Tag Archives: sumatra

Looking Ahead

Vika asked about the route ahead, and I guess it is time for an update. In two weeks we will rendezvous with our new crew, TC, somewhere this side of Padang (middle of western coast of Sumatra). Then we will sail to Padang as our departure point from Indonesia. Luc will meet our fleet of two there. And there’s a chance we will connect with one or more other boats headed in the same direction, and grow our fleet.

In Padang our focus will be on first trying to rid the boat of an infestation of tiny red ants, and then on provisioning for crossing the Indian Ocean. Weather permitting, we plan to depart Padang on May 11. We will probably still anchor at a couple of the Indonesian islands on our way south, even though technically we aren’t supposed to after clearing out. We need to get south to get out of the Inter-Tropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ, aka the doldrums) to find wind. Padang is essentially right on the equator, which is why we have calms and squalls and shifting breezes in all directions. South lie the trade winds that will get us across an ocean.

South also is the Australian island of Cocos Keeling. We hope to stop there, because it sounds like an interesting place, and because it would break up the long passage. But it is a toss-up whether the wind will allow us to get there without beating to windward. If the wind is in our face, we will skip Cocos and head west, destination Rodrigues (part of the country of Mauritius). And subsequently on to Mauritius proper. There we will have another hiatus of two months, and I will fly home for a break.

Yes, Vika, the original plan was to go to India and cross the northern Indian Ocean to the Red Sea. When the BPOers decided that the Middle East was not a good place to be, and we would sail around Africa instead, that changed the schedule (hence this long period cruising SE Asia, as we wait for cyclone season to end) as well as shifting the route to the southern Indian Ocean. I’m happy with the change; I’m just champing at the bit to head back out to sea.

Lahewa, Nias Island

After our experience of being overrun with boys yesterday (plus getting the provisions we needed), we were tempted to move on today. But we had spoken with the harbormaster about maybe arranging a ride into Gunungsitoli (the big city of Nias, population 125,000) for us, with an English-speaking driver. And we had to go see the harbormaster anyway, as he was holding our clearance papers. So we went ashore, playing it by ear.

There were several people in his office, and we sat and chatted. After some coffee he asked if we wanted to go to the city, that he would drive us himself for 600,000 Rupiah (about $50). We decided yes. But first Tim asked if we could complete our clearance, since we would leave the following morning. Yes, he says, but there is the minor problem that we cleared out of Sabang for Padang, not for Lahewa, so we weren’t really supposed to be there. But not to worry, we should pay a small fine to make it right. Okay…, how much is the fine? Well, that’s up to us…

I suggested 50,000 (about $4), a figure I had read in someone else’s Indonesian cruising story, and he asked if we had American money — that $5 would be good. We didn’t have American money with us. Oh, but wait! We’ve had a soggy $5 bill in the seat of our dinghy since before we left the US! We left it there as “mad money,” and this was the perfect opportunity to use it. Everyone satisfied, we got our clearance papers and piled into his air conditioned car for the almost two hour drive to Gunungsitoli.

The road was good — it was built after the tsunami. But there were many little bridges, and the roadbuilders didn’t extend their good work to those bits. Tim suggested they didn’t get enough money from Jakarta, and I think our host was a little offended by that. He said no, that workers in Indonesia sometimes just say, “Good enough; I’m going home.”

The tsunami was not devastating here like it was in Aceh. Yes, it was destructive. But the tsunami of 2004 was followed by a more deadly earthquake here in 2005! What a place to call home!

We had a nice lunch at a waterfront hotel, and then visited the Nias Museum. Fascinating. They had a culture somewhat like the Marquesas, with lots of tribal warfare. Here they didn’t eat their enemies, but they hunted heads. And they made stone sculptures reminiscent of tikis. They had amazing houses, interesting tools, and far more that I couldn’t absorb. Nias is only 40% Muslim; it is predominantly Christian. Our driver says they all live together in peace; the kids go to the same schools. But sometimes the government overlooks their needs, he says, because they are not “as Muslim” as most of Indonesia.

Tim asked what he thinks about the United States. Sometimes good, he thinks, and sometimes not. He thinks Obama is a good man, who does not tell everyone to be the same as Americans. But invading Iraq was the bad side of the US.

Everyone on Nias seems to have power (and most have a TV antenna). Not everyone has water, except off their roof, and sometimes when it is dry they have to buy more. Our driver has always been interested in the US, since he meets people on yachts, and once he worked on a tugboat that went to Diego Garcia to help dock a US aircraft carrier! But he says he would never have the money to actually go to the US. Several people have made similar statements, that we have the means to visit Indonesia but they do not have the ability to visit the US.

When Tim got around to the subject of alcohol, he told us that Nias has a traditional alcohol drink distilled from coconut milk. He arranged with a friend for us to buy some. Coconut moonshine!

It was a long and tiring day, so we weren’t too happy to look out from the pier and see kids climbing on the boat! They swam away as we approached, but others then swam out. We yelled at anyone that came aboard. It took several iterations before they gave up and left, so we could sample our moonshine in peace.

 

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Example of traditional Nias house of old

 

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A tangle of reinforced concrete becomes a monument to the tsunami and earthquake

 

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Examples of traditional stone sculptures on Nias

 

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Lahewa, Nias

 

Sumatra Islands Photos

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Leaving Sinabang

 

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Into the mangroves between the islands. I know I keep showing that the charts are off, but in this case they are pretty useless!

 

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Anchored in the mangroves, looking east

 

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Anchored in the mangroves, looking west

 

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No sign of humanity other than a distant call to prayer and an occasional engine on an unseen road

 

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Until morning, when we are offered the red snapper they caught, that he is cutting up for us

 

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Selamat pagi…good morning

 

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Trash in the water is a problem throughout Indonesia, but we seemed to sail through the vortex where it accumulates!

 

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Approaching Lasia, dolphins welcome us, but they don’t stop to play

 

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Lasia

 

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Sunset at Lasia
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Squall

 

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Threatening, but didn’t amount to much

 

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This little guy, on the other hand, turned into half a day of rain

 

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Time to wash sheets!

 

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Visitors

 

 

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Struggling to communicate…

 

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Bay of Plenty. Surfer boat on left; world class surfing off the point, though pretty small today.

 

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More interesting weather

 

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Approaching Nias

 

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There aren’t many aids to navigation in this part of the world, but here’s a major one on the north coast of Nias.

 

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Rain on the perfectly calm water, anchored at Lahewa, Nias.

 

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Tim opts for a shower

 

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At Lahewa we buy fruit and veggies and have a simple meal (rice and fish) ashore. Back at the boat, some kids swim out. And…more on the way behind them!

 

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We lined them up for a photo, but more kept coming. In all I think we had 20 come aboard!

 

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It wasn’t easy getting the party to end, but here most are swimming back ashore, still waving for the photo.