Cambodia, Vietnam, Indonesia

dezembro 2019 - fevereiro 2020
Uma 70aventura de um dia na Gina Leia mais

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  • Bukit Lawang, Indonesia

    22 de janeiro de 2020, Indonésia ⋅ ⛅ 31 °C

    After our jungle hike we decided to stay around for another day, because it’s quite chilled here. The temperature at night 🌙 is great, the air good most of the time (sure they also burn 🔥 plastic here, but not that often) and when it’s too hot 🥵 over the day you simply take a seat 💺 in the river 🌊. They have a small bridge 🌉 over the river and a „public bath“, what else do you need?Leia mais

  • Medan, Indonesia

    22 de janeiro de 2020, Indonésia ⋅ 🌙 28 °C

    We‘re back in Medan for one night, Tomorrow we want to go to lake Toba by bus 🚌 - let’s see how that works out.
    Btw this are the rice fields here, it’s only one week until harvest. They install nets and ropes over it. The ropes are connected to metal plates which make noise when you pull the ropes. So all ropes come together at one point at a small perch where someone is sitting and pulling the ropes when there are too many birds 🐦 on the field.Leia mais

  • Lake Toba, Indonesia

    23 de janeiro de 2020, Indonésia ⋅ ⛅ 25 °C

    Today we went to Lake Toba by bus - so after breakfast we called a cab by an app called gojek to the central bus station (what a relief, no more bargaining, not knowing the real price). At the bus station the bus was ready to go, what a wonderful coincidence ❤️.
    It was one of these Asian bus adventures - well I remember similar Nigerian bus adventures... I doubt that this bus would get any permission to do anything in Europe, nowhere in Europe... But everything went pretty smooth and after a short time we were well integrated in the bus community. 5,5h later we arrived at the lake and took a boat.
    This time we had to wait one hour until it left but it was fine for buying some fruit on the market and chatting with some people. The boat did not plan to go to our hotel but adding 30 cent per person, the captain dropped us directly at our hotel, which is at the shore of the lake. So now we’re laying on our deck chairs, enjoying the fresh breeze and enjoyable temperature. And tomorrow, we’re up for another adventure since we need to get our visa extended, and that can be quite an adventure in Indonesia... well, we’ll see 🤪.
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  • Samosir, Indonesia

    24 de janeiro de 2020, Indonésia ⋅ ⛅ 29 °C

    Today we found out, that you need to be at least 2 weeks in Indonesia, before you can extend your visa, so we couldn’t do that today. We used the opportunity to get all information, the forms and all copies, now we’re ready to go and we will do the extension next Wednesday. So we went to Parapat by ferry, visited the market and went for lunch. We also passed by Aek Nauli Elephant Conservation Unit. I did some research and found out that above all, the increasing conversion of the rainforest to farmland is endangering the Sumatra elephant as their natural habitat is becoming increasingly limited. The animals that are looking for food in the newly created plantations are driven out by the farmers, killed or locked up in camps. So this is one of this camps (similar to the one in Tangkahan). After I found that information I decided not to go there but found the Barumun Nagari Wildlife Sanctuary which imho is the better way to solve this. But Barumun Nagari would take some time to travel, so let’s see if we will travel there. In any case we will enjoy this wonderful lake for some more days...Leia mais

  • Tuk Tuk, Sumatra, Indonesia

    25 de janeiro de 2020, Indonésia ⋅ ⛅ 28 °C

    Tuk Tuk is a place on the island of Samosir (island in Lake Toba) in Sumatra, Indonesia and has round about 2000 inhabitants. The people living here are called Batak (indigenous people on Samosir). Although Marco Polo reported rumors about man-eating mountain peoples, which he called "Batta", when he drove past Sumatra in 1292, it was not until 1824 that the first Europeans traveled to the Batak country.
    The Batak developed a warlike culture with many battles between the individual villages and practiced headhunting with ritual cannibalism. There is evidence of ritual ingestion of hallucinogenic mushrooms and the use of pupuk as a magic ingredient. Pupuk is said to have been prepared from human flesh (the brain and other parts of the body of a robbed and murdered child). Although you can still drink mushroom shake all over here, I think there will be no human meat in the BBQ tonight.
    The Batak bury the noblest of their dead in ancestral houses, which are decorated with carvings similar to their houses, or in stone tombs (the Tugu). The Batak houses have mighty curved gable roofs. Their wooden skeleton structure is traditionally covered with straw. Today, straw has often been replaced by corrugated iron. The different groups of the Batak have each developed characteristic house and architectural forms. A three-part structure consisting of the substructure, wall zone and roof can be roughly distinguished. The houses stand on piles, their front and back walls are inclined outwards and carved or decorated with decorative laces.
    The Batak came late under the influence of Dutch colonial rule compared to the other peoples of Indonesia. It was not until 1907, with the death of the last charismatic priest-king of the Batak, Sisingamangaraja XII, who had waged a long guerrilla war against the Dutch, that the Dutch gained complete control over the Batak.
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  • Sony guesthouse, Sumatra, Indonesia

    25 de janeiro de 2020, Indonésia ⋅ ⛅ 28 °C

    This guesthouse is wonderful and weird at the same time. Here the weird part: It was built in the 90th and it seems like no renovation of the building happened since then. Here in Sumatra with this high humidity and rain during all year you can imagine what happens to a building not taken care of. This fact and that we were the only guests in this guesthouse until yesterday (when a Dutch couple arrived) makes it weird and a bit apocalyptic. The wonderful part is the location on Samosir, since it is outside the village Tuk Tuk which makes it incredibly calm and peaceful. Nevertheless you have 3 families around which offer food, it’s called restaurant but you more or less eat in the living room of the family. The guesthouse itself has a wonderful garden of which a gardener takes good care. It’s located at the shore of lake Toba 400m away from the next guesthouse at the shore. This gives you the feeling that’s *your* lake. In addition the small ferry drops you at you personal boat launch. It not only feels like *your* lake, it also feels like your *own estate*, since there is nobody around except you. I hope the Dutch couple either stay in their room, or leave soon 🤪.Leia mais

  • Tuk Tuk, Sumatra, Indonesia

    27 de janeiro de 2020, Indonésia ⋅ 🌧 23 °C

    Today we switched the hotel and now live in a Batak house ❤️, again with garden 🌺 and lake 🌊 view... I won’t tell you the price since it is embarrassingly cheap. I travelled a lot since I was 16 but this place here is one of the nicest I found so far (except of Anini beach and Polihale state park in Kauai, Hawaii). So we’re going to stay until Saturday and then move on - the plan is to find some really lonely islands 🏝. And now I’m going to jump into the lake... 🏊🏼‍♀️Leia mais

  • Samosir, Lake Toba, Indonesia

    28 de janeiro de 2020, Indonésia ⋅ 🌧 22 °C

    Once more it was cruising time 🛵 today. We went around the island for lunch 🥗 on the other side. What I really love 💕 here is, that still a lot of people live in the traditional batak houses...

  • Kantor Imigrasi Kelas II PematangSiantar

    29 de janeiro de 2020, Indonésia ⋅ 🌧 24 °C

    Today was a adventurous and fortunately a rainy 🌧 day, our task today: get our visa extended. Fortunately rainy because it’s not so hot in the busses and you don’t miss a sunny swimming or cruising day 😜.

    Now the visa adventure: first you need to know that, depending where you extend your visa, it can be a matter of several days. The queues at the immigration offices can be very long and the processing also can take some days.

    My first idea was to extend it in Medan but since the city center does not attract me to stay for 3 days I skipped that idea. Next idea was to do it in Bali but since everyone does it in Bali the queues are sometimes very long and there is the chance that you might leave after closing hour not even talked to anyone.

    When we arrived at lake Toba we found out that you also can do it in Pematang Siantar, 60km from lake Toba. We also heard that there are no queues and the people are nice and helpful.

    So: getting up at 6:30, walking to the harbour and catching the ferry 🛳 in Tuk Tuk at 7:40. Arriving at Parapat 40 minutes later and looking for a shared taxi 🚖. Finding one (mostly SUVs here) and driving to Siantar for the next 2h (bumpy roads take time). We negotiated with the driver to drop us directly at the immigration, which is on the other side of the city but for some extra cash everything is possible. At 11:00 we arrived and since we had everything in place: the already filled out forms, copies of the passport, the visa and the flight ticket back, the next part went pretty smooth. Taking a biometric picture, giving fingerprints and sign digitally. We were the only ones and the guy was very friendly.

    But it’s Indonesia and you definitely need two things in addition here: patience and confidence. Although all data was right and accepted by the system, the application did not go through... problems in the central computer. The guy asked us to come again THE DAY AFTER TOMORROW, until then it would be done.

    Welllllllll, my name is Gina and I’m not giving up fast 🤪. I talked with him about this and that and what I like here and about food and my job and, and, and. After a while he said he would give it a try after lunch once more.

    Ok, waiting for 1,5h. 13:00 lunch break over. Aaaaand third try it went through, yes! Now the payment but where? “You’ll find it in the backyard”, he said. But where, we looked here and there, nothing... Aaaaaah, after entering a totally wrong room *ooops* we were told: there was a BUS 🚌 in the backyard where you can pay... Ok, payment 💰 in the bus 🤪: done!

    Back into the office :14:00. Wonderful, everything done.... EXCEPT OF... “The big boss needs to sign it until the office closes at 16:00.” they guy said, and “Maybe he won’t sign it today, that happens often, so maybe you better come back tomorrow...”
    Welllllllll.... “I think your boss is in signing mood today 😉, I think I’m going to wait until the office closes at 16:00”, I said with the nicest smile I had go offer. “You can try.” he answered.

    Ok, out again and we were huuuuuuuuungry. So we ordered some food around the corner and just before the food arrived tatatataaaaaa the guy came out and said: “You’re lucy, it’s signed.” ❤️❤️❤️. We picked the visa up and finished our food. 15:00. WE MADE IT.

    So now back home... first by public shared bus 🚌 through the city to the shared taxi station and from there with the shared taxi to Parapat to catch the ferry. If you ever travelled by public shared bus 🚌 the following is nothing new for you but if not, you should at least try it once. The drivers drive like hell, the busses are squeezed with people and there are no seats but benches and not in driving direction but parallel to it. In addition the busses have no door, so you can hop in and out while driving. It’s cheap as hell but also the shared SUV taxi is cheap (1,30 € for 50km).

    At 18:00 we reached the ferry, in time for catching the last ferry at 18:30. 19:15 we jumped from the ferry on the jetty of our hotel.

    What a day, but we made it!!! ❤️❤️❤️
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  • Parapat, Sumatra, Indonesia

    1 de fevereiro de 2020, Indonésia ⋅ ⛅ 25 °C

    Today was our last day at lake Toba, we decided to go to Parapat by ferry to visit the market. We found a fruit, which I never saw before, it’s called Salak and it’s skin looks like snake skin. We found it on the market and I was very curious about it. So we eat some and it is sweet and sour at the same time, very refreshing with the texture of an apple. You can see it one the picture with the blue umbrella. Salak is a species of palm tree native to Java and Sumatra. The fruits grow in clusters at the base of the palm and are about the size and shape of a ripe fig, with a distinct tip. The fruit can be peeled by pinching the tip, which cause the skin to slough off so it can be pulled away. The fruit inside consists of three lobes with the two larger ones, or even all three, containing a large inedible seed. In short: A NEW FRUIT!!! 😋
    Btw: if you wonder what the girl is doing with the fish: she sniffs the gills to check if the fish is fresh.
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