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Category: Indonesia

Harau Valley, Sumatra

Harau Valley, Sumatra

Harau Valley, Sumatra, Indonesia. 7 January 1986

Met the others [Alain & Evi] near the clocktower [in Bukittingi] at 7.45am.  A cloudy, misty morning, no rain. An oplet [shared taxi] to the bus terminal, then a bus to Payakumbu, 36kms away. From there an oplet to another terminal. Then we walked to another terminal for an oplet ride to the Harau Valley.

From there we walked 5ks through the valley, flanked by sheer rock-faces, quite high [~300m] with spectacular waterfalls. Some tranquil farm scenes, a lot of water buffalo. Ran the gauntlet of “hellos” yet again from everyone especially little kids. “Apa kabars” from us in return.

Got to the base of our first waterfall, then climbed a steep path for a panorama of the valley. A guy sold us drinks and peanuts up there.

Walked another 3ks to see 3 more waterfalls. The force of the water at the base created a lot of wind & spray. Men with rifles were shooting birds from the tree-tops.

We came back cutting across rice paddies for a short-cut. Most of the time there was light rain. Had soup, tea and some biscuits in a small shop. Hitched a ride in a truck to Payakumbu before bussing back arriving at 6pm. 

Borobudur

Borobudur

Borobudur temple, Java, Indonesia. 24 December 1985

Woken at 5.15am. Rained all night and still drizzling when Alain, Evi, Chris & Caroline & I left [Dewi’s Homestay, Yogyakarta] walking to the bus stop. Took a bus to the Borobudur turn-off and then another to the temple. Had breakfast around 7 before walking into the complex. Only recently finished shops selling souvenirs, well-kept gardens & pathways leading to the temple on a hill.

Quite magnificent, has just been reconstructed after almost collapsing. [Not sure what that reference was for, but checked its recent history and was surprised to see it was victim to a terrorist attack in January of that year. The stupas show signs of where they may have been reconstructed]. Weather was drizzle but cleared, wispy clouds making the surrounding mountains & volcanoes very photogenic. [The shot above shows Mt Merapi on the right, our destination for that afternoon, with a dawn summit on Xmas day].

Took over 20 shots mainly on the tripod. A lot of the stone carvings are very interesting, well preserved or restored.

As time went on more and more tourists arrived, swarming over the structure.  Left around 10.30, the light by then was dull and hazy. 

Chilling on Nias Island

Chilling on Nias Island

20 January 1986, Lagundri Beach, Nias Island off Sumatra

Lagundri Beach was a fabulous chill-out spot after nearly 2 months of wet season travel through Bali, Java and then Sumatra. I spent 10 days there with the last 6 at Yanty’s. Caught up with Alain & Evi again after a week apart.

Typical diary entry for most days was spent the day eating, reading, relaxing in the hammock, swimming and throwing the frisbeea day similarly spent in idleness and relaxation – wonderful! Finished reading Conrad’s ‘Lord Jim’ and Knut Hamsun’s ‘The Wanderer’ & started Graham Swift’s ‘Waterland’. Played lots of cards.

The photo is one I took on a self-timer on the tripod – so of all people I should be ready – but not, pulling a face on the left. Mr Milyani, his wife & their large family, plus Evi, Alain crouched down, James – a kiwi from Nelson – at the back. I listened to James’ cassette tape of Hunters & Collectors’ “The Jaws of Life” on his superior walkman. I had swapped my Smiths tape for James’ copy of ‘Waterland’.

This was our last day here and we left at 6pm on the back of motorbikes heading to the Teluk Dalam wharf and then on a battered old cargo boat heading to the mainland port town of Silbolga.

Lagundri Beach

I believe this area was badly impacted by the 2004 tsunami with most of the beachside accommodation destroyed. Then it suffered a double-blow three months later with a bad earthquake in 2005 killing 900 on Nias Island.

More: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2005_Nias%E2%80%93Simeulue_earthquake