The specific purpose of the weekend was to get up one of the Bandung area's many volcanos to see the views and check out the crater lakes and hot springs. I'd never seen anything of that sort before. My friend and I spent much of the lovely scenic train ride rereading Lonely Planet and a couple of local mags trying to decide where in the area to stay that would put us close to a decent volcano. In the end, my tea addiction overpowered better-situated guesthouses, so Kawah Puti was the default choice -- the only volcano within two hours, or 40 kilometers. But not a bad choice at all. Minimal hiking, magic to the eyes... a winding path eventually allows you to approach the lake, and you glimpse this:
Taking the Jakarta Jump
On September 23rd, 2004, eleven thousand miles after boarding a plane in Charlotte, North Carolina, I disembarked in Jakarta. This is what's been happening since...
Sunday, July 31, 2005
Vilalges here are called "kampungs", and the word carries a special weight. Most of the people who live in this and any other village here are related. Most are born here and never leave. Even those who do leave the kampung for the big city often send their children back home to be raised on the kampung.
We were really demoralized by all the traffic on the narrow roads into and out of the pretty darned massive city of Bandung... 45 miles from Bandung to Malabar took nearly 2 hours. In Bandung, yet another crowded dirty smelly Javanese city, there were occasional splashes of color, like this unmotorized bajay -- anywhere you look on these streets you see folks like this man in an untradeable life...