Sunday

Indonesia Part Two


Friday August 25th 2011

Our arrival to Yogyakarta seemed only fitting as we stumbled from our train, cobwebs hanging from our thoughts as we attempted to engage our mental compass and locate our bearings.  As a traveler you can only assume so much when arriving in the dark morning hours in a potentially hostile location.  We still had gleaned little of Indonesia except for the confirmations from the friendly, but space consuming man at our feet, who was quite adamant that danger lurked everywhere and we had better stay vigilant.  We exited the station and within moments were greeted by an overly cheerful man, considering the hour, but were easily convinced to follow him down numerous alleys until he arrived in front of a supposed guesthouse.  As it would turn out he was a sincere fellow who wanted nothing more than for us to be his Facebook friend.  It’s a shame we lost the paper with his name because our guesthouse proved safe and quite reasonably priced.  Well, everything sounds like a bargain when it’s 5:00 am.


Yogyakarta is an Indonesian town that would appear to be, and with sound intention, unlike Jakarta in almost every way.  Welcoming to a traveler and humming with activity, in the downtown there was a certain vibe that was welcoming to us.  It was here that numerous strangers would stop us, invariably trying to persuade us with some negotiation but eventually falling short as their interest turned toward conversation more than persuasion.  Unlike the crooks of the previous SE Asian countries, here in Indonesia the people seemed genuinely interested in just talking with you.  Yes, it can become bothersome as what would normally be a 15 minute walk took us2 hours as we were frequently stopped by any passerby that held even the slightest ability with the English language.
               
Yet we made the most of our time in this hot but amicable city.  It’s most common item for sale is Batik art, a type of painting that involves hot wax and canvas.  Every silver tongued street salesman and subsequent vendor is certain of his products perfection while seemingly astonished that his competition could ask such prices for their art.  Of course, the prices rarely exhibited any real fluctuation but the looks on their faces could have convinced you otherwise.  It was with certain pleasure for me to merely view the art and slowly nod and sway to the ramblings of the vendor as he dispelled any myths of the art while spinning his words in hopes that you would purchase.  Honestly, some of pieces were quite engaging and the price was relatively low compared to many other items that had been cast before me throughout my travels in hopes of luring me in like a crow to a polished stone.  But I insisted my travels would cease to exist if I were to haggle, purchase and carry every treasure that was offered to me.  Pictures and postcards have been my motto and it was with charming resilience that I brushed off their continual advances. 

The food of Indonesia was again a welcome change for Dustin and I both as the flavors of what appeared to be yet another dish of noodles shocked our tongue with unfamiliar flavors.  Maybe it was their sauce or maybe it was all in our heads.  Either way this was a welcome change for us.  And with new foods in every country come new snacks!  Wandering the main thoroughfare of Yogyakarta we entered one of many snack shops only to find stacks of snacks, from the floor to the ceiling, lining every wall.  Samples were allowed for some items and if it hadn’t been for some modest self-restraint, a full meal could have been devoured, one tiny new and delicious morsel at a time. I left with a pound of banana chips that should have lasted longer than it did.  Burgeoning with a belly ache I vowed next time to take it easy on such a delight.  In my defense, these banana chips had been fried and glazed with honey; a combination no man can refuse. 

Saturday August 26th 2011

Although we had escaped the congestion and torments of Jakarta we were still contending with the same issues surrounding Rammadan.  We were still trapped within the one week prior to the final day and this was continuing to cause some difficulty for us whilst traveling.  Our next destination was to be Mt. Bromo, a volcano further East in Java.  I knew very little of the finer details surrounding our next location but Dustin needed little time to persuade me into going.  Frankly I was happy to tag along with someone else and allow them to pick and choose what we would see.  By this point we had both experienced poor traveling conditions and so provided we secured a seat on some forward moving apparatus I figured we’d be fine.

The afternoon before departing from our latest treasure of a town, we ventured just slightly out of the city to visit the Pramaban ruins.  Now, I know I had put a firm foot down after visiting the Angkor Wat Temples and proclaimed that my temple touring days were over.  Yet I found myself wandering through Pramaban anyway, as if there would be something in these old stones that I may have missed in others.  If anything, Pramaban plays host to ruins in the truest sense, as not many months earlier an earthquake had caused serious damage to this site.  Former temples were now just heaps of stones, scattered about a field as if they were a child’s toys left in a sandbox.  Nothing will ever surpass the enormity of Angkor Wat, but Pramaban made a fair effort to entertain me for at least a modest hour.  My photos seemed to be blurring one into the other and I was finding it difficult to find any real value in my latest sites, but I knew that this would still be better than the 12 hour minibus ride I would have the following morning.


Sunday August 28th 2011

We arrived last night into what is now one of the best places I have visited yet.  Dustin and I made our way out of Yogyakarta via a 12 hour minibus ride towards Gunung Bromo.  Much to our pleasant surprise the bus was lacking many passengers, allowing us to stretch our legs and watch the scenery pass us by.  Boasting around 135 million people, the island of Java is the most populous in the world; more so than Japan, Hong Kong or any other. While we had originally expected to cruise on some highways it became apparent that the entire journey was a seeming trip through endless suburbs and small towns, rarely ever allowing our speed to exceed 40 mph. As a point of clarification though, one should not picture suburbs in the same way as they would in the USA.  In Indonesia it is more of a permanent sprawl, expanding from coast to coast with an occasional rice field thrown in for good measure. But so long as you are comfortable though, such trips give you opportunity to pensively sit and stare, forgetting all else but what passes you by.

Although our surroundings had turned to night, the final hour of our journey was the most telling of our newest destination.  My ears struggled to pop as we slowly ascended into the darkness, our driver methodically turning the steering wheel every few seconds as we wound ourselves further onward, up into the mountains of Indonesia.  When we stopped to let out the first passengers I couldn’t help but notice a very strong chill in the air.  Frankly speaking, it was just damn cold.  The locals that were seated outside the hotel were wrapped in blankets, smoking their cigarettes and lazily watching us.  We both felt as though we had left Indonesia and were somewhere completely different; perhaps Patagonia or somewhere else, but surely not on the island of Java!

The next morning provided an epic display of our location.  Gunung Bromo is a volcano that lies at 7600 feet with a surrounding area of beauty and simplicity that took hold of me.  The village sits on the edge of a ridge, one that forms a nearly complete and giant ring around the volcano itself.  Within this enormous semi-circle lies a desert of sorts, a mixture of sand and ash that display a morbid reality of the monotone effects from volcanic eruptions.  Standing at the edge of this village one need only raise his gaze slightly to see the volcano that draws the tourists to this enchanting destination.  Much like the experience in the Cameron Highlands of Malaysia, there was some intangible element about this place that seemed to draw me in with a familiar feeling of ubiquitous calm. 

Like any other place we had visited the resourceful locals were there to offer any visitor the option of taking a jeep or a horse to the volcanic rim.  While we scoffed at such a proposition Dustin did make the wise choice of purchasing a mask from a local vendor while I was already armed with my blue bandana.  Dustin looking like an asbestos removal worker and myself something of a shabby bank robber, we made our way down the hill into the flat of the desert (known as the Sea of Sand) towards the crater.   Having erupted earlier this year, Bromo had released great quantities of ash that now blanketed the ground beneath our feet.  Whatever had once been lush and green now resembled a canine’s view as if a part of the visual spectrum itself had been thrown away.  Wind swept at our every step and waves of sand and ash would wash over us as Jeeps and horses alike thundered past.  We were not in any hurry to reach our destination and yet we made it in nearly an hour.  Mounting the hand carved steps we climbed from the floor to the rim and stood in amazement.  Standing on the rim with the wind and the ash our senses were bombarded.  Sulfuric odor penetrated our noses while the heat emanating from the steam caused further perspiration.   It was awesome.

I could not help but be amazed, finally to be standing on one of the greatest forces that our world contains.  My amazement was only slightly tainted by a mild unease that such a force would pick this very moment to erupt again, sending me to a most painful, if not unique demise.  One cannot help to conjure such thoughts when finally exposed up close and personal to the brutal strength that the earth possesses.  Needless to say we made our way down after sufficient photos were taken to prove of our adventure. 

The following morning we awoke at the brutal hour of 4 am to ready ourselves for the hike up the other side of the gorge’s rim to elevate ourselves for what was promised to be a most spectacular sunrise overlooking the village and the volcano.  Guided by our headlamps and a faint glow from the moon we struck out on the trail only to be forced to the shoulder time and time again as the same Jeeps that had trundled through the desert were now carrying passengers up the hill for sunrise.  As we began to lose count of the Jeeps we couldn’t help but wonder where they were all coming from.  This village could be no more than a few hundred people and yet surely 50+ Jeeps had rampaged past us as if the today was the last day the sun would reveal itself.  It was with some satisfaction that upon reaching the parking lot for the Jeeps we learned that everyone would have to hike the final bit to the top.  So we lowered our heads and pressed on, passing those in front of us until finally elevating ourselves above all others even farther up the trail.  Temperatures were literally freezing and yet it was almost welcoming to experience such a sensation having spent 99% of my trip sweltering under the languid, yet menacing sun.   The view was as spectacular as one could hope for and we spent the following hour taking way too many photos as the sky changed from black to grey to blue.  Bromo stood before us with ceaseless patience as smiled and clicked our cameras, wishing I could capture my ecstasy as much as the beauty that stood before me.

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