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...
Saturday, March 11, 2006
No wonder Johnny Weismuller, Christophe Lambert and the other Lords of Greystoke Manor never crashed... these "vines" which I always assumed were thin and stringy, if tough, are MASSIVE... can't even close my fist around it.
Welcome to the monkeyhouse...
Don't forget to click...
Unlike the fun "monkey forest" in Ubud on Bali, there is nothing "staged" about the monkeys everywhere here in the forests and jungles on these mountains. These monkeys, hanging out around the paths to the mountaintops in the park, are not the same ones that treaterd us to spectacular performances in the jungle across from our phenomenal $30/night terrace seats... We watched them tiptoe through the treetops behind our hotel, over our heads, and across the ravine our room is perched on... we watched a mother WITH BABY just like the one in these pictures... launch herself Evel Knievel style over Snake River 20 meters from one flimsy branch to a flimsier one in another tree...looked like she was bungee jumping with her child in tow... Who needs movies and TVs? We got two shows on a giant screen with excellent surround sound, and beer, books, appetizers and each other that ran for over an hour each... utterly relaxing, fasinating, and entertaining...
After the travelling monkey theater show had exited stage left the way they had come, the curtain came down, slowly but steadily, until the jungle stage was removed from our view. I took this shot right after the actors left. Not to worry, though, the curtain was back up by sunrise, and at noon just before checkout we caught a matinee performance from a different, much larger, monkey company...
Friday, March 10, 2006
A clash of civilizations: Our child of the jungle Guide, our javanese tourist, and a Sunday morning worker collecting food for the area water buffalo... he was one of the few men doing this work that we saw -- most were women, and they looked like they'd been spending Sunday mornings this way for a long time...
Must end on a sad note. The last contact we had with the folks that live off the jungle, before rejoining the "litterati" tourist crowd under the mountain love: Sundays collecting water buffalo food begin very early in life. This boy isn't ten, and he isn't standing straight, and he isn't wearing shoes... and we wonder why some peole grow up to be short and bent...