Leaving the Hotel for the Station
Sue-On and Vera
ON BOARD THE TRAIN
Waiting for it to leave the
station.
.
LEAVING THE STATION
The Porters Line Up on the Platform
to Bid Farewell
A View of Our Coach ~ Excellent
Ride: Clean ~ Smooth ~ Comfortable
.
Interesting traffic waiting
at the crossings for our train to go by
Miust have been wash day as
there was a lot of laundry hanging out.
Rice fields, flooded in preparation
for new seedlings
*** Probably a cassava field.
*** In front are the harvested
fields.
They are flooded which makes
the stubble easier to plough back into the soil.
Some of the stalks are gathered
and burned. Not sure if they use the stalks as fuel for cooking.
*** Bananas, anyone?
.
In the villages, there are lots
of trees, both shade and fruit.
Rice in fields and terraces
-- such vibrant greens!
They reminded us of the new
leaves on our trees back home in the spring.
.
Everchanging Scenery:
Lush Tropical Vegetation ~ Farm
Settlements ~ Cultivated Fields
RR Crossings ~ Small Villages
~ Mountains and Valleys ~ Streams
Fruit Trees ~ Roads and Pathways
~ "Scarecrows"
Villagers ~ Field Workers ~
Hikers
Volcanoes Everywhere: Active
and Dormant
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Houses along the tracks are
pretty primitive looking compared to our standards.
Life must be hard, but the people
look relaxed.
.
.
CONTINUED IN PART II
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Bill
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Bill and Sue-On Hillman: A 50-Year
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6.a TRAIN TRIP FROM
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HOMES IN THE VILLAGES
*** All land is used to produce
food - whether it's small strips of rice, taro, cassava. he latter is an
interesting plant.
It grows quite tall with leaves
at the top. It's the roots that are used, often 3 - 6 tubers?
The leaves are edible to those
who have high blood pressure ( not that tasty!).
The tubers can be sliced and
deep fried into chips, or the starch is used to make TAPIOCA.
*** Some houses are better than
others, and they all coexist.
Many also have "store-fronts',
selling snacks, doing car repairs.
.
.
*** The two strips are rice
seedlings.
The seedlings are grown in water.
When they are at the right stage,
and the fields are ploughed and flooded,
the seedling are picked as "plugs"
and planted one by one in the prepared fields
. .
*** The fields are worked by
villagers.
Many of the fields have been
harvested.
The crop is planted at various
times, so some are new, some are fairly grown,
some are being harvested, and
others being plowed and the stubble worked into the soil.
.
*** Interesting to see palm
trees, banana trees, etc.
planted along the ridges between
fields.
We were trying to capture people
harvesting.
It's all manual labour - using
a sickle and tied into sheaves.
These are dry enough for another
individual
to beat against a shielded screen
to take off the grains of rice.
Another would bag the rice,
take it back to the village,
and spread out to dry in the
sun on any available flat surface.
.
*** Some harvested fields alongside
ripening fields
*** Some of the piles of stalk
left - We've seen small fires and wondered
if this would destroy the nutrients
in the soil. Fertilizer - potash, is used widely.
The vocanic soils are very fertile.
.
One of the many canals used
for irrigation and to stock fish
*** Good to see the odd dog
in this predominately Muslim country
Traditionally, domestic dogs
have been seen as impure, and the Islamic legal tradition
has developed several injunctions
that warn Muslims against most contact with dogs.
Generally though, according
to the Qur'an the use of hunting dogs is permitted.
*** This may be a guava tree.
It's a nice fruit when ripe
with tasty juice, but it contains a lot of seeds.
.
Some homes we were able to snap
as we slowed down coming into a station.
We had three stops before our
destination.
Vera had ordered our lunch after
the second stop - a hot boxed lunch -
stir-fried chicken fried rice,
vegetables, and banana fritter.
.
*** A potted Elephant ear /
taro plant.
Sue-On is thinking she should
move hers out to the sun more this spring.
Pots are used a great deal -
easier to keep watered?
Every house has pots lining
the front entrance.
*** An orchid growing on a tree.
A large bus was there to meet
us at the train station and drove us to our hotel - the KJ Hotel.
It was still an hour's drive
to city centre - not so much distance as for traffic.
*** Music is everywhere in this
hotel.
They perform at breakfast, at
lunch, at dinner, in the lobby.
*** The wall behind reception
desk at our hotel.
.
Vera took us out to the Playon
Restaurant for supper.
This is Javanese Fried Rice
Noodles with Seafood,
Delicious! We also shared a
Playon Pizza with Smoked Chicken.
Lovely crisp crust. This was
a favourite place for university students.
A solo performer was on stage
- playing a guitar and singing through a voice doubler, etc.
He had auditioned for Indonesia's
Got Talent.
Walking to and from stores and
restaurants is quite dangerous
as the traffic is crazy with
motor bikes, cars,
and broken "sidewalks" that
are lined with food stalls.
.
.
.
CONTINUED FROM PART I
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JAVA CONTENTS
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INDONESIA INTRO CONTENTS
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Part of the
Hillman
Travel Adventures
Bill
and Sue-On Hillman