March 28, 2011

Indonesia Photos

Shiva temple at the Prambanan complex.

Each of the biggest temples at Prambanan held large statues. This picture is of Nandi, Shiva's bull.


Carvings at Prambanan.

Prambanan
Borobudur


When you walk in the gate at Borobudur, you get a sarong tied around your waist to wear when ascending the temple. The carvings in the background are some of hundreds of meters of scenes from Buddha's life at the temple.



The top of Borobudur has dozens of massive stupa, each one containing a buddha statue.

The carvings at Borobudur are incredibly detailed.

Carving at Borobudur

Carving at Borobudur

One of the 504 Buddhas at Borobudur.

One of the 504 Buddhas at Borobudur.

This is the restaurant at Yulia's where we stayed on Pulau Weh, as seen from the water. The water was an amazing shade of crystal blue and the snorkeling was awesome. Picture from the internet.   
David relaxing on the deck of our bungalow. Just for the record, he is wearing shorts.

View from the bus of traveling through northern Sumatra. This picture really does not do it justice. The shade of brilliant green in the valley are massive rice paddies. The surrounding hills at this point in the journey were covered in impossibly thick jungle, although we saw a lot of deforestation later.

View from the bus of traveling through northern Sumatra.

View from the bus of traveling through northern Sumatra - rice paddies.

Sumatra

Well......sadly this is the last entry for this trip, because we fly back tomorrow. It's crazy to think that three months have passed by so quickly, although it does feel like we've been traveling for quite a while. As Emily briefly mentioned, after we were at Mt. Bromo we spent five days, a relatively long stay for our schedule, at a city called Yogyakarta. Pronounced Jogjakarta, and usually shortened to just Jogja, it is a fairly sizable city in central Java that has a really nice blend of lots of cool sights to take in (temples, palaces, ruins, museums), tons of culture various forms of dance, music, art, etc, all without giving over its own identity to becoming a tourist town. Every night there are huge crowds of teenagers hanging out on certain corners, showing off their fancy bikes, smoking, just generally trying to look as cool as they can in front of each other. So in other words it reminded us of Portland a lot.
While at Earlham I took a World Music class where I remember being really impressed by gamelan, which is a form of Indonesian music performed by large ensembles of musicians playing tons of different drums, gongs, string instruments, and usually some vocalists. We got to attend a couple of gamelan concerts while in Yogya, once accompanying traditional Javanese dancing at the Sultan's palace. While this was a tourist attraction, it was as much for Indonesian schoolkids and other natives as westerners. There is a huge cadre of professionals who basically make their living from the Sultan being artisans in residence to display the traditional arts.
The other time we "saw" gamelan was when we went to a shadow puppet show. We'd been able to catch puppet show in India and Thailand as well, and it was interesting to see how similar they are, and as no accident because the practice was brought east by traders many years ago.
We went to a series of ruins called Prambanan, which were nice to take in because while Hindu they had a lot of different styles than other Hindu stuff other places. Borobudur, which is the biggest tourist attraction in the entire country was indeed spectacular, but it was also unfortunately pretty crowded, and tons of Indonesian teenagers either kept trying to interview us to practice their English and get their picture taken with us. Why you'd want our funny-looking faces in their pictures I don't know. We waited at the temple until the very last minute before the security guard kicked us out and it became much less crowded and more peaceful near sunset.
Next we flew to the northern tip of Sumatra to a city called Banda Aceh. This is pretty much the epicenter of the 2004 tsunami damage, and there are tsunami-attractions you can check out here including a 1,600-ton ocean liner 5km inland and a boat that rested on top of house, thereby saving the lives of 59 people that were in it. The population of the city as well as most of the entire Aceh province was totally devastated as most people already know. A few people I randomly struck up conversations with told me their experiences, it was pretty crazy.
After getting in there, we took a ferry to a little island nearby called Pulau Weh. This was definitely the best snorkeling we've done so far on this trip, and if we were scuba certified, the diving could've been way more incredible. Divers regularly see manta rays, and sometimes even whale sharks. We were pretty happy with what we saw which included turtles, octopus, sea snakes, a shark, a billion different cool kinds of fish. It makes me want to learn more about tropical fish, they're so colourful and interesting. And they have such cool names like: lionfish, goatfish, unicornfish, but my favorite is Harlequin Sweetlips. Another great thing about our little cove on the island (besides our $5 bungalow with a comfy hammock) was that there was an amazing communal dinner every night at the place next door. You just let them know ahead of time so they know how many mouths to feed, then show up and eat as much as you can of about 5 different dishes with fresh seafood curry and different veggies every night for $2.50. And the best part is the really warm and friendly vibe. It was hard to leave Pulau Weh, but we managed after another five days.
Then we plunged into the mountainous interior of Sumatra by bus. And it took a while. Over a span of 3 days we were in buses for about 25 hours. Granted, it was a very scenic 25 hours though. We were planning on doing some trekking in the jungle, but it turned out that the only option is to pay a lot of money to have a guide take you. Most people don't mind this, but I seem to have an irrational soft spot where I'm not willing to pay some $60, which in US equivalent might be more like at least twice that to walk around in the jungle with us. But we had gotten some good jungle treks in Thailand, and the whole Sumatra trekking scene was kinda weird and not geared towards budget travelers.
So we've since made it to Medan, the biggest city in Sumatra, where we fly tomorrow to Kualu Lumpur and then on to LAX. Then we'll have the reward of spending the night in the LAX airport to await our flights the next day to the each coast to see my sister and her family in maryland. Emily also has an orientation meeting for her australia grant this summer. If you haven't heard about this and want to know email her and she'll tell you all about it. Also she'll hopefully post stuff about this summer on this blog. Well, we've sad to leave but excited to get back at the same time!

March 20, 2011

Indonesia Continued

We spent a few days in Jogja, an awesome city in central Java. There is tons of museums, music and cultural sites there. We saw a puppet show and a classical dance performance and heard tons of gamelan music. We also visited Borobudur Temple, which is one of the seven wonders of the world. It is a huge Buddhist temple in a beautiful mountain valley. We also went to Prambanan, which is a complex of many ancient Hindu temples in various states of repair/disrepair. Pictures later.

We are now in the province of Aceh on the northern tip of Sumatra. After getting into Banda Aceh, we went to an AWESOME island called Pulau Weh, and have been doing tons of snorkeling. We'll write more about this friendly, beautiful place later. Here are some pics from the internet of some of the cool stuff we've seen:
LIONFISH
BIG BLACKED TIPPED REEF SHARK    
We'll be back in the US at the end of March.




March 12, 2011

Bali and Java


We said goodbye to Thailand, spending out last day on the beach and our last night sleeping in the Phuket airport for our 5 am flight.
Last beer in Thailand
After arriving in Bali, we quickly booked it out of the mega-mega-super-dooper touristy area, heading to an only uber-touristy areas in Bali and Lombok. We spent four days snorkeling and eating overpriced fried noodles. Two very relaxing days were wiled away on a small relaxing island called Gili Air, where no motorized vehicles are allowed. The snorkeling was awesome - huge expanses of coral. Plus, we saw four sea turtles and I had a staredown with my absolute favorite animal - an octopus!  We have had really good luck with weather during this trip, but it is the rainy season in Indonesia, and its rained for at least a little bit most days we've been here.
Downpour in Bali

Sooo relaxing.

We then headed to Java to explore Gunung Bromo, where we read that we could could climb around the smoldering crater of the volcano, which is in a massive crater of a volcano that erupted one million years ago. This is a picture from the Internet depicting what the area usually looks like.


However, our plans to climb to Bromo's rim were quickly dashed when we arrived at four in the morning to the small mountain town 3 km away from Bromo and discovered that IT WAS ERUPTING. Like, spewing lava, belching smoke, erupting. But not enough to evacuate the town - sweet. So we stayed for a couple days basking in the supreme, window-shaking, ashy awesomeness of Bromo and thanking Indonesia for apparently not having any lawyers or liability forms. During the night, Bromo was shooting lava a few hundred meters in the air - it was quite a sight to behold, that  we didn't even try to capture on camera. Here are a few movies/photos of the action - but unfortunately they are pale representations with out the shaking and roaring of being there... definitely the highlight of the trip.
View of Bromo and the crater floor - you could sit at the temple (which is the white speck to the right of the volcano) and watch the eruption 

View from behind the temple

We hiked for about 10 km around the crater floor, this is the view of Bromo from the west.

The crater walls were huge and beautiful - this is probably about 500 meters tall.

A
There was tons of cool mud on the crater floor. 
View of crater from the town we stayed in. 
Also, on a hilarious note, we were interviewed about our experience live on national Indonesian tv! Look for us at minute 1:30.
http://www.tvonenews.tv/video/49238/pesona_erupsi_bromo.html