South-East Asia 2016

June - December 2016
A 181-day adventure by Joel Read more
  • 182footprints
  • 11countries
  • 181days
  • 499photos
  • 0videos
  • 38.0kkilometers
  • 26.3kkilometers
  • Day 20

    Day 20: Borobudur

    July 5, 2016 in Indonesia ⋅ ⛅ 15 °C

    Yet another early start, as our alarms went off at 3:45! As I was waking up I could hear people in the corridor which seemed very strange, I'm so used to Australian and Western hotels being ultra quiet during the night (generally speaking at least). But I realised why when we got down to the lobby to meet our driver - the restaurant was packed, with more people than I'd ever seen in any of our hotel restaurants before! All the Muslim families were having their pre-fast meal, which is embarassingly obvious when you think about it.

    Our driver was waiting so we hopped straight in - we were the last pick-up so we headed immediately for Borobudur temple, about an hour north-west of Jogja. Not much to report other than the food carts were all out in the street with people eating before sunrise, and it was busier out than I expected. Other than that I just dozed so I don't remember much of the actual trip.

    Arrived at Borobudur by 5am and walked straight up to the top of the temple complex. Already plenty of people up there, but not too crowded thankfully. I think they only sell a limited number of tickets for the sunrise and it's much more expensive than the regular ticket, so it's probably out of reach for most Indonesians. Got a decent spot and settled in to watch the sunrise. It was probably a little underwhelming if I'm honest, as the horizon was a little hazy and the colours just weren't as vivid as they'd been at Bromo a few days earlier. I also had the shits a bit because I was trying to do a time-lapse video with the GoPro, but gormless idiots in flourescent outfits kept on standing in front of the camera! Overall it was a good experience and I'm glad we did it, but I wouldn't bother doing the sunrise again.

    Once the sun was fully up we set about exploring the temple and surrounds. This was probably the best part, as only a couple of additional tours arrive after sunrise until after breakfast, and the sunrise crowd was now spread out over the whole temple rather than clustered at the pinnacle.

    A bit of context - Borobudur is the world's largest Buddhist temple, and was constructed in the 8th century! That makes it a similar age to the Hagia Sofia, and significantly older than most of the famous sights in Europe outside of Rome. It fell into disuse around the 14th century when most of Java converted to Islam and was mostly buried in volcanic ash and jungle, and it wasn't until the British ruled Java briefly in the 17th century that it was excavated. Hard to imagine what they must have felt on uncovering it, real Indiana Jones type stuff!

    It's arranged into 9 levels, with the lower levels covered in inscriptions and bas-reliefs depicting various scenes from Buddha's life, along with examples of Buddhist laws and stories. We spent the better part of an hour wandering around the lower levels, marveling at the detail of the carvings and how well-preserved they were. We also returned to the top to look at the view in full daylight, and take a few photos of the bell-shaped stupas which Borobudur is most famous for.

    We had to be back at the nearby cafe by 8-8:30 for a quick breakfast that we'd already paid for, as straight afterwards we were going on a cycling tour of the local area! We ate (nothing spectacular), and then waited. And waited. And waited. Our driver and the cycling guide were both nearby, but apparently there was another couple of the cycling tour that weren't ready yet. By 9:30 I was about to start convincing the guides to just start without them, but they finally showed up! Apparently their ride from Jogja had arrived quite late and they'd had to rush around the temple a bit. A young couple from Ireland; once I'd gotten over my annoyance at their lack of punctuality I warmed up to them and they were actually quite nice.

    Cycling trip underway, we set off straight into traffic which was a little daunting! But despite the chaos, people are actually pretty reasonable - they don't give you much space but it's probably better than cycling in Sydney where bogans yell out the windows about how only faggots ride bikes and so on.

    First stop was a local market in the nearby town of Borobudur (yes the temple takes its name from the nearby town). According to our guide the market was normally fairly quiet and sleepy, but as today is the last day of Ramadan it was absolutely packed with people buying produce and supplies for their feasts tonight and tomorrow. Sort of like taking someone to Myer a couple of days before Christmas I guess! The market was full of fruits and vegetables, "fresh" meat (in the sense that its been freshly killed) and plenty of still-clucking chickens. Several stalls where people were selling farmed catfish - they kept them alive in tubs of water so they don't just sit out in the heat. At one point a catfish jumped out of a tub and started crawling across the market street!

    Very hot, very noisy, very crowded and very chaotic, but a great experience. Back on our bikes we turned down a few side streets and soon were in the rice fields that surround the temple. Fairly easy riding for the most part as it's on a flat plain, though there were a couple of small hills. Here we just around for a while, through little villages and along tiny streets, past the occasion shop and of course the always present rice fields. A few fields were growing other stuff too - tobacco, chillies, cabbages, papayas, bananas.

    Next stop was a local pottery workshop where a family just made bowls, stupas and other pottery items in their home. We all had a go at making a stupa which proved amusing - I was very awful at it as you'd expect!

    We stayed here for an hour or so chatting with the family and relaxing after our cycling exertions, but eventually got back on our bikes and headed back to Borobudur town to meet up again with the driver by around 2pm. We were all very tired by now but it had been a great ride. Hard to think of where all the time had gone, but we really enjoyed it!

    Passed the time on the ride back to Jogja by chatting with the Irish couple, they were in Indonesia for a couple of weeks for a holiday but were living and working for a year teaching English in Dubai. They both seemed reasonably well-travelled and were good to chat to.

    Back at the hotel we both showered and had a nap. We intended to go down to the Hotel Ibis rooftop bar on Malioboro Street to watch the sunset (and people launching end of Ramadan fireworks), but we woke up quite late and had to really hustle. Got a motorised pedalcab which was quite an experience since you sit in the front rather than behind the driver! Made it to the Ibis on Malioboro Street about 15 minutes before sunset, only to discover that the rooftop bar was actually in a different Hotel Ibis a couple of streets away! A very brisk walk and elevator ride, we made it to the other Hotel Ibis rooftop bar just in time to watch the sun set, though we needn't have bothered since it was hazy and the sun just sort of disappeared near the horizon.

    But it was still a nice stop, and we had a cocktail each while watching random fireworks shoot off around the city and listening to the muezzins do their thing (allahu ackbah x 12 officially marks the end of Ramadan and the commencement of Eid-al-Fitr or Idul Fitre as it's called here).

    Back out into the streets and the warm night air, neither of us were particularly hungry since we'd had a late room service lunch around 3pm. We contented ourselves with some satay sticks from a food cart (8 sticks for a dollar = bargain, though they aren't huge chunks of meat like you get in Australia) and then a pastry from a BreadTop imitation chain. Considered having an ice cream too, but the gelato place we'd seen a couple of days earlier was closed so we just walked back to the hotel, stopping briefly at a cafe for an iced tea/hot chocolate on the way.

    Spent a bit of time doing some planning in the evening since we'd gotten back to the hotel by 8pm. Today is the 5th and we have one more full day here in Jogja before a day of train travel to Jakarta on the 7th. Originally we were only planning on spending two days in Jakarta (it's apparently a polluted concrete jungle) before heading elsewhere, but our flight from Jakarta to Singapore isn't until the 15th. We were hoping to head for Raja Ampat in West Papua for a few days in between, but according to the internet July/August is the worst time of year to head there (heaviest rainfall and strongest wind), so not great conditions for snorkelling. Decided to put it off for another time.

    So we decided to just spend the full 7 nights in Jakarta, taking it easy. Although we've definitely done a lot of chilling out, Shandos has fallen well behind in her work and I've got enough footage for another two videos that I haven't had time to produce yet. So we booked a nice semi-fancy hotel in downtown Jakarta with good business facilities, and we'll just spend some time working and doing non-travelling things. I realise that taking a holiday from a holiday sounds ridiculous, but there aren't many things about this lifestyle that aren't ridiculous!
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  • Day 21

    Day 21: Prambanan

    July 6, 2016 in Indonesia ⋅ ☀️ 27 °C

    After all the build-up of Ramadan, today was actually the day of Idul Fitri so basically everything outside was closed. As it was our last day in Jogja we decided we had to go and see Prambanan temple complex. Since Jogja is at sea-level but inland it gets very hot during the day, so we opted for a sunset trip out to Prambanan.

    This meant that we didn't do much with the morning other than a lie-in and lazy breakfast, followed by a wander around to get lucky and find a burger restaurant that was actually open! Unfortunately the burgers were fairly average, but alas.

    Our driver picked us up from the hotel at 2pm, and to our surprise it was the same driver who'd taken us to Borobudur yesterday! This time we were accompanied by an Italian couple in the back who we exchanged pleasantries with, but seemed to be in the midst of a heated discussion so we left them alone. The ride out to Prambanan took a bit longer than expected - it's a lot closer to the city than Borobudur but the drive seemed almost as long. Worse traffic I suppose!

    Prambanan is actually a complex of many temples - the largest of which is Hindu, and is the largest Hindu temple in Indonesia. Built in the 9th century, it stands nearly 50m high and was surrounded by 240 small temples (most of which are now destroyed). And it's part of a larger complex of several hundred temples, the majority of which are actually Buddhist, so it's a very interesting site.

    We arrived and had a look around the main Hindu temple, but the place was absolutely crawling with local tourists and the position of the sun relative to the main buildings made it very difficult to get good photos, so we decided to wander around the rest of the site. About 200m away in the park is one of the larger mostly-ruined Buddhist temples which was quite impressive.

    Then we pressed on for another few hundred metres and came to the largest Buddhist temple on the site, Candi Siwu. This temple is more dome-shaped Buddhist rather than the pinnacles of Hindu architecture, and felt like it was probably 75% of the size of the main Hindu buildings. But what really struck both of us was that there were basically no tourists at this temple, and the ones that were here were almost entirely Westerners. None of the Indonesian tourists come a few hundred metres down the road to see temples that are almost as impressive, which struck me as very strange.

    Since we had the site basically to ourselves and the sun was starting to set, we got some great photos and had a really thorough look at all the carvings, reliefs and so on. As with the main Hindu building here, the large central temple was surrounded by hundreds of small shrines, most of which have sadly been destroyed and are just piles of rubble. Lots of looters over the years means that a sizable percentage of the original bricks are gone, and the government isn't inclined to restore with different masonry - and fair enough I think.

    Back to the main Hindu buildings where the crowds had thinned out thankfully, so we indulged in watching the sun dip into the horizon haze, though the temple buildings never quite caught the sun the way we were hoping for. Still a beautiful site, very impressive architecture, and we were both very glad we came. Decided against paying $30 to watch a 4 hour ballet performance with the temples as a backdrop - it's apparently very good but neither of us was particularly in the mood, so back to the hotel it was.

    Tired and overheated we opted for a hotel restaurant dinner which was actually delicious. I had an Indonesian beef soup which I loved, and Shandos was very taken with her curry as well. It's quite interesting actually - Indonesian curries so far seem to just be lots of curry powder rather than the Thai-style curries we normally get in Australia that are very heavy on the coconut milk. Off to bed for an early-ish start tomorrow - a long train journey to Jakarta awaits!
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  • Day 22

    Day 22: Yogyakarta to Jakarta

    July 7, 2016 in Indonesia ⋅ ⛅ 32 °C

    Alarms buzz at 6am, meaning we've got 1 hour for breakfast, packing, dressing, washing and getting to the train station. Well, I had to pack, Shandos had done hers the night before which made logical sense! Took me longer than expected, and it was nearly 6:30 by the time we made it downstairs for breakfast - only 15 minutes to eat! Picked out a couple of breakfast items and then had to make an unspeakable pitstop in the bathroom, so I only had time to scoff half a piece of toast. My stomach felt uneasy so I had a couple of Gastro-Stop tablets and off we went to the station.

    Quite a bit busier than the other stations we'd been to, with lots of people milling around and no special executive class waiting room this time. The train arrived right on time and we boarded and settled in for the 7.5 hour journey westwards to Jakarta. There were some nice mountainous bits of scenery as we went across the middle of Java, but on the whole it was much the same scenery as the previous journey (crumbling concrete towns and rice fields), so it wasn't what I'd call a particularly spectacular journey.

    Our executive seats were just as comfortable as the previous trip - loads of luggage space, leg room, power points, tray tables etc. Passed the time with a couple of podcasts and a few hours of Civilization on my laptop, while Shandos dozed and read books.

    Arrived in Jakarta about 30 minutes behind schedule at 4pm, right next to the huge national independence monument (Monas, or Sukarno's Last Erection as it's colloquially known - apparently it was the last project the president really cared about in the last days of his life/reign). Got a cab to our hotel for the princely sum of $4 - we probably could have walked it in 10 minutes but Jakarta isn't really a walking kind of place. Wide boulevards with Indonesian traffic and no footpaths isn't a great combo!

    Checked into the Alila hotel which is easily the fanciest (and most expensive) place we've stayed so far. As I mentioned earlier, we've decided to stay put in Jakarta for a week to do a bit of catching up and a bit of forward planning too. We also splurged a little for an "executive class" room meaning that we also have access to a special lounge with superior breakfast options, and free canapes and cocktails every night between 6 and 8pm. Straight away we both realised though that the Wifi in our room didn't work - we were in the far corner of the building on level 15, and the signal just couldn't maintain through the walls. A couple of calls to reception and a guy confirming that yes, it didn't really work, and we were on the move to a new room, this time on level 22 with great views over the city.

    The new room was much nicer as well - not an upgrade, but it had been renovated far more recently and had far better furnishings. Once all the moving was done, it was conveniently 6pm so we headed for our exclusive lounge on level 7 to check out the cocktails and canapes, and we were very pleasantly surprised at the selection. Lots of sweet and savoury options to choose from, and good cocktails too! I had a lychee martini and Shandos had a mojito.

    While we were relaxing my stomach starting feeling off, and I had to run to the bathroom a couple of times for unspeakable acts. Since we'd filled up on canapes and drinks we decided against a proper dinner so headed back upstairs. Unfortunately my stomach was now feeling very off, and I had to make several more trips to the bathroom before turning in for the night.
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  • Day 23

    Day 23: Sick in Jakarta

    July 8, 2016 in Indonesia ⋅ ⛅ 32 °C

    Unfortunately my stomach got worse and worse overnight. Lots of pooing, and a bit of spewing for good measure. Basically every 2 hours I ran to the bathroom, feeling awful all the while.

    Morning came but didn't bring any relief, I wasn't capable of anything but sleeping and running to the bathroom. Shandos pottered around with a delicious breakfast, getting the laundry done, exploring the local area a bit, and doing some work down in the executive lounge.

    I spent the entire day in the room feeling very sick and very sorry for myself. I perked up a little by the end of the day and went downstairs for some canapes, a decision which I regretted shortly afterwards. Off to bed again for another night of severely interrupted sleep.
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  • Day 24

    Day 24: Still sick in Jakarta

    July 9, 2016 in Indonesia ⋅ ⛅ 32 °C

    Nothing to report. Still just as sick as yesterday, with fluid still erupting frequently from both ends. Left the room while housekeeping did their thing, but otherwise stayed in. Shandos did some more exploring but not too far.Read more

  • Day 25

    Day 25: Recovering in Jakarta

    July 10, 2016 in Indonesia ⋅ ⛅ 30 °C

    Finally starting to feel a bit better, though I didn't make it downstairs for breakfast again. Feasted on a couple of dry biscuits and some water; one more awful visit to the bathroom but aside from that I definitely felt on the mend.

    Made it to the Chinese restaurant downstairs in the hotel for lunch and had a small serving of yum cha before heading back up to the business lounge where I parked myself for the rest of the day. Shandos at this point was going insane so headed out shopping to one of the many huge shopping malls dotted across Jakarta. I spent the afternoon doing various things online, catching up on Skype with family and just generally relaxing.

    Shandos returned by around 5pm and we hung out for a bit before having our by-now-regular canape dinner in the executive lounge and heading upstairs to the room. I'd successfully made it over 12 hours without running to the bathroom, so I think I've finally gotten it beat.
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  • Day 26

    Day 26: Small steps in Jakarta

    July 11, 2016 in Indonesia ⋅ ⛅ 32 °C

    Decided to risk heading downstairs for the (apparently) delicious a la carte breakfast that Shandos had raved about a few times earlier in the week. I hadn't made any disastrous pitstops for over 36 hours at this point so I was feeling confident. And the gamble paid off! The food was indeed excellent, I had a very tasty croque monsieur (jaffle with ham & mushroom filling, topped with cheese and a fried egg) which stayed in for the entire day.

    The morning we spent working on various things, before venturing out for lunch. We wandered a bit before settling on Happy Day, an American-chain style restaurant a couple of blocks from the hotel. Shandos had eaten here a few days ago while I was sick and wasn't overly impressed, but I just wanted something clean looking that wasn't likely to upset my stomach. I got my wish at least, though I agree it wasn't especially spectacular.

    Again we spent the afternoon doing various bits & pieces at the hotel lounge, but headed out around 4pm. We were considering heading to one of the rooftop bars that dot Jakarta but figured we'd be under-dressed for most of them - I've only got thongs and hiking shoes, and only shorts! Instead we decided on the backpacker area of Jalan Jaksa where we hoped to find a bunch of cheap restaurants and bars.

    Grabbed a cab and headed into Jakarta's traffic around 4pm which as it was essentially commuting time on a weekday was at a standstill (though time doesn't seem to really have much impact on the traffic here). It got worse as we rounded a corner near our hotel which bounded the main Presidential palace and several military jeeps charged out the gate, limousine with President Widodo aboard and trailing just behind. Off he went with his motorcade and escort, changing traffic lights to suit (again not that people pay much attention to the lights), while us mortals sat and waited.

    Before long we arrived at Jalan Jaksa, and were a little disappointed to find that it was actually nothing special. There were a couple of backpacker style dive bars and some dingy hotels but that was about it. Found a couple of interesting looking alleyways which we explored down, past locals with their little food carts and warungs, unfailingly happy and smiling - quick to ask where we're from but not following on with a pressure sales tactic.

    Eventually we found a bar that we'd heard about called Melly's Garden, which was set back from the road amidst some gardens and Hindu temple architecture. Almost like being back in Bali, as it had the mosquitoes to match! But we were very early - at 5pm there was literally nobody else in a 300 seat venue. Undeterred we took a seat, grabbed a couple of 750ml Bintangs and settled in. By 6:30 the place had started to pick up but we'd almost had enough to drink and there was no non-smoking section as usual which kills our enthusiasm for venues pretty quickly. So off we wandered, the earliest of the earlybirds.

    Foursquare had recommended a burger joint a couple of blocks away which we wandered over to, but the supposed burger joint actually turned out to be a small food court type place with semi-permanent food trucks surrounding a small eating area with table service. There was a bunch of different options (none of them burgers but never mind); we both ended up going for a kebab each and shared a platter of satay skewers. Satay is a bit different over here - rather than large chunks of marinated chicken you get in Western countries, it's very small bits of chicken grilled almost crispy, and then slathered with a thick spicy peanut sauce. Delicious.

    While eating we noticed the most popular stall was selling "martabak" which neither of us had heard of, but were intrigued by. Martabak is apparently very common across the middle-east and subcontinent and was brought here by Indian traders. It's essentially a pizza/pancake style dish, but it gets folded over to form almost like a sandwich (or a square calzone, but not crispy). The fillings are normally minced meat, spices, diced potato, cheese etc sort of like a Turkish gozleme, but this stall was doing a roaring trade in sweet ones filled with Oreo, Toblerone, Milo, peanut butter & chocolate etc.

    We couldn't just make a find like this and not indulged, so we settled for a red velvet pastry filled with cream cheese and crushed Oreo biscuit. The bread/pastry was roughly the consistency of a crumpet, and the filling was amazing though extremely rich and I couldn't eat more than a few pieces. We'd at least had the foresight to bring it back to our hotel room where we ate it with our remaining bottle of wine from Bali.

    All in all a good day, if a little tame. But at least my food stayed down!
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  • Day 27

    Day 27: Exploring the old city

    July 12, 2016 in Indonesia ⋅ ⛅ 27 °C

    Today was the day - after being off colour for so long I felt like I was finally going to be up to a bit of sight-seeing, so we decided last night that we'd head for the Old Town - a few remnants of Indonesia's Dutch colonial past. We'd heard good things about the fish market on the docks, an authentic working port and market where the fishermen dropped off their night's catch early in the morning to be sold during the day.

    So we agreed on an early start, in a taxi by 7:15am after a hotel breakfast and shower. Despite the early hour there was still plenty of traffic around, and as usual it took longer than expected to arrive. We were dropped off in a fairly nondescript area, though obviously close to the port. We knew the street (it was called Jalan Ikan ie Fish Street), but when we followed it to where the fish market supposedly was, all we could find was piles of rubbish and garbage. It honestly looked like the aftermath of an earthquake or something. There were a few shacks still standing with people around, so we "asked" which isn't the easiest concept when you don't have a mutual language, but according to the guy we asked, this WAS the fish market! I think we misunderstood him and it had moved or something, but it definitely wasn't there. Alas.

    We walked into the port itself where all the sail boats were tied up and had a look around. Apparently it's the largest sail-powered fishing fleet still operating anywhere in the world! Something to be proud of I guess. A few people offered tours of their boats but we declined as we could see pretty much everything from the outside anyway. After a decently long walk we headed over in the direction of the old Dutch settlement which still lives on in a few buildings.

    First stop was a cafe Shandos had heard good things about, named for the Dutch East India Company, but much like its namesake it was closed and possibly out of business. We weren't that early, strange!! More walking southwards brought us to the last remaining Dutch drawbridge anywhere in the world. When the Dutch set up their trading port of Batavia in the 1630s, their master town plans required canals and so on, so that's what they did! The drawbridge had been knocked down a few times and I think the current iteration is actually from the 1930s, but the stanchions looked original enough. It's pretty short and not very tall, but impressive enough. One weird note - the gate to walk over was locked and everything looked very closed (no tourists etc), but a man appeared and relieved us of 20k rupiah ($2) and opened the gate. Go figure.

    More walking and we arrived at the main area - a large square called Fatahillah in front of the old governor's mansion (huge!). Still a block or two worth of buildings still standing here, and much more in line with what I'd expected when I pictured an "old town". Since the earlier cafe had been closed, we headed for our intended lunch destination at 10:30 - Cafe Batavia, again in an old colonial building overlooking the square. Had a mocktail here which was very night but cost almost $7 each which is an outrageous price by Indonesian standards.

    The square itself was packed with Indonesian tourists looking around, taking selfies and riding the hire bikes parked at each end of the square. A few street performers around too - a guy with puppets and a few guys with that "seat hidden inside their outfit" illusion where it looks like they're hovering. We hired a bike for 30 minutes and did a few laps of the square taking some photos, but the bikes were designed for either midgets or children and our knees would hit the handlebars with each revolution.

    We explored a market down a side street and ducked briefly into an exhibition about the restoration of the old Dutch buildings, but there wasn't a whole lot to see. Shandos wanted lunch at this (11am) point, so ordered a plate of noodles with satay sauce and some cut up potato fritters from a lady at the side of the road. It was actually very tasty, though a little spicy.

    From here we visited the museum that's been set up in the former's governor's palace, the giant building overlooking the square. Entry was the princely sum of $0.50 each! It was interesting enough to wander around and see the space (and read a few signs about the colonial era), but most of the really interesting stuff was long gone and the place was absolutely rammed with Indonesian tourists who moved through at a breakneck pace. Selfie in front of this wall, that wall, the other wall, next room. An odd way to sight-see in my eyes, but no judgements!

    We were asked to be in a /lot/ of selfies here as well, at least 15 I think! Shandos more than me. I don't quite know why other than we're an oddity (there aren't many Westerners around though we saw maybe 5 total during the day). I assume there's nothing malicious about it because everyone's very smiley and friendly, though there's just so much giggling from the girls sometimes I'm not so sure. A couple of teenage guys also followed for a few rooms around the mansion and I was getting the shits with it and preparing to confront them, but eventually they asked for a photo and I think they were just mustering the courage to ask Shandos.

    Out of the museum and into a (mercifully air-conditioned) cafe on a side-street nearby when I had a plate of nasi goreng for lunch. We chilled out here and had a couple of iced teas before wandering a little more around the streets of the old town. Not much more to see though, we'd exhausted the scenery a bit quicker than I was expecting. But no problem, it's just so hot, sweaty and grimy here that we were both ready to head for the hotel and have a swim by 2pm!

    The main station was just nearby so we walked over and puzzled out the system for buying a smartcard (think Opal/Oyster/myki etc), buying our ticket etc and finding the platform where the train was already waiting. Although the station was a grand old crumbling relic from the 1920s, the train itself was sparkling new - apparently an import from Japan to encourage Jakartans into more public transport. The traffic problems aren't going to fix themselves of course!

    The train left after about five minutes and we stood the whole four stations to our stop where we jumped out and walked the couple of blocks back to the hotel. Aside from the ticket queues at the station, I'd say the process was a lot quicker and cheaper than a taxi, so thumbs up for the new Jakarta metro from us. We had a swim in the pool though thunderstorms were brewing, before freshening up and heading downstairs to our favourite executive lounge haunt where I now type this! Current plan is to head across the road for a street food dinner before our last full day in Jakarta tomorrow. Nothing really on the cards, though I'd like to do some shopping. Let's see how that works out!
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  • Day 28

    Day 28: Shopping in Jakarta

    July 13, 2016 in Indonesia ⋅ ⛅ 32 °C

    Last full day here in Jakarta before we depart for new countries and new adventures! We'd worked out over the last few days that the main thing to do in Jakarta was to shop, so figured we should go and check out a shopping mall or too for an authentic experience.

    Caught a taxi to the Grand Indonesia Mall around 10:30am after a leisurely hotel breakfast. I should mention by the way, that these areas of central Jakarta have seen terrorist attacks occasionally (remember the JW Marriott hotel has been bombed twice since 2001, the Australian embassy nearby was bombed, and there was a bombing in January this year at a police post and a Starbucks - remember the photo of that guy in the middle of the road waving a handgun around). But this westernised area of central Jakarta is like a warzone - police checkpoints, helmeted and machine-gun toting security everywhere directing traffic. Crash barriers, razor wire, inspections on every driveway where they use mirrors to check under the car and in the boot for bombs. Metal detectors and bag inspections at the entrance to any large property. Crazy stuff.

    Once we'd gotten past all the security we set about wandering the mall. There was a couple of things I wanted to buy - some shorts, since mine were feeling a bit old and shabby, a hat to replace the one I lost, and some new headphones as the ones I'd bought just days before leaving Sydney had stopped working already!

    We walked around looking at the shops - not really much to report since as you can imagine it's basically like any other upmarket Western shopping mall. There weren't any super-luxe brand stores like Versace or Gucci etc (they all seemed clustered in a different mall across the road), but the stores here still had surprisingly high prices. The stores were basically the same international chains that have set up shop in Australia over the last couple of years - Top Shop, H&M, Zara etc, along with a lot of brand stores like Nike/Reebok/Adidas and some Asian-specific retailers like Seibo.

    Had a lot of trouble finding shorts that would fit - obviously I'm a lot larger than the average Indonesian guy so most stores just don't bother stocking things large enough for me. Managed to find a couple of pairs of shorts large enough at H&M which were about $20 AUD each, so no difference to buying them in Oz really. For lunch we visited Tim Ho Wang which is a Michelin-starred dumpling place (although it's a chain now, the original is in Hong Kong). Best known for BBQ pork buns (and BBQ chicken buns in this Muslim country), I can report they were excellent!

    Wandered around quite a bit more before I found a hat I liked at Cotton On - a trucker hat, and some headphones from the Sony store. More than I wanted to pay ($50), but hopefully they last a bit longer than my last pair!! Went exploring into the upper levels of this gigantic mall, and found an entire three floors that were kitschily decorated to look variously like Shanghai, New York City and ancient Rome for some reason. The food outlets were all heavily decorated and themed, which felt a little unusual. I guess in Aus it's reasonably common for a stand-alone restaurant to be heavily themed, but not outlets in a mall? Anyway it was kind of fun.

    We chose a Vietnamese place and grabbed a salted caramel iced coffee and salted caramel iced chocolate - genuine Vietnamese fare of course! Caught a taxi back to the hotel tired but contented around 5pm, just in time for a quick freshen up in the room and heading downstairs for our standard complimentary cocktails and canapes. Indulged a little too much with free mojitos and Bintang!
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  • Day 29

    Day 29: The next country!

    July 14, 2016 in Singapore ⋅ ⛅ 25 °C

    Today was finally the day we left Indonesia - we had to make it today, as our 30 day visa was expiring the following day! Although our flight wasn't until 5:30pm, it was obviously an international flight so we needed to leave plenty of time, along with time for getting to the airport in Jakarta's fickle traffic (anywhere between 50 minutes and 2 hours apparently!).

    As usual we just hung around the hotel doing a bit of internet stuff until after lunch when we headed for the airport just before 2pm. Sad to be checking out of Alila as it had been a super comfortable place to spend the week. It almost felt like being at home. But I definitely won't miss Jakarta, it's noisy, dirty and polluted, the traffic sucks and there is surprisingly little to do for a city of 30 million. If I hadn't been sick those few days early on I'm not sure what we would have done!

    Got to the airport in record time, about 45 minutes, so we were pretty early especially since we didn't have to check in having done so online, and with only carry-on luggage we didn't need to stand in a bag drop queue. Shandos's phone beeped just as we were getting out of the taxi, AirAsia informing us that our flight was delayed by 60 minutes to 6:30pm. So we were early, and it was late. Awesome. At least the airport has a few shops and things, so we bought some Indonesian food at a cafe downstairs and ate it very slowly.

    Moved upstairs to Starbucks where again we bought drinks and drank them very slowly. The departure boards still hadn't been changed from saying 5:30pm, and when I checked with an AirAsia person she said oh yeah it's definitely still 6:30pm, or maybe about 7pm now. Great! Eventually we got bored of leeching Starbucks's wifi signal and headed to the gate where there was a fairly sizable crowd. Two flights were shown on the departure board, one at 6:30 and ours below it ("Running On Time Departing 5:30pm" despite it being 6pm). We couldn't see the actual destinations for these as the screen had a Windows XP "Install New Hardware Or Printer Wizard" dialog box covering this useful area.

    The ground staff handed out hot meals and water which was nice, I had a sort of chicken stir fry thing and Shandos got fried chicken strips with rice. A couple of garbled announcements in Indonesian and a general stampede to the boarding area prompted us to move as well, only to discover our boarding passes weren't valid - because that flight was going to Kuala Lumpur. Back down we sat, assured that the plane was definitely ready for about 7:15pm (about 20 minutes away).

    Around 7:15pm there was another garbled announcement and about 1/3rd of the people at the boarding gate moved over and went through. Since nobody else seemed to move we didn't worry about it, but decided to head over once there was a lull in the queue. Turns out there was another (unmarked) flight elsewhere after hours that everyone else was waiting for, and we were basically the last people on the plane! Thankfully it was only about half full, with lots of empty seats dotted around. Because we were running so late we'd lost our departure slot (Jakarta is a pretty busy airport), so we waited probably another 20-25 minutes on the ground and various taxiways before finally taking off around 8:15pm.

    Only thing of note on the flight was that we'd apparently pre-bought meals and neither of us recalled! So we had our airport late lunch, courtesy AirAsia food and then a plane meal of chicken satay sticks & rice within the space of about 5 hours! Whoops.

    Landed in Singapore, off the plane and straight through customs & immigration we went, and almost directly into a waiting taxi to our hotel at Clarke Quay. Although we'd gone slightly westward on the flight, Singapore is actually an hour ahead of Jakarta, so we also lost an hour in the process. The 3 hour delay plus time zone change meant that it was nearly midnight by the time we arrived at the hotel.

    So if that was Indonesia, we'd done it. I'd enjoyed my time there; the people are very nice and friendly, there's been some great scenery and some great experiences. And it's unbelievably cheap - Singapore will be a huge adjustment!
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