Bali, Borneo and Beyond

Post No. 6. If it’s Tuesday, Bye-Bye Bali!

Inta the hearta Yogyakarta

Tuesday, March 21. Have I mentioned the heat and humidity? It’s one thing to contemplate in February, in New York City, the idea of touring on the Equator. It’s entirely another thing to look at your smartphone and see that the temperature really is 92 degrees Fahrenheit, with the humidity making the heat index somewhere around a 104-degree steambath.

Last night (our first night in “Jogja” – the other name they use for Yogyakarta) fd we went, by daredevil motor rickshaws, to a performance of the epic Ramayana. Complete with fire, fireworks, and a brilliant performance by a 2-year-old performer:

Today’s tour began with the Kraton Yogyakarta Sultan Palace. All sorts of memorabilia of past Sultans. Also stuff from Sukarno, the first President of independent Indonesia, who served from 1945-67. Here I am, in front of his desk.

Signs telling us “Don’t Step/Don’t Sit” on any of the exhibits. We were careful not to offend, especially after noticing that our tour guide was armed:

Thence to another Batik emporium, followed by the HS Silver Workshop, where they were handcrafting silver jewelry, mainly filigree.

Sorry it’s a stereotype, but here are the men waiting outside in the heat, while the women silver-shopped in air-conditioned comfort.

Lunch at Srawung restaurant, in the midst of rice paddies. Finished up at Prambanan Temple, an array of structures built in the Ninth Century by a king from the Sanjaya dynasty, and dedicated to the Hindu deities Shiva, Brahma and Vishnu (destruction, creation, and protection, respectively).

Tomorrow we visit Borobodur, the largest Buddhist temple in the world (a UNESCO World Heritage Site). After lunch in Jogja, we’ll be off to the airport for the last third of the trip, Malaysia, beginning with Malaysian part of Borneo. Back to you soon!

5 responses to “Bali, Borneo and Beyond”

  1. Patricia wittenstein z Avatar
    Patricia wittenstein z

    Hi- I am so completely ignorant about this part of the world, I will have to google to get an idea of just where you are & going to be.. continue to enjoy your posts. xx

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  2. Charles E. Doubleday Jr Avatar
    Charles E. Doubleday Jr

    Hi Stef and Stan,

    A very elegant place! I’m trying to follow you on google maps and it looks like you will be going to the northern part of Borneo. Looks like you’ve been dancing around the equator. To me that’s very exotic. As your armchair geographer, I think you’re south of the equator now and will cross north of it to get to Malaysia.

    Enjoy! Charlie and Rhonda

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    1. Thank you, my geographer! You’re right on the money!

      Did I ask you already if you know (know about) Bill and Karen Timberlake (professors of Chemistry and authors of textbooks on the subject, including “Basic Chemistry”)? They’re in our travel group.

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      1. Charlie Doubleday Avatar
        Charlie Doubleday

        Oh – cool – I’ve never run into another chemist on vacation. I haven’t met them but I’ve seen one of their textbooks. It’s for a general audience – my class is for 2nd year students.

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  3. egnstdlmn@aol.com Avatar
    egnstdlmn@aol.com

    Sorry could not read your reports.P/C souncooperative.Anyway,hope all was goodlove Marian

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