Bukittinggi, Sumatra, Indonesia - "Bukittinggi Jungle Trekking" - TRAVEL

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    BackpackersWanted.com

    "Bukitinggi Trekking"

    A once thriving hive of tourism, famous for jungle trekking, the West Sumatra village of Bukitinggi has fallen all but dormant in recent years. Some argue

    the recent string of natural disasters have caused the drop while others attribute it to the worldwide economic crisis, but whatever the reason, the effect is

    the same. Previously crowded multi-day treks have resorted to personalized charters and the abundance of cultural tours have dwindled to only a few.

    Quantity no longer matters. Operators will not turn away business, even if it is for one lone tourist. Reggie meet Erik.

    Departing Bukitinggi, my personal 3 day jungle trek to Lake Maninjau, began on a different foot...a motorbike actually. Erik's theory, "Why start a jungle

    trek walking along the highway?" Instead, we shaved off a few hours walk by hopping on the nearest ojek's (motorbikes). Whipping down a series of

    bisecting mountain roads, we arrived to the start point, an overgrown path only recognizable to the trained eye. It was here Erik gave me two options: The

    beaten path or the road less traveled.

    Without hesitation, I chose the road less traveled. More

    specifically stating, "I don't want to see any other tourists." Erik

    let out a roar of laughter and responded, "Don't worry Miss, you

    wouldn't see tourists anyways".

    Leaving the partially trodden path behind, we began an immediate

    ascent into the scraggily unknown.

    Battling an uphill slip and side, thanks to the relentless wet-

    season rains, Erik and I practically crawled up the first ridge,

    grabbing onto roots and low hanging vines to, if not aid, at leastwill forward progress.

    So focused on footing, I forgot to look in front of me. Whap! Low lying branches and rotting logs inflicted the next round of jungle punishment. Slapped and

    jabbed from all angles, the subsequent scratches and minor lacerations were tolerable reprimands compared to what awaited me at the top of the ridge.

    As if the jungle was testing my resolve for entry into its deep, untouched regions, a gargantuan spider web emerged my final rite of passage. Walking into

    the thick web, unknowingly of course, I was left immobilized. Thousands of sticky threads haulted physical movement while the fear of what created the

    web, and more importantly, where it was now, completed the full body paralyzation. Luckily, the 8 legged beast never reared its ugly head and I escaped

    with only a large arachnophobic fright. Give me Freddy Krueger running his nails down a chalkboard any day over another spider web nightmare!

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    I had survived the initial gauntlet, earning respectable admittance into the deep, jungle

    domain. Impressed Erik remarked, "Ok Miss, now we can begin the trek." Begin? I thought we were

    halfway there?

    A trekking guide for 24 years, Erik was an eternal spring of jungle knowledge. Kind of like an Eagle

    Scout on steroids, he pointed out virtually every plant that could be, A. Edible, B. Medicinal, or C.

    Poisonous. He ensured me that this knowledge would save my life if we were ever separated, bitten or

    severely wounded. A briefing I did not find in the least bit comforting.

    To reach camp on our first day, 3 mini-mountains stood in our way. Each summit reached signified the

    downhill entrance to another world, a world of unsung hero's. The hero's of West Sumatra; The Broom

    Maker, the Rice Paddy Farmer, and the Basket Weaver.

    The first valley swept me into the broom maker and his families lives.

    Seated inside a sweltering bamboo hut for most of the day, this old broom maker has been wrapping,

    winding and tying his future together for the past 83 years. Age has not hindered his ability, only

    honed it.

    Venturing into the forest every few days, the broom makers family cuts, transports,

    and treats hundreds of bamboo stalks. The stalks are then used for broom shafts

    while the needle thin bristles growing out of the bamboo roots, are carefully

    extracted for the brooms bristles.

    Stacking all the necessary materials to once side of the stuffy hut, the broom

    maker goes to work. Working quickly and nimbly, he brings his families phyical

    efforts to fruition with each completed broom.

    His craftsmanship is unparalleled yet his sale price does nothing to reflect it;

    15,000 Rupiah ($1.50) per broom.

    The second valley introduced me to a whole new field, rice paddy field that is.

    I first spotted the rice paddy farmer from high atop the fertile terraces. Wearing her quintessential triangular straw hat with pants cinched above her knees,

    she raised and lowered her hoe with a precision that only years of experience could perfect. Even from afar, the rice paddy farmer exuded a profound pride

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    In I went. Barefoot and knee deep in what can only be

    described in juvenile vocabulary, "squishy muck", I

    sloshed towards the farmer. Greeted with a smile and a

    hoe, there was no time for formalities, this was work.

    The farmer's son offered a brief demonstration.

    Scooping a hoe full of mud from the shallow floor of the

    water-logged terraces, he would skillfully transfer the

    muck to the beds retaining wall, slapping and spreading

    it out for reinforcement. A process repeated over and

    over again.

    I think its safe to say my efforts failed miserably at

    providing physical assistance but at least I could offer

    comic relief.

    in her terrace. This terrace was her life.

    I asked Erik what the farmers average work day consisted of, and, in typical Erik fashion, he responded..."Why don't you find out for yourself".

    The rice paddy farmer explained (utilizing Erik as interpreter) that her entire family works in the fields. They produce 2 harvests a year with the 3rd harvests

    success relying completely on rainfall. Now bear with me, here comes the mathematic portion of my blog: Each harvest yields about 150 kilo's of rice, of

    which the family keeps 75 kilo's for personal consumption. The other portion is sold at 6,000 Rupiah per kilo, earning the family around 4,500,000 Rupiah

    ($450 USD) per harvest. So, on a good year, factoring in 3 harvests, the rice paddy family family will have made $1,350 USD. And that's on a good year.

    Arriving at the days last valley, a final hero weaved her way into my heart. The Basket Weaver.

    The smell of wet bamboo filled the air and the crackling noise of bamboo screaming against each bend erupted off the weavers earthen walls. Like a well-

    oiled machine, she only stopped to replace an exhausted candle stick or nurse the occasional splinter. Tweezers were no match for these splinters, these

    extractions required a machete, carefully cutting around the deep bamboo shard until it came out. A quick dab of the injury on a nearby cloth and she was

    off again...over, under, over, under.

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    Like broom making, weaving is the final stage of a long process. First, the bamboo is

    gathered from the jungle and stripped into thin, long planks. Next, the strips are doused in

    water and laid out to dry. Not once, but twice, to ensure they are pliable enough for weaving.

    When the weaver deems the bamboo ready, 20 minutes is all she needs to produce 1 large

    basket.

    Her basket quality far exceeds that of the acclaimed Longaberger brand, yet is available for a

    fraction of the price, 4,000 Rupiah each (.45 cents). Did I say fraction, I meant mili-fraction of

    the price (a staggering figure that only true Longaberger followers can understand).

    What makes this woman's tale even more touching is her reason for the craft. Her son.

    The mother of two, her youngest son suffers from a large brain tumor. The village medicine

    man's ancient remedies and crude drainage procedures are no longer enough, her son needs

    surgery and fast. She spends her days working in the nearby chili farms but for a wage that

    is barely enough to live on. So now, the young mother who has only ventured from her village

    twice before, is saving to transport her son to a foreign city, in an even more foreign

    establishment, a hospital, to undergo the expensive life saving. And she is doing it all one

    basket at a time.

    Hosting me was, I'm sure, another form of income, but the friendly

    radiance that beamed forth from their cracked and broken teeth

    assured me that money was not the catalyst for their hospitality. It

    didn't matter to them that verbal communication was at a minimum,

    they enjoyed the company, pure and simple. As the saying goes, "A

    smile speaks a thousand words".

    Their small hut smelled of cigarettes and damp wood. Walls were

    constructed of cardboard boxes with old political posters plastered

    overtop for wall paper. Convenient store supplies of peanuts, dried

    fish, and stale cookies hung from the ceiling and large, overstuffed

    rice bags provided a simple seating arrangement. Human speechwas limited due to the language barrier, but Oma's sisters loud

    prayers to Allah, sung throughout the evening, filled the verbal void.

    Oma and her dear village friend. Opa was still w orking in the rice f ields.

    Oma and Opa's hut was nothing to brag about, but compared to my nights accommodation, it

    was the Hilton.

    The village of Sumpu was also home to my hosts for the evening, Oma and Opa (meaning, Grandma and Grandpa).

    The oldest couple in the village, Oma and Opa never had children. Sterility plagued their union from the beginning, an inability with life long repercussions.

    With no children to take care of them, even at 85, they must work every day to survive. No retirement funds or pensions here. Oma spends her days

    running a small convenient shop out of their hut, while Opa treks one hour to and from the rice paddies to complete enough work to put his wage, rice, on

    the dinner table.

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    Every corner of the small hut was decorated with

    intricate webbing. Some web owners were present,

    proudly displaying all 8 legs and a bright body, while

    other owners, maintained a missing in action

    status. One spider, in particular, became my eveningadversary.

    Three small tree stumps were utilized to lift my tiny hut off the insect laden jungle floor. Criss-

    crossed bamboo and various bits of tree bark overlapped to create a sturdy enough floor and

    shards of rusted tin laid overtop one another created the partial roof. The walls reflected the

    same flattened card board box panels used in Oma and Opa's hut but in a more sporadic,

    disheveled state.

    Neatly made with a matted down Care Bears blanket and a soiled, My little Pony pillow, a tiny

    floor mat lay in the middle of hut - My bed for the evening. The hut and bed were tolerable, my

    roommates were not. Spiders.

    Branches exploded all around and a distinct cackle filled the air. Monkeys.Gibbons, to be exact. As interested in them, as they were of us, it was difficult

    to tell which party was seeking the other one more. Gracefully jumping from

    limb to limb they taunted us from high above. Pelted with large fruit pits and

    small branches, my love for monkeys changed with each direct hit.

    Concentrated on our find above, we failed to notice that below. Leeches. Heavy

    rains the night before forced the leeches from their underground homes and

    during our brief stop, they wasted no time moving into new one's...Us. Well,

    Erik in particular. 5 leeches on one foot. Feasting merrily on Erik's blood

    already, removing them was no easy task. Twisting and pulling at their bodies,

    these slippery suckers can sure put up a fight. I was lucky to escape with only

    a few clingers. Slower then Erik's residents, my leeches must have still been

    seeking the perfect plot of Reggie real estate to sink their teeth into when I

    plucked them off. Phew.

    Our final jungle encounter, rested humbly amongst a few

    bamboo tree's. The giant Rafflesia flower. Only blooming 3 times

    a year, for a period of 5 to 6 days, this dinosaur of the flower

    world was a rare find. Each petal was as large as my head with

    an overall weight approaching 20 pounds. It's once bright red

    petals shown a more muted maroon, informing us this flower

    was on its final days and reminding us just how lucky we were

    to have seen this it!

    Situated half-way down the ridge towards Lake Maninjau, we

    made it to camp 2, Erik's uncles home, just before the evening

    rains. A tree-house inspired, camouflaged abode, unless you

    knew the exact curves of the ridge and growth patterns of the

    large reference tree's, you would never find it.

    Suspended almost directly above my head, when our eyes locked, the staring match began. Transfixed by his presnese, I was afraid to look away, for fear

    of where this elusive little monster could go. Hours passed without movement from either party until my oil lamp began to flicker, dimming slowly at first,

    until finally extinguishing itself. Darkness. Tucking myself tightly under the covers, I braced myself for an inevitably sleepless night.

    I awoke, if I ever slept, the next morning to the same spider, poised in exactly the same position. The sly devil wanted me to believe he remained there all

    night, but the webs 4 new cocooned additions, led me to believe otherwise.

    Day two's trek began much like the first - up, down, up, down - but instead of meeting more of the jungle's amazing human inhabitants, we encountered

    nature's.

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    I awoke on day three to screeching birds outside my lofted window and the booming

    laughter of the monkeys that must have antagonized them. After a quick brekkie, my

    favorite, banana pancake, Erik and I commenced the final downhill leg to Lake Maninjau.

    Like vampires at dawn, we emerged from the dense jungle canopy shielding our eyes

    from the intense day rays. The final few kilometers stretched before us in divisions of

    large, rice paddy terraces, terminating at the shores of Lake Maninjau.

    Farmers children dropped their hoes and school children abandoned recess in hot pursuit of

    this strange foreign woman. "Hello Mister" may have been the only phrase they knew, but I

    will be a mister any day if it is rewarded with the pure excitement and joy on their little

    faces.

    Dropping into Lake Maninjau's crisp waters, I enjoyed the best shower in days. Rinsing offdays worth of mud and insect repellent, the smell of Pantene and rotten fish have never

    smelled so good.

    Exhausted, I sprawled out on one of the weathered hammocks and let the rythmic tings of rain drops hitting the thin tin roof, coax me to sleep.

    The smell of curry roused me from my slumber. Scrambling down the tree-house ladder, I found the source of the appetizing aromas. Erik's uncle and his

    wife were hard at work in the kitchen, sauting greens, frying tofu, and simmering their famous chicken and jackfruit curry. Once again, my hosts did not

    speak English but through Erik's interpreting we managed to hold a delightful dinner conversation and even play a few card games.

    For more of "Reggie's Backpacking Chronicles" please visit her website: http://www.backpackerswanted.com

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