Indonesia
Pindah

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    • Day 46

      Lake Toba

      July 26, 2023 in Indonesia ⋅ ☁️ 21 °C

      Heute morgen habe ich mich gegen 9 Uhr mit den Mädels getroffen und habe mir einen Roller gemietet, das erste Mal! Ich war ein bisschen unsicher auf den Beiden und habe es erstmal ein bisschen getestet, aber es hat dann ganz gut funktioniert. Ich bin nur leider früh in einer Kurve leicht hingefallen und habe eine Schürfwunde am Bein und am Ellebogen, nicht weiter schlimm. Ich habe es dann nochmal etwas vorsichtiger probiert und es hat sehr gut geklappt. Ich war immer ein bisschen hinter den Mädchen, weil ich langsamer und vorsichtiger gefahren bin, davon habe ich mich nicht beeindrucken lassen. Die Insel hat nicht viel Verkehr, aber einige Kurven und teils steilere Straßen. Es war schon eine richtige Challenge für mich. Generell habe ich auch viele „außerhalb der Komfortzone - Momente“. Also die Insel ist wirklich total schön und wir haben so viel gesehen. Ich war natürlich sehr fokussiert auf das Rollerfahren, aber ich fühle mich jetzt viel sicherer und bin auch stolz das ich es geschafft habe und mich wieder drauf gesetzt habe trotz des kleinen Zwischenfalls. Es ist leider auch nicht möglich ein Taxi zu nehmen um die Insel zu entdecken. Generell gibt es in Sumatra keine Taxi-App oder so etwas. Alles ist weit auseinander und schwierig zu erreichen. Also für meinen ersten „Drive“ war ich ganz schön lange unterwegs und ich war auch die ganze Zeit alleine, weil die Mädels so schnell waren. Ich bin am Ende durch die Insel gefahren und habe total viele Hunde, Büffel und Kühe gesehen. Zwischendurch sah es ein bisschen wie Schweden aus. Ich hab es zum Glück rechtzeitig bis Sonnenuntergang zum Hotel geschafft. Morgen mache ich mal ein bisschen entspannter 😅 das war echt anstrengend für mich, die lange Rollerfahrt.Read more

    • Day 43

      Lake Toba, Indonesia

      January 23, 2020 in Indonesia ⋅ ⛅ 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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    • Day 45

      Tuk Tuk, Sumatra, Indonesia

      January 25, 2020 in Indonesia ⋅ ⛅ 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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    • Day 45

      Sony guesthouse, Sumatra, Indonesia

      January 25, 2020 in Indonesia ⋅ ⛅ 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 🤪.Read more

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