Wednesday, December 19, 2012

The Island of Bali

Lovina--Northwestern corner of the island of Bali, Indonesia

Current Weather--Warm, not as humid as Java, and a bit overcast with the threat of thundershowers at the moment--overall...nice :)

This will be a short entry as I am running out of time on the computer and it will most likely cost me an arm and a leg since I have been sitting at this computer for two hours now. But it was time to get caught up on life and try to get a few job applications out there into the world. Yes, the ever search for seasonal work...a love, hate relationship. I hate it when I have to search for it, but I love it when it sends me to amazing locations for work. You win some and you loose some. 

We arrived in the the northwestern corner of Bali yesterday morning. We ended up taking two trains and then a ferry from Yogyakarta to get to the current small beach village of Lovina that we are sitting in at the moment. It was a long day of travel. We spent that morning doing a two hour Batik lesson in Yogya then we caught the local bus to get to the train station and it was non stop travel after that. 4 hours on one train, 7 hours on another and then a 40 minute ferry ride. We got on the first train at 1600pm and we got off the train to catch the ferry at 0440am the next morning. We managed to catch a few hours of shut eye on the bumping, swaying train but needless to say we looked like zombies as we walked off of that train, fending off the numerous,"Hey Misters! Need a taxi!?" as we walked the 200 meters to the ferry terminal. Felt good to stretch the legs. 

So yesterday was spent getting to know Lovina and catch up on a little bit of sleep from the journey. Today all three of us went our own ways to do a bit of personal exploration. John went to dive, Rachel went to snorkel and I relaxed with my book, journal and wandered around Lovina taking photos as well as doing some job searching to fill the next few months of my life once I return state side.

That being said, any of you faithful readers have any good job ideas for me? Something to fill the months of January to mid April...

Lovina is nice. Quiet and small and easy to walk around. No crazy, jam packed traffic mob here. So far Bali has a different feel than the island of Java. I wasn't sure if I would like Bali because whenever you hear Bali all that is associated with the island is the thumping soul rocking party scene of the expats. Not exactly my scene. But I have discovered that if you make it to the smaller villages you can escape the scene. You will find more of that down near Denpasar. We will only be in Denpasar long enough to pick up John's girlfriend and then we're hitting the road again for bigger and better things. 

Bali is primarily Hindu so we have left much of the Muslim/Arabic influence behind although you can still find hints of it here and there. The temples we have found in Lovina are very different, the feel as well as the architecture of the place. People still pray to their God several times a day, but the call to prayer is not heard throughout the entire village. 

So that's that really. No real soul searching in this entry. Just some rambles. Until next time...

Monday, December 17, 2012

Toto, We're Not In Kansas Any More

"Asia is not going to be civilized after the methods of the West. There is too much Asia and she is too old." ~Rudyard Kipling


Southeast Asia: Indonesia

Current Location: Yogyakarta, near southern Java

Hong Kong has been left behind. It's December 17th, my mother's birthday, and I am sitting in an internet cafe attempting to update this blog in Yogyakarta (pronounced Jogjakarta). My season with Dragonfly ended December 7th. I wrapped up a six day backpacking program with the Australian International School of Singapore, unpacked my bags, repacked my bags and boarded a plane for Singapore on December 8th.

Three days in Singapore drooling over the myriad mixture of amazing food there and then we boarded another plane for Jakarta, Indonesia for about 25 days of adventure. Southeast Asian style. 

Two days in Jakarta where I relaxed and attempted to recuperate from a bad flu like cold. I discovered quickly that there is nothing worse than traveling when you are battling a cold and a fever. We were in 90 degree weather and I was freezing. When we hit air conditioned rooms, my entire body ached with the cold. A day of sleep quickly killed it and we were back at it. 

A train ride to the smaller city of Bandung, a hike up the ridge of Tangkuban Perahu, a smoking volcano where we faced the wrath of Mother Nature in the form of a lightning bolt that came a little too close for comfort. And then it was another train to Yogyakarta, traveling through some of the most beautiful countryside I have seen in some time. Terraced rice paddies, green, green, and more green. It was beautiful.
This is the real deal. No more organized mass public transit system, no more timely bus schedules, no more English tourist signs to direct you where you need to go. Where you can find a sign it is in three languages: Hindu, Arabic, Bahasa, and then maybe English if you are lucky. 

Here it is you, a clean change of clothes and your wits. The lonely planet guide book will only get you so far. Life in Indonesia flows to its own beat. When the bus is full that is when you depart for your destination. That could take twenty minutes or an hour and a half waiting for that bus to fill. Once that bus is full, it's not filled with the maximum limit of five people,instead it is more like 20 people crammed in tighter than sardines in a can. If the guide book says it takes an hour to get from Point A to Point B by public transit, expect it to be more like three hours. The roads are packed with motor bikes, scooters, tiny buses, trucks, bicycles, pedestrians all attempting to go in the same direction. You could easily just move five feet in thirty minutes. Crossing the street as a pedestrian here should take five years off your life, but it's actually quite easy. You step out into the street and weave your way through, the bikes melt around you, the cars seem to disappear around you and before you know it you are across to the other side. It's like nothing I have ever experienced.

Let's just say that seeing three white westerners ask for the local bus out of Bandung a few days past made the day of many local Indonesians. They stared at us and then they giggled until I thought they were going to wet themselves. But they eagerly escorted us to their "bus" and loaded us in. It was as much of a highlight for us as it was for them. 

Indonesian people are incredibly friendly. After three months of life in Hong Kong it is a nice change. In Hong Kong no one dared make eye contact. Here you are hailed from left and right with a: "Hi Mister! Hi Miss!! Where you going?" Granted, a white westerner also means money in their eyes, but there are also those just eager to practice their English and get their paparazzi photo of the 6ft giant of a white man that I am traveling with. People are eager to send you in the right direction if you need assistance. If you asked a local for directions in Hong Kong you often just got a lot of gestures in the far off distance that got you more lost than you already were. Here, a person will eagerly lead you to where you need to be, chatting your ear off as you walk. 

Indonesia is a country filled with the old and the new. It is a Muslim and Hindu country. The island of Java where we are located is primarily Muslim and so there is the call to prayer five times a day. 4am, 12pm, 3pm, 6pm, and 7:30pm. The call to prayer reaches across the entire city and is actually a beautiful thing to hear. 

This morning we woke to the 4 am call to prayer and boarded a bus at 5 am to tour two of the largest Buddhist and Hindu temples of Southeast Asia: Borobudur and Prambanan. Both sites are listed as world heritage sites and after being there I can see why. The essence of religion and the overall idea of "belief" oozed from Borobudur. I do not consider myself a religious person, but my personal faith was strong as I walked around that complex with the eyes of thousands of stone carved Buddhas looking over me. I wanted to sit, close my eyes and just listen to the hidden whispers that I was sure were there. 

My journey through Hong Kong was not really captured on this blog, little time for reflection or the energy to write. But the last three and a half months of my life have been filled with culture. The next few weeks ahead promise more. One thing I have learned since leaving the states in September and landing in Asia to work overseas, the world is vast and knowledge is wine. I may be thirty one years old and just as unsettled as I was ten years ago, but I wouldn't trade my life for any other at this point. We only have one life and there is only one world, it is in our hands to take and see, to explore. Why hold back?