Inside the COMO Shambhala Estate Daily Schedule

Inside the COMO Shambhala Estate Daily Schedule
The day begins before you're ready for it. At 6:00 AM, the jungle is already alive—macaques chattering in the canopy, the Ayung River rushing somewhere below—and a soft knock at your villa door delivers fresh ginger tea and a plate of papaya. On day one, this feels impossibly early. By day four, your body wakes five minutes before the knock.
The Morning Rhythm
At 6:30 AM, you're expected on the Pilates Pavilion or in the Retreat yoga shala. The choice depends on your program: Ayurvedic guests typically start with gentle Hatha flow, while the Active Detox cohort faces a vigorous Ashtanga sequence. The morning session runs 75 minutes, and instructors adjust for ability, but there's no hiding in the back row—groups cap at six participants. The pavilion is open-air, perched at the forest edge, and the first week of your stay you'll spend half the session distracted by the sheer audacity of the views.
Sitting meditation follows immediately after at 8:00 AM, usually 20 minutes of guided breathwork or silent vipassana. On day one, twenty minutes feels interminable. On day four, you're annoyed when the bell rings.
Breakfast is served at 8:30 AM in the main Kudus House restaurant. This is your first encounter with COMO Shambhala cuisine, a proprietary approach that's traveled the wellness world from Singapore to Bhutan. It's not punitive—think coconut chia pudding with dragon fruit, buckwheat pancakes with raw honey, pressed juices designed by your consulting nutritionist. The menu adapts to your program: Ayurvedic guests get warm, grounding dishes prescribed for their dosha; detox guests eat lighter, with more raw elements and digestive teas.
Late Morning: The Work Begins
The hours between 9:30 and 12:30 PM are when programs diverge most sharply. Wellness consultations happen now—60-minute sessions with resident experts in Ayurveda, Traditional Chinese Medicine, or integrative nutrition. You'll discuss bloodwork, tongue diagnosis, pulse readings, and leave with a personalized supplement protocol and meal plan adjustments.
Workshops rotate daily: Introduction to Pranayama, Balinese Healing Traditions, Understanding Your Dosha, Foundations of Mindful Eating. These are small-group, didactic sessions held in the Estate's library or treatment pavilions. Optional but strongly encouraged. On your first day, you attend dutifully, notebook in hand. By day four, you're asking questions that surprise yourself.
Midday: Nourishment and Stillness
Lunch is served at 1:00 PM, always three courses, always calibrated to your program. A typical Ayurvedic lunch might include mung dal soup, steamed market vegetables with turmeric, and brown rice. Detox guests get raw spring rolls, kelp noodle salad, and probiotic-rich ferments. There's no alcohol anywhere on property. You stop missing wine by day three.
Post-lunch is sacred downtime. The Estate discourages scheduling anything between 2:00 and 4:00 PM. Most guests retreat to their villas—suites named Tirta Ening or Umabona—to read, nap in the outdoor pavilion, or float in their private plunge pool. Some walk the jungle trails down to The Source spring. The heat is profound, the humidity democratic.
Afternoon Options
At 4:00 PM, optional sessions resume: restorative yoga, guided forest walks, hydrotherapy sequences in the spring-fed pools. This is also when most guests schedule their add-on treatments—the Estate's spa menu runs 30 pages deep. A 90-minute Ayurvedic abhyanga massage costs extra but integrates with your program. So does a private session with the qigong master, or an extended TCM consultation with cupping and acupuncture.
Evening: Closure and Release
Dinner service begins at 7:00 PM, similarly structured to lunch but lighter. Herbal broths, steamed fish if you're not vegetarian, roasted root vegetables. Conversations at communal tables grow more intimate as the week progresses—by day four, you're discussing childhood food trauma with a Malaysian banker and a Sydney architect you met three days ago.
The final group session convenes at 8:15 PM: gentle yin yoga, sound healing with Tibetan bowls, or guided yoga nidra. Thirty to forty-five minutes. It's intended to prepare your nervous system for sleep.
By 9:30 PM, most of the Estate is dark and quiet. You're in bed with a book on Ayurvedic philosophy you'd never have touched at home, and you're actually reading it. Tomorrow, the knock will come at 6:00 AM.
On day one, this schedule feels like bootcamp. By day four, it feels like the only sane way to structure a life.



