounding and blue color. Unlike Weekuri, Waimarang has its water from natural spring water. If you are an adventure-junkie, you can rock/wall-climb to get into the upper lagoon that is said to be even more gorgeous than the lower area. Let the local kids be your guide, but don't give them money. Give them imported candies or biscuits instead. Or even better you can bring them storybooks to read. Sumba is still underdeveloped and we don't want the nice kids to be materialistic and rude to tourists.
4.0 based on 55 reviews
About 1.5 hours by road from Labuan Bajo including 30 minutes leaving the main road from LB to Ende. The last 30 minutes of driving is a rather bad road but ok for car and motorbike. 45 to 60 minutes tracking to the waterfall necessary one way, but a nice walk through jungle. At the place to stop the car/bike a villager was most happy to guide us to the waterfall. No entrance fee and you should probably pay 50 to 100 k for the guide. We were the only people on the day there and it is a bit of an adventure. I swam in the fall and we bought fresh fruits from the guide/villagers who were very friendly and happy (Jack fruit, banana, coconuts). There were no proper shops so you might want to bring water and snack. For me it was my highlight of Flores, but there are probably a few more excellent waterfalls. Do not expect proper signs or any form of organisation, but it was unspoilt and friendly people. Maybe GPS and an Indonesian phrasebook useful.
4.0 based on 281 reviews
We rented a bike and headed out for a day trip, the ride was great and the water fall good for a few hours fun including rock jumping, swimming and relaxing. The road is good and the walk in takes 20 minutes, not for the faint hearted.
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