The Oz Bus crew at Mt. Bromo
Contemplating the beautiful Nature - overwhelming!
Hanging out with the Indonesian filmcrew: Director´s Chair at the shoot
Egypt in Indonesia ???
The Filmcrew
Action in the volcano crater!
walking around the crater - a very thin rim!
Meeting the locals on top of the volcano!
Bait - containers full of crickets, and a two-tailed Lizard.....
That´s the animal that always looks very scared and I think it can almost pop its eyes out!
Jungle Cat
Geckos in all forms and colours, lot´s of curiosities to see at the Bird´s Market in Yogyakarta!
The Shadow Puppet Show in Yogyakarta
Nightlife in Yogyakarta
Bonfire and BBQ at Pangandaran Beach
The Badminton Crew - the dude from the Badminton court who was pretty much smoking while were were nearly fainting from the hard workout....Anto, Tony, Me and Aki, our Japanese Champion!
Pro-Shot!
Fishermen at Pangandaran and a chinese Dragon with the german
Watching Germany vs. Argentina!
Anto, our tourguide, and his family
This is how we are supposed to do it!!
Passing through Jakarta
The Ferry from Sumatra to Java
Toasting the white skin
The truck should not have overtaken in a corner...
lunchbreak
The bus in Indonesia
Stopping at the Equator on Sumatra
After a long ferry trip where we and all the children on board had to watch movies of people being slaughtered in the middle of the day, we met Anto, our next guide, on the border and squeezed into a tiny bus – consicering that we had to spend the next 10 or so days on it. More than half of the bags had to go onto the inside of the bus and only tall man Andy had his own bench. All the others had to squeeze tactically next to each other.
It felt a bit like being back in Nepal, super bumpy roads, and service stations just like in India. So back on nuts and crisps, and let the belly grow! Tony and I found his game section on the computer, so we filled one or the other boring afternoon with battling Plants against Zombies, or I beat him in Battleship...still, we were driving all day long, the hotels were average or below, it was always dark when we arrived in the towns and there was no other places to eat around than KFC or Pizza Hut. We did not see any Oran Utans, what Sumatra is famous for, but crossed the Equator, probably the only highlight of this leg of the journey...
With the crossing to Java everyone already seemed to be lighting up a bit. A 3-hr ferry ride through sunny weather and a cup of Pop-Mie Noodlesoup in your hand. Downside of the first day on Java was the horrid traffic driving through Jakarta, and people being dissappointed not to stop there. I was quite happy not to, looking at these vast skyscrapers wherever you looked, it did not seemed like much of a system in where to build them, or you could not really make out one city centre anyways. It would probably take days to get an idea of where you are there, and we definately did not have any. One more stop before we would get to the promising beach resort of Pangandaran. Surfing, Snorkelling, Bodyboarding, and one day off the bus, yay!
The beach was actually quite grubby, but we had a great pool. It was some holiday in Indonesia and the town was packed with families. There was also the annual Harley Davidson reunion, so all these cool dudes with their pimped bikes were riding up and down the beachfront. There was a cleaner and whiter beach in a natural reserve with lots of monkeys around, and you had to be very careful not to be robbed of anything loose on your body. Watches, Glasses, Camerass, nothing was safe from the cheeky monkeys.
To celebrate our day off (and Germanys success against Argentina), we had an Irish-German drink-off, and we drank quite a lot of Bintang, and know now that it does not feel good in the morning! - and a very nice barbecue by the beach on our last night with fish, chicken, fruit and yet another large Bintang beer, or maybe 2...
Ready for the next round we got on the bus on our day 74 and bumped along to Yogyakarta, the cultural capital of Java, or even Indonesia. Shame on me, but I did not take part in the trip to Boroburur Temple, the worlds second oldest buddhist temple. I had good reasons though, first of all I have seen the oldest one three times already (Angkor), and secondly I was dying for another relaxing day and, another day off the bus. So a bit of relaxing, a good cup of Javanese Coffee, a bicycle-risckshaw trip through the crazy humble-tumble of that busy city to the Bird´s Market, a cetrainly different place to experience. Full of birds, bats, guinea pigs, mice, rabbits, dogs, cat, chicken, fish, and everyhting you can imagine or not, our cameras were yet again filled with loads of new fotos!
We were getting closer to Bali, but not before we would have climbed Mt. Bromo, one of Indonesias highest still active volcanoes and another highlight of our trip. So many days have Andy and Tony been talking about racing up, who is gonna win and who not, that it was almost classic that they did not even go together. Andy chose to get up with the early birds and see another unimpressive sunrise. We had a better sleep-in until 7 and a nice stroll to the volcano and up (maybe not so much of a stroll, after 2 months on a bus and about 2000m above sealevel, but sounds good anyways, haha!) Dramatic views from the rim of mt. Bromos crater, especially as at this time of the day most of the people have to catch up on some sleep after getting up at some crazy time in the morning and the place is a bit more deserted. You can still hear all the motorbikes and people trying to sell you transport because they think you look too unfit to climb up yourself from far away...
The love-triangle reunited in the afternoon to hire some bikes and race around the crater. That was definately great fun, felt a bit like riding ono the moon – not that I would know how that felt – but the ground was so sandy and slippery that you had to show some real biking skills, which I of course had much more than the other two (really?) … and off we went. We cruised around a bit until we reached the other side of Mt. Bromo, where an Indonesian TV team filmed an egyptian historical programme. As soon as they saw us weirdos on a bicycle they left their positions straight away and we were much more interesting than some Pharaohs strolling around Indonesians highlands. All the locals who were the usual spectators came to look at Andy, the tall man. After a bit of an introduction into Indonesian film production, which looked highly ineffective to be honest, and a bit of chatting we had to turn around and head back to the hotel, as we did not want to get lost in the middle of the volcano crater during sunset.
Unfortunately we would have to end a brillant day with a bit of a farewell party, one of our fellow passengers had to travel home unexpectedly, but we would see her again in Darwin, so it was not that bad in the end. A bit of chilling out on the chilly verandah of the beautiful hotel overlooking the volcanoes, before we had to pack for yet another day on the minibus in Indonesia. Early night, as some of the tough ones had to get up in the middle of the night to see Germany bein beaten by Spain.
The trip to Bali was just another day on the bus, small ferry for 45mins and another crappy lunchstop with Pop-Mie-Noodle in a cup hopefully for the last time of the journey.
Luckily saying goodbye to this bus would also mean saying goodbye to a DVD player and no more watching one episode of Heroes after the other. I can tell you, driving on a bumpy road whilst watching TV for hours is not good for your brain!
Bali was great, good nightlife again, great waves on the beach to play in. We did not make it very far away from Kuta Beach, but had some more relaxing days in the sun...
This is gonna be the end of Southeast Asia, what a journey!!! Heat, upset stomachs, long waits for food and people that just would not understand us, but on the other hand beautiful scenery, beautiful people, and lots of good impressions and memories that I would take with me and keep for a long time!
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