The Bus Journey Medan to Bukit Lawang:
Have a look at our YouTube video of the orangutans. It lasts about 7 minutes:
On our Becak to the bus stop |
Up bright and early to get this bus, having been fretting
about it in the night, I even texted Thomas at 01.30 to find out how often the
bus went. I’m glad he didn’t reply till 06.00 though!
Waited for our becak (tuk tuk) but he didn’t turn up,
amazing we felt loyalty to him even though his bike was the slowest, ropiest
going, and the seat the least comfortable with no padding at all! There was one
loitering outside the hotel, but his English wasn’t as good as our first man’s
but beggars can’t be choosers, so we pointed out to him on a map
Busses outside Marwar bakery (complete with loaf of bread on the wall!) |
(which may
have been the first map he’d ever seen) where we wanted to go, and kept saying
Mawar Bakery over and over, though it didn’t really help! He dropped us off
outside of a collection of bakeries, none of which was Mawar but was about
where we’d shown him on the map. Sadly our helpful tourist man hadn’t been
quite right and we needed to walk a couple of minutes down the road towards the
bus station, where the touts pounced! It was actually worse here, 100,000 they
started at so we laughed, said we were paying the driver and no more than
30,000, this was obviously still slightly too much as the tout eventually persuaded
us to pay half now, half to the driver, so he got a cut of some sort!
Our balcony at Bukit Lawang. Not a bad view! |
We were
confident we were on the right bus though, thanks to the conversation with
Thomas – medium sized orange bus with B.Lawang in the window. Goes about every
20 mins so we were going to stand our ground till we got a sensible price! I’m
just amazed that the bus goes so often and that there are that many locals
wanting to travel. Do the touts try to get a cut from the locals too because if
they are just trying to scam tourists there aren’t enough of us to make a
living from!
Breakfast at Thomas' Retreat |
The walk to the bat cave |
It’s a real shame though, once we were on the bus with the
window open (no AC) talking to our tout he was a really nice guy! The bus wasn’t
great, our bench seat at the back wasn’t fixed so we had to keep pushing it
back, but it didn’t break down, people got on, people got off and we arrived in
good time 2 ½ hours later about 11.30. I was about to ring Thomas when a ‘friend’
of his rung him for us, said we should go with his friend who put us in a
becak followed on his motorbike and then
carried my rucksack the 10 mins or so through the town and over the bridge to
the guesthouse! So eventually got here for £5 compared to the £30 a private car
would have cost! Tight? Us? Well the difference was the jungle trek for one!
Rubber trees on the way to the bat cave |
Bukit Lawang:
I have never seen a pineapple growing before |
It was like a breath of spring arriving, it’s beautiful,
right on the river looking at a few buildings and then jungle, we are in Thomas’
new rooms with probably the best bathroom in the resort, proper flushing
western toilet (many apparently you have to bucket flush) proper shower, albeit
cold, but that really doesn’t matter, big, spacious, with a quiet fan that
sounds like a turbo prop come the morning, it’s fabulous.
Arriving at the bat cave |
Creepy crawlies in the cave |
So when to trek? We had already decided to only do one day
(locally called the chicken trek) rather than spend a night in the jungle as we’d
read much about the campsites and the thinness of the mattresses, and that at
least one of them was right by a guesthouse so only 45/60 mins from town so why
bother? Then talking to a couple of guys said they really only saw animals in
the first few hours of their two days, had a good group and enjoyed the
overnight, but didn’t sleep and then just rafted back the following day, cost
twice as much money!
The Bat Cave:
Bats in the bat cave |
Glad we put it off from the first full day as our first
evening it poured down, the electricity went off, but fortunately came back
before bed as the generator doesn’t power the new posh rooms. The rain hadn’t
made much difference to the ground as we walked to the bat cave, eventually
finding our way after a few detours to a tout who wanted to guide us into the
cave as well as charge us ‘entry’, we declined his kind offer! It was a cave,
but the wildlife was interesting, cute little bats, hideous big spiders, long
legged centipedes, and cave crickets, an interesting climb in and on exiting we
were lucky enough to find six Thomas’s monkeys hanging around picking fruit. Back
by 1400 just before the rain came in, so again, glad we weren’t trekking!
Thomas' monkeys outside the bat cave |
Our Orang-utan Jungle Trek:
The funny jumping bugs on a stem |
Woke up the next day raring to go trekking, sadly we weren’t
going with Thomas as he has some family issues at the moment – his cousin, her
husband and their son were all killed on a motorbike last week, we’ve seen so
many families all riding together so it must happen, but horrific to meet
someone it’s happened to! Plus he has some horrible infection on his leg! His
stand in, Sadi, was a great guy though, good English, very entertaining and
very good eyes! We saw loads of things, from bugs that looked like fungus on a
stem till you realised each one was a discrete being, and that they could jump!
To bugs with yellow clown noses!
And some fairly big ants |
Then, there in the tree a mother orang-utan with an infant swinging
about, amazing. If that was all we saw, we would probably have been happy, but
no, a big male close by to another mum and young, then a lone female who was
very entertaining, a guide was already there with his German clients and was
putting out a little fruit. It’s great how the guides all talk to each other,
either calling through the jungle, or on their phones, so if someone has a good
experience we can all go and join in.
Suddenly we were in a big group seeing
mum and baby, but they had obviously been with her for a while, so she went in
one direction while they went in the other, we followed for a moment before our
guide got out some sugar cane to give to Tuni to share with her baby, she took it so gently and
didn't mind me stroking her, or her baby! Should I have done it? Should
we interact with them that close!y when they are 97% human so could
catch any bug I've got, I don't know. But I am a sucker
for animals and if there is the opportunity to touch I'll always be at
the front of the queue, even if it means elbowing small children out if
the way!Then there was a hand in my pocket looking for the banana
that had appeared there.Amazing. B came up and gave her some passion fruit which she also
seemed to enjoy. We were really happy bunnies!
She left because we heard a male approaching who may not
have wished her baby well, so we all tried to talk to him while she went on her
way, again we were joined by a huge group, so we thought we’d go and have
lunch. The tables turned and he followed us, so as we were eating our lunch, he
was having his – bananas, sugar cane, our pineapple and melon skins. Not many
have shared lunch with a semi wild orang-utan!
Jackie with Sadi and a guide from another group |
Another mum and baby, who had the last half of our water
melon which they loved, later we had just about had enough, not of the orang-utans,
but of the tromping up and down through sweaty jungle on steep, slippy, muddy
slopes. So time to head out. Our guide was pleased with us though we may be old
but we are a lot fitter than he expected us to be and no moaning, and we were
pleased with him as we had a fabulous day. How many we saw in total we’re not
sure, maybe 12, maybe more, but for us, more than enough! In the real wild
feeding of the animals is frowned on, but here because it is a rehabilitation
area for mistreated pets or zoo animals so although some of them are wild, some
of them are only semi wild it is just about acceptable.
The big male comes to lunch |
We got back very sweaty so straight into the river, pausing
only to empty the pockets and take the shoes off, everyone here bathes fully
clothed and I had felt bad going in in my bikini when we first arrived, and the
clothes were all going to get washed anyway. Fabulous. What a day. Chilling
today then off to Berastagi where apparently we are going up a volcano, only
one as the other one that used to be climbed keeps erupting!
And he gets given some lunch |
1 comment:
Absolutely amazing pics over the three blogs I have read (two ahead of this, catching up). Had to comment on this one as I felt quite moved by the lovely photos of you with the animals, but that you had the dilemma of whether you should. I would have been the same. The sad or maybe not sad but realistic point of view is surely that most people want to do the same as you and the fact that they do means the animals have a better chance of survival due to the tourism. It doesn't sit comfortably but it's reality. The pics are amazing. Xxx
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