“Where are we exactly?”

Ella: Where are we? Marta: What do you mean? Ella: I mean, where are we exactly in this moment? Marta: Oh! I see… We are in the tiny island of Gam, in the archipelago of Raja Ampat, Regency of West Papua, in Indonesia. Ella: Ah… Thank you. When Marcus and his friend Ella are trying to figure out where we are geographically. By Marta Kaltreider. 

A one way ticket and no agenda takes us to the furthest Eastern corner of Indonesia: West Papua. We leave behind a fulfilling year packed with unforgettable memories that warm our hearts, life-changing experiences that have nourished our souls, enormous challenges that have made us grow and heartfelt goodbyes to many generous, kind and inspiring friends that we miss already. Ahead of us, a 5 week journey awaits. An unrehearsed, unplanned and unknown voyage meandering through the wonders of Indonesia. And so our adventure begins…

Two flights, a 3-hour rusty ferry crossing and a 1.5 hour rickety longboat ride in the darkness of the falling night and we arrive to the lost paradise of Raja Ampat, West Papua. Once part of the Australian land mass, West Papua is the Indonesian side of the island of New Guinea, one of the least populated provinces of Indonesia. Off the Western coast sits the Raja Ampat archipelago, a cluster of over 1,000 islands home to the richest marine biodiversity of our planet.

Wild, untouched and forgotten by civilization, the natural beauty of this virgin archipelago goes far beyond what I can attempt to describe. Off the beaten track, light years away from any commodities of the developed world and unpopulated except for scattered local families that inhabit lost villages, hidden bays, white sand stretches and the dramatic cliffs of the islands’ rugged coastlines. Raja Ampat emulates how Planet Earth must have been before humankind got into the equation.

Along with our dear friends the Nolans, whom at the last minute and much to our delight decide to join us, we “settle” in the island of Gam. Our days of simple living “à la Robinson Crusoe” in our rustic cabins over the sea, slowly flow amidst fluorescent turquoise crystal clear waters. Fishing, well… sort of… -all we can find are a few rusty hooks and some fishing line (no bait, of course!)-, day trips to blinding white sand beaches, a whole lot of exploring the wonders of the underwater world and the most spectacular scenery I have ever admired become our routine and we are loving it.

In Waigeo, the next island that we call home, a native family takes us in and hosts us in their modest straw huts rudimentary built on stilts over the pristine waters. Their warm smiles and very broken English combined with our limited Bahasa skills, make for many good laughs for all. Being lost in translation is the new normal but everything has a way of always working itself out.

Jumping off the jetty into gardens of shockingly colorful coral and countless fish becomes a favorite pastime. Big and small, striped, polka dotted, long and narrow, short and stout, smooth or spiky… we spend the days admiring the most spectacular, abundant, bizarre-looking and fascinating underwater creatures, unimaginable even to the most creative minds. We dive into the world of water snakes, crocodile fish and nudibranchs that among an infinite variety of fish, become our swimming companions. We just cannot get enough of it…

The up to 10 kilo fresh catch of the day, along with some rice and dark green vegetables, becomes our daily menu for lunch and dinner -breakfast is an unknown concept… oh, well…-. Much to our admiration Pak Daniel, the eldest of the clan, skillfully descales, slices and prepares the fish with pride. Machete in hand and squatting over the rocks by the shore, the coming and going of the low tidal waves help him with the final cleaning. Meanwhile, the kids’ morning pastime is throwing other smaller fish back into the shallow waters only to try to re-catch them with their bare hands.

By the end of our stay, fresh fish, green leafy vegetables and rice taste delicious no more… we have fantasies of fresh, crunchy, colorful, tasty salads and fruits… It is time to go. Where next?

 

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One way ticket to Sorong, West Papua. Please?!
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There’s our ferry. Let’s go!
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Amazing that they do not sink… a bit rusty, eh?
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Local ferry options: A) Join in the party down below, in the ferry’s belly. B) A big happy family sharing bunk beds with everybody and then some. C) The best $20.00 ever spent! The “Deluxe Room”
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Being the only westerners on board, even the captain wants to capture the moment!
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Looking down from our deck is fun to watch the passengers arrive and board the ferry.
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Off the ferry and onto the local boat to the island of Gam. It got very dark, very quickly!
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Our home sweet home in Gam… Fancy some fishing off the bed?
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Ignorance is bliss… We managed to not step on any stone fish or poisonous snakes while exploring the shallow waters and the mangroves
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Let’s go on an adventure!
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Where the ocean ends and the sky begins
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Sunset in paradise…
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Daytime in paradise…
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Explorer in paradise!
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Beauty all around, all the time… I wonder if one ever can get use to it and take it for granted…
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Breaking the balance of the color palette!
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Cheers to good friends!
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Views of Pianemo
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Ever walked in a deep cave bigger than your home, full of bats, that gets so narrow the further in you go, that you have to go down on your knees? How about then the bats get scared and start flying towards you in such small space that one of them crashes against the side of your back?! Yes, I think I am still screaming about that one (and our guides are still laughing about it!)
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It is official: Marcus Island has been claimed!
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So long Gam Island. Hello Waigeo!
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Our new house to the right. Our backyard, aka jetty, to the left. Yes… that is Jeff lounging on the far left.
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Laundry day, fun day.
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Fancy some squid for lunch today? Just caught off of our jetty much to Marcus’ surprise!
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It was deeeelish!
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Best rope swing ever! Especially when the tide is high.
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Fresh catch of the day: 10 Kilo Grouper
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Another day, another fresh catch of the day!
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Clara’s shell shop
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New local friends, new freedom 🙂

 

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Thank you Arlia, Aleman Indem, Asa, Maria, Calista, Mateo and Daniel.
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Clara’s journal’s pages after our time spent in Raja Ampat. In her own words: “the view from our jetty”

Our next stop is Makassar, capital of Sulawesi, one of Indonesia’s largest islands. Peculiar in shape, and limited in connecting urban infrastructure, much of Sulawesi has been able to remain relatively untouched by the outside world. Although mostly muslim, Christian communities and pockets of natives loyal to local beliefs and deities are not uncommon findings throughout the island.

From Makassar, an overnight-loooong-jerky-hilly-windy-bumpy-stormy bus ride -Marcus may hold the title for Vomiting World Champ and we may hold the one for the Most Unprepared Parents of the Year… I will leave the details to the imagination- takes us to the mountains of Toraja. Traditional villages, characteristic for their Tongkonan silos and homes reminiscent of boats, scatter throughout Toraja’s topography of remote valleys, beautiful mountains and impossibly green riced terraces sprinkled with dark colored boulders. Our base camp is in Rantepao, Toraja’s capital, a lively town that grows on us as we slowly discover it and make it our own.

Torajan culture is rich and its traditions plentiful. Although Christian by legacy of Dutch colonialism, Torajan people have managed to preserve their ancestral animist Aluk To Dolo, or Way Of The Ancestors, beliefs from generation to generation. The result offers a unique, if not bizarre, and captivating combination of rituals and ceremonies unlike anything we have ever experienced.

Torajans worship, prepare for and celebrate death on a daily basis. Unknowingly, we are lucky enough to land in Toraja in the midst of Funeral Season (ignorance is bliss!) so, faster than we can say cheese, we find ourselves immersed in a paramount funeral of a wealthy man who died… two years prior! Torajans are not in a hurry to bury their dead. Instead they live with them and take their time until all is aligned and in agreement for the multi-day long rituals and festivities to start: majestic buffalo are presented as gifts to the family of the deceased, offerings of slaughtered animals butchered with scientific precision by the collaborative efforts of barefoot villagers lay in a pool of blood over  the naked soil, dancers in traditional beaded ropes parade to the rhythms of ancient chanting and a whole lot of intricate protocol unfolds to welcome the guests of these highly hierarchical society.

We explore the burial sites of Lemo, carved high up into the rock walls of the hills, and the Caves of Lomba. Connected through a nature-made network of long, narrow tunnels deep inside the rock walls of the cliffs, the Lomba caves are the haven for the privileged bones and dilapidated caskets worthy of such honor. Outside the caves, their homonymic “Tau-tau”, wooden, real-size sculpted depictions of the deceased, keep them safe under an eagle watch.

We embark on a two day hiking journey with our trusty local guides, Pak Budi and his son Atto, who gift us with his wisdom, genuinely friendly demeanor and quirky sense of humor. Along the mountainous terrain, we are welcomed by the local people who seem amused and fascinated by our unusual western ways and looks. Inspite of their simple life and limited resources, the locals generously open their homes to us and expose a glimpse of village life much to our delight.

Torajan people are remarkably skilled and incredibly talented artisans and they patiently teach us their arts. In Ketc’Kesu we practice using rudimentary carving knives and learn to paint intricate Torajan motifs with the experts, and back in Lemo, Ibu Marion teaches us the art of beading delicate filigrees, one bead at-a-time. We have learned so much… we leave Toraja feeling grateful for its unprecedented natural beauty, thankful for its gentle-mannered and generous people and fulfilled by this rich culture full of art and meaningful traditions.

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M for Marcus and Makassar! Killing time in Sulawesi’s capital until our overnight bus to Toraja starts its journey at 10:30 pm.
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Ready for a good night sleep on the bus (and some vomiting too!)
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Welcome to beautiful Toraja
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Land of buffalo
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and land of Tongkonan buildings. Tongkonan homes/silos are an ode to the original settlers, their ancestors, that arrived by sea to Sulawesi and eventually made their way inland to Toraja.
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As we arrive to the Funeral, the welcoming committee greets and ushers the guests endless times throughout the day
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These women chant a poem to usher the sorrow parade
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While they chant their poem, the men grouped in a circle behind hum a background melody
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Their traditional robes are beautifully hand beaded
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Everybody plays a part in the tightly woven, intricate protocol of the funeral
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The village of Lemo is one of the many examples of how Torajans bury their -wealthy- dead into the rocky cliffs
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Each wooden door is a tomb. Each Tau-tau is the wooden homonymic depiction of the deceased that protects the tomb
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Inside the Lomba caves it is difficult not to step or hit a bone!
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Sometimes, the caskets are hanging from the side of the cliffs instead of inside the rock walls
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They decompose and rot to the elements so the scenery is very telling!
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Tau-taus at work in front of the tombs
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And our 2 day trek begins! From the valley
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across scattered villages,
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always enjoying Pak Budi’s wisdom.
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A family that hikes together stays together.
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We find some pets along the way
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When they get scared they hiss really loudly!
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And the beetle pets love the hike as well, of course!
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Along the way we come across a machete making man
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And we admire the buffalo skins drying outside. On one side, hair. On the other, fresh flesh!
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Gardens of menhirs cross our path as well.
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We even get to witness the bath of the buffalo!
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We get to sleep in a traditional Tongkonan home!

 

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And the next day the sun rises to the most beautiful view of the fog melting away
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So down to the valley we go
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We even hit a storm and a rainbow!
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And for the last stretch we jump on the local “bus” to go back to Rantepao but not with out getting soaked with yet another torrential storm!
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Back in Rantepao is market day.
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We buy a much needed machete at the machete lady stand
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We do not buy a buffalo, much to Pia’s disappointment…
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And therefore we will not need the buffalo’s reigns either
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We visit the beautiful village of Ketc’Kesu
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Where we learn how to wood carve Torajan stile.
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Unlike in Bali, Torajan carving requires only one knife
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And back in Lemo we learn to bead traditional Torajan dresses
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Ibu Nove invites us to a wedding celebration of a family member and she goes out of her way to hook us up with the dancers
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and the wedded couple along with their parents-in-law. We felt a little underdressed…
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Thank you Toraja, and thank you buffalo!

We have a whole lot of time and what feels like endless freedom so off we go, over the Indonesian skies, to the island of Java.

Home to more than 50% of Indonesia’s inhabitants, Jawa Timur or Java, is the most populated island in the world. Neighbor to Bali to the East, Java dominates Indonesia politically, economically and culturally. Much of Indonesia’s history has been written here: Hindu and Buddhist empires, Islamic sultanates, the heart of Dutch colonialism and the epicenter of Indonesia’s independence in the 30’s and 40’s.

We land in Surabaya, East Java’s metropolis, and through trial and error we manage to catch a local bus to Malang, a smaller, friendlier, more manageable city, two hours south. Once in Malang we plot our next adventure. Exploring the magnificent volcanoes of East Java: Mount Bromo and the Ijen Plateau.

Our new local hire, Pak Widodo, will kindly, patiently and (mostly) safely navigate the traffic of what seems like infinite, monotonous and busy roads filled non-stop on either side by building after building of any business imaginable. Inhabited by a majority of muslim population, the domes of the mosques stand bright above everything else adding splashes of contrast and sparkle to the blue skies.

From a deep green valley up a steep mountain road we drive to the small town of Cemoro Lawang, gateway to the magnificent and smoking crater of Mount Bromo. A hike around town gifts us with the most striking first glimpse of the volcanoes. In the foreground, as if dressed in a soft silk tunic, stands Mount Batok. Beside it, Mount Bromo’s smoking crater. In the distance mounts Kursi and Widodaren, all swimming in what is known as the Sea of Sand plateau, a vast, bare, sandy “ocean”. The magic of such beauty is exhilarating and hypnotic. The combination of textures, shapes and scale, the warm sunset light that showers the scenery changing the spectacle every moment… It is entrancing. We can’t wait to conquer the volcanos.

That night, an old blue Jeep that still roars strong drives us up, high above the canopy, to the mountains across Mount Bromo where we patiently await for the sunrise. The cold is intense and the fog is thick but patience and perseverance pay off and when the sky opens up my eyes fill up with tears of gratitude for the beauty that unfolds in front of me. Like a heavy blanket keeping you snug, the fog unrolls to uncover a stunning lush valley. At the edge of it, the Sea of Sand surrounds Bromo’s active crater and Batok’s majestic presence. We forget all about the cold, we forget all about the 3:00 am wake up call, we feel -we are!- on top of the world! Later, sitting on the ridge of Bromo’s smoking crater, we hear the Earth’s core roar; mightily, passionately, intensely, fiercely…

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4:30 am. Makassar Airport, Sulawesi. Our flight to Java leaves at 11:00am. The hotel at the airport is full and we are tired after our overnight bus drive from Toraja so… no problem!
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In Malang, plotting our trip to the volcanoes while admiring the washing machine. These things are fascinating!
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Not to mention the cassettes! These are even more fascinating 😉
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Bromo’s smoking crater on the left. Majestic Batok on the right.
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Waiting for the sunrise. It is not raining… we are just trying to stay protected from the icy wind!
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Sun rising at last… Bromo’s smoke dances with the early morning fog.
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The edge of the valley and The Sea of Sand plateau at sunrise.

 

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An unexpected surprise.  Jeff and Marta get to have an early morning date hike up the volcano as the kids are trotting along ahead. Why walk to Bromo when you can ride up on a horse?!
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Hiking up
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Looking down into the Sea of Sand from Bromo’s crater ridge. Batok to the left.

 

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8:30 am. Exploring The Sea of Sand.
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Our roaring blue Jeep!

A long… long… long drive through dryer landscapes of bushes and deciduous trees, followed by bright green rice fields, coastal towns of calm bay seas, a huge coal plant -supplier of Bali’s electricity-, lush forests, coffee plantations and scattered palm trees and we arrive to the jungle. The road keeps on getting narrower, narrower and narrower and in the dark of the night we have finally make it to the tiny village of Licin, our new home town from where we will venture to explore the Ijen Plateau. A full day of rest to play, relax, read, write, draw, climb trees and watch the jungle go by is a must in preparation for the 12:30 am brutal wake up call the following day. Ijen, here we come!

It is cold. It is dark. It is 1:45 am, yet the steep, but not strenuous, hike up Ijen and all the way down into the crater are worth the effort. At the crack of dawn, just in that limbo moment between light and dark, blue flames passionately dance in the depths of the crater right beside us. As it turns out this natural phenomena is just the beginning of the spectacle… As the sky lightens up for the new day to start, I feel we have somehow been tele-transported into a faraway planet. Wearing masks to avoid breathing the toxic gas, a cloud of thick white smoke flirts with the fluorescent yellow rocks that dress the crater. Brighter morning light unveils a lake of impossibly opaque fluorescent light blue color, a perfect compliment to the acid yellow hue of the sulfuric rocks. We are all mesmerized by such beauty…

Local men mine the sulfur from the side of the crater. A hard job. Their faces wrapped in old rags to avoid the fumes and pick in hand, they brake off big chunks of the mineral as if fighting a fierce dragon and carry the heavy blocks on handmade baskets, balanced on their shoulders, slow and steady, all the way up the steep side of the crater. One bare foot in front of the other. Admirable. Heartbreaking…

We leave Java overwhelmed with adrenaline from all the power, intensity and beauty that we have witnessed. The Dayak people of Northern Kalimantan await for us, and so are our friends Cara and Safia who will meet us there too!

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In the lost town of Licin, in the heart of the jungle, we stumble upon a tree house home stay and we settle in. After a late night arrival, morning breakfast the following day does not disappoint. This tree house is a gem and the views are unbelievable!
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The gardens around the tree house are great for relaxing, playing and running around.
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Perfect plan after such a long drive the day before
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We even get to do some archery! The owner of the tree house, Daniela, is from Germany. She fell in love with the area, quit her job in the fashion industry and moved to this lost part of the world. Thank you, Daniela!
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We even get to make a campfire!
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Inside the crater of Ijen. Where are we?! Have we been tele-transported to a different planet?!
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The cloud of smoke released by the sulfur walls
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Sulfur smoke is highly toxic so breathing masks are a must. The opaque blue waters are a perfect complement to the acid yellow colored rocks.
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Massive sulfur formations make the inside walls of the crater
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A miner harvesting sulfur. Face wrapped in old rags to avoid the toxic fumes.
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Miner filling up the baskets with chunks of sulfur ready to be carried up the crater and then down, down, down into the valley.
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Miners will often carry 70 to 100 kg of sulfur per trip up that they will later sell for pennies…
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Slowly and steadily up the rough path. Some miners go barefoot, others wear flip flops. The “luckiest” ones wear plastic rain boots…
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Walking back up towards the ridge
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No sulfur on this side but still spectacular textures and colors
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Looking up towards the ridge of the crater, the early morning light draws the outline of the visitors, mostly Indonesians on vacation.
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Walking back down on the ridge to the valley, the view on the opposite side of Ijen does not disappoint either!

Kalimantan is the Indonesian side of the island of Borneo. Border to Malaysia, North Kalimantan is the newest province of Indonesia and the least populated one. A 3 hour boat ride from Tarakan to Malinau, followed by a bumpy drive uphill and we arrive to the village of Setulang, home to the Dayak people, the heirloom inhabitants of Kalimantan.

Surrounded by pristine jungle, the village feels welcoming and peaceful. Ample, semi-paved streets are lined on either side by picturesque wooden homes on stilts. At the center of town, a massive bright green field. To the side, stands the Long House, beautifully carved and painted with traditional Dayak motifs. The Long House is the community building, central to village life, where dances, music, meetings and community gatherings take place. Ibu Rostina and her family generously host us in their home as if we were The Royals. Traditional live music is in the air and before we know it, Marcus is playing soccer on the field and the local girls have invited our kids onstage, in the Long House, to practice all together the local dance that they are rehearsing.

The following day, an army of Dayak villagers take us upriver to their jungle camp. It is a technical boat ride but they move skillfully and confidently and master the unexpected challenges of this effluent of the Setulang River. For the next 4 days, Mother Nature, Pak Phillius and Pak Krimson, true Dayak men of the jungle full of wisdom, will provide for us.

Home to one of the richest biodiversity habitats in the world, this remote and untouched jungle of Northern Kalimantan is full of animals that our dormant western instincts don’t allow us to see but for sure our ears hear. Ahhhh… life in the wilderness at last! Phenomenal. Daily “showers” in the crystal-clear waters of the river, exciting leech-infested hikes, pristine waterfall swims, magical dipping holes, majestic ancient trees taller than my neck can bend up to see, colorful butterflies the size of birds, raging storms of roaring thunder and torrential downpours, warm rays of sunlight dancing through the lace of the thick jungle canopy… welcome to the Garden of Eden, or so it feels, as this land has been virgin, untouched and unharmed for longer than our ancestors’ ancestors’ have lived. At night, traditional prayers requesting a fruitful hunting season, tribal chants and dances around the fire tower that Pak Phillius and Pak Krimson so expertly have built.

Upon returning to Setulang village, Ibu Rostina and her family await for us once again with open arms. It is hard to believe that our 5 weeks of travels are coming to an end. In 48 hours we will be back in Bali and then back to the US. We are enamored of Indonesia’s natural beauty, amazed by the variety and richness of its islands, fascinated by its vibrant culture and grateful for its wise and openhearted people.

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Killing time in Tarakan while we manage the excitement of Cara and Safia’s arrival
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Welcome to Setulang
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The long house, in the background, and huge grassy field. The core of the village.
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Each family has its own silo. All silos are grouped together in the same area.
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The ladies are hanging out. Photo credit: Cara Lloyd
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Typical village scene
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Exploring Setulang
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We even get to visit the local school and meet the children in the classroom. They all were, immaculate-pristine-perfectly pressed uniforms!
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Ibu Rostina takes us to feed the piglets
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Life in Setulang is mellow and we are taking it all in
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The Long House is beautifully decorated with traditional Dayak paintings and carvings
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The local teenage girls are rehearsing a traditional dance
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Before we know it, our girls are up on stage learning from the masters! Photo credit: Cara Lloyd
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They dance to the sound of handmade, traditional instruments, of course!
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Ready for the jungle!
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Upriver we go. Life in the wild awaits for us!!!
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Jungle kitchen
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Fancy some fresh boar tonight?
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Dinner in the jungle
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Jungle hike
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The jungle is thick. No machete on hand means no access and the trees are huge.
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Leech check!
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Better to wait with our feet up on the bench while the others finish up so we do not get leech-infested again 😉
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Where there is a need there is a will! Jungle lounge chair by Marcus.
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Machete filing time
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Learning from the Master. Pak Phillius is a sea of wisdom.
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Weaving with jungle grasses
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Toy making
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and playing, of course!
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Machete in hand, Pak Phillius and Pak Krimson, another sea of wisdom, made rafts for the kids to tackle the river rapids… in a blink of an eye!
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River rock natural chalk hues
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Preparing the fire tower!
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It is time to go back to Setulang…
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So long Garden of Eden,
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so long renaissance man (Pak Phillius),
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Thank you, jungle family
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Thank you, Ibu Rostina and family

Back in Bali, after two incredible days with dear friends giving us their hearts, the moment arrives and we must go. As we fly out of Denpasar one last time, en route to California, tears stream down our cheeks. Sitting on the plane, our hands hold each other tight in the form of a long, sturdy, unbreakable chain across the row. All five of us. Our eyes wide open. We study the island we have called home one last time, from the early morning bright sky. Bali is gifting us again with its beauty and with each tear that runs down my cheek I realize that I am crying out of pure gratitude for the last two years that have given us the space to grow strong and tall. Individually. Together.

Sampai jumpa lagi, Bali. We are ready to write our next chapter in California. Grammy and Grandpa here we come!

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So long Bali… Thank you for everything, Island of Gods
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We’ll be back…
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Good morning, Grammy and Grandpa! Happy birthday, Grandpa!

“I just love traveling, Mamá!”

“I just love traveling, Mamá!” Marcus taking in the excitement as we connect flights in Bangkok to start our adventure. By Marta Kaltreider.

It is hard to believe that exactly one year ago we were on our way to India… Today in the early morning, I sit in front of a peaceful lily pad blooming with bright pink flowers, greeting me for the day ahead. We are in Luang Prabang, Laos. Now that the whirlwind of the last few weeks has passed, I feel grateful for this tranquil time gathering my thoughts.

We started in Siem Reap, Cambodia, where we were reunited with our dear friends from New York, the Crevier Family. Siem Reap sits on a massive plain surrounded by rice fields and scattered populated clusters. It is a laid-back but lively town quickly adjusting to the tourism industry. As Chris pointed out, 20 years ago, Siem Reap had a population of 10,000. Today, more than 175,000 people live there! Lots of open-air restaurants, day and night markets, food carts, massage shops and moderate tuk-tuk traffic fill up the streets gently and gracefully.

Just a short tuk-tuk ride from Siem Reap, we embark on a journey back in time as we find ourselves marveling at the plentiful temples of the Angkor complex. Built with more stone than all the Egyptian pyramids put together and expanding over an area larger than modern-day Paris, Angkor is a compendium of over 200 magnificent temples. Each temple is an architectural wonder, each corner a stylistic twist, each stone a page of history, each carving a story told… Layers of  moss delicately dress the ancient sandstone blocks, impossibly twisted roots find their way through cracks and crevices tightly hugging the walls together from the erosion of time and ever-changing sun rays dome the temples with enchantment.

Meandering through Angkor, I can’t help but wonder all that these dilapidated, yet most magnificent, walls have witnessed through centuries of tumultuous history: transitional religious periods of Hinduism, Atheism and Buddhism, barbaric Cham invasions, Khmer Rouge persecutions, civil war, genocide… Cambodian people have endured a long past of enormous hardship but, despite their traumatic history, their kind smiles and warm hearts seem to have prevailed.

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Cambodia here we come and happy upside down holidays to all!
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Welcome to Siem Reap. Pub Street is the tourist center of this lively town.
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Ice man truck delivery!
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Vegetable Lady at the Old Market
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Let’s see… Sausages… Dry fish… Nope, not on my shopping list today 😉
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Fancy some lunch? (We actually DID eat in this “restaurant”!!!)
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In honor of you, Daphne. We miss you!
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Art class at Khmer Kids Art Gallery. A great organization that provides free art classes for children in Cambodia and teacher training to promote the Arts in education.
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It was a real art studio complete with commissioned paintings and all the nuts and bolts. The owner and staff were super kind and accommodating. Worth your time if you are in Siem Reap!
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Sunrise in Angkor reflected on the water that surrounds it.
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We enter Angkor Wat as the day wakes up with the faint light of dawn
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and my heart stops.
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We cannot believe it… we really are here!
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The sun is now up and the morning light completely changes the colors of the stones. My heart stops again… 
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And to my delight (and the guard’s) as the day unfolds the light keeps on flirting with the walls.
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Unlike most of the other temples, Ta Prohm Wat is close to the condition in which it was discovered. 
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It looks as if the trees and their roots hold it together saving it from collapsing
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Ta Prohm Wat is a Unesco Heritage site. Records show that it was once home to over 12,000 people.
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Nothing like catching up with your sister while strolling through history
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Beautifully decorated, the Bayon temple has over 200 serene and smiling stone-carved faces.
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Most of the temples have been reconstructed much like an enormous puzzle. Each stone is catalogued with very specific nomenclature and eventually matched with its surrounding counterparts.
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Even though this shrine is dedicated to Buddha, there are many theories about who these faces represent
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Bayon temple has undergone many alterations in accordance to numerous kings’ preferences and religious transitions 
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As if the temples were not beautiful enough already, let’s allow Buddhist monks to make the site even more stunning

 

 

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Laos here we come!

Here I am now, in Luang Prabang, Laos. Our Cambodian “vagabonding” behind us. This time I sit quietly riverside in my little hotel room deck, diving into my loved world of written words…

 

The town of Luang Prabang in North-Central Laos, is a beautifully balanced mix of rural and urban, present and past, local and foreign, heritage and progress. French-colonial architecture lines up the streets of the old town, a peninsula delimited by the meandering and converging waters of the Mekong and Nam Khan rivers. Sophisticated storefronts of beautifully curated handwoven textiles and delicate handicrafts excite my creativity with vibrant hues, elaborate patterns, lavish textures and exquisite detailing. Gourmet Lao cuisine eateries awaken, fulfill and delight our tastebuds with bursting flavors of chillies and lemongrass, spiced pork and flambeed fresh fruits, and the intense orange robes of buddhist monks chaperone our wandering ways adding constant serenity to our footsteps… Truly a gift…

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Good morning to you too, lily pond!
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Welcome to the Unesco World Heritage town of Luang Prabang
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The town sits on a peninsula delimited by the converging waters of Mekong and Nam Khan rivers and surrounded by stunning mountainous scenery.
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During the dry season, local families build this bamboo bridge to get across the Nam Khan river but the bridge disappears in the wet season as the river is way too high and powerful
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Plentiful and beautiful temples pop around the town and are very much part of everyday life
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Storefronts in Luang Prabang are exquisite and the artisan offerings are varied, refined and a delight for the senses. I could seriously have gone bankrupt!

A tiny taste of the colors and textures of Laos (above)

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The “Lamp Lady” stall at the night market (all handmade, of course!). Luang Prabang has without a doubt one of the best Night Markets I have ever experienced with a lot of beautiful quality products that escape the expected touristy offerings 
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Yummmmmmm…..
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Happy 50th Birthday, Jeff! What better way to celebrate than a day spent with dear friends at a rice farm to experience the rice cycle from farm to table!
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First a brief introduction
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The pupils are very focused
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My little rice farmer!
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After selecting and preparing the seeds from past crops we are ready to get into the fields…
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To plow with the water buffalo!
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We are all going in! It’s as if you are sinking into quick sand
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So much fun!!!
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“A bit” muddy but ready for planting nevertheless! First, some direction…
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Action! One small bunch at-a-time. Front to back. Ideally without falling in… 
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Harvesting time, machete and all!
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“Do we really get to use a big machete?!?! Awesome!!!”
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Time to separate the grains from the plant with a traditional tool that looks exactly like nam chucks. Wrap it, hold it tight and WHACK IT! Very therapeutic 😉
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After milling the shell off the grains we get to sift it to separate the “peeled” grains from the skin. Traditionally this part of the job was only done by women and only when they excelled at it they were valuable women ready for marriage (not clear on wether this is still the case…)
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Let’s “tuk-tuk” it to the Kuang Si Falls. 
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At the start of the trail, the falls begin in shallow pools and the sound, the vegetation and the color of the water make me feel as if we are entering FairyLand
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The tiered pools, eventually lead to the biggest waterfall of all. A stunning -and sacred-, turquoise water pool fed by a water jump of over 60 meters! (And my camera ran out of batteries #^*<!!!)
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The travertine limestone of the basin, a very soft and porous sedimentary rock high in calcium carbonate, gives the water this magical light turquoise color
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Time for a dip!

But there is a Laos beyond the boundaries of Luang Prabang. Laos, The Kingdom of a Million Elephants, has endured the hardship of a long and mighty cruel history of rebellions, occupations, invasions, a large-scale civil war, starvation, annulment of human rights and massive aerial bombardment that to this day continues to claim over 50 lives per year (from unexploded bombs still hiding in the countryside). So off we go, bursting the bubble of Luang Prabang, on a three hour rickety drive North to Nong Kiaw through lush -albeit dusty, as it is indeed the dry season- mountain chains, rural villages of modest homes -huts-, locals going about their lives dressed in handwoven coverings, plentiful crops and blinding-white, cotton-candy clouds dispersed though the endlessly deep blue sky. In Nong Kiaw our local “boat” awaits to take us upriver to remote Muang Ngoi.

Nestled in the foothills of the jungle by the shore of the Nam Ou River, sits the tiny village of Muang Ngoi. Dirt paths, barefoot children playing outside, fishermen mending their nets and savory smells of satays slowly roasting on street fire pits, all surrounded by breathtaking scenery taken out of an Apocalypse Now movie frame. Welcome to quintessential South-East Asia.

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Waiting in Nong Kiaw for the boat that will take us to Muang Ngoi. Not a bad view!
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Plus we find some chicks to play with
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Too cute… Amazing that they all lived through little hands’ love 😉
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Our local boat has arrived. Hopefully we will not sink…
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Let’s go!
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Our first sunset time in Muang Ngoi… speechless…
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And the sun rises in Muang Ngoi… Speechless still… (This one is for you, Omi!)
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A local fisherman on the river is always an added extra-nice touch
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A lesson with a few local basket weavers. Too cool!
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All happy walking around town with our handwoven basket creations
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It is beginning to look a lot like Christmas!-sleek baskets, uh?!-
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And Santa found us, even in remote Muang Ngoi! Not surprising with this sweet note…
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Captain Marcus ready for our expedition to a textile weaving village upriver
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Typical home of the weaving village
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In this village, weaving is clearly a world for women
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While men hang out and children run around, all women relentlessly spin thread and sit at their looms weaving away moment after moment
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Got wood, anyone?
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Ready for adventure kayaking down the Nam Ou river

I write these words as we embark on a long journey that will take us back to back to Luang Prabang. Our families packed in a typical rudimentary wooden motorboat. I reflect back…

Behind us Muang Ngoi, Mr. Udd and the fun times we shared together. Days of adventure surrounded by indescribably beautiful, remote and virgin nature. Pristine valleys ruled by herds of water buffalo rolling in the mud framed all around by fluorescent-green velveteen mountains. Magnificent trekking on meandering trails through thick bamboo forests, peaceful creeks, dramatic waterfalls and playful clouds flirting with the hill tops.

Hidden deep in the mountains, away from it all, a few scattered tribal villages watch us walk by intrigued by our baggage and amused by our children. Walking though the Kahmu village, the tribe seems depressed. Not much activity is going on around the family huts where mothers squat on the ground to breastfeed their young, while groupings of barefoot children dressed in rags and elderly villagers watch us -the world- go by.

We spend the night with the Hmong tribe. Unlike the Kahmu, the Hmong villagers greet us warmly and take us in providing shelter and nourishment for our tired, hungry -and lively- bunch! The village is simple and modest but well organized and incredibly industrious. Handwoven baskets strategically placed for litter collection. Ample wild lawns with dozens of children chasing chicks and ducklings amidst laughter and joy. Rudimentary bulky contraptions being mightily pulled, pushed, whacked or spun to juice, grind, mill and knead the locally harvested rice, corn and sugar cane. Flaming fires grilling to perfection the fresh water catch of the day. Newborns napping, rocking back and forth, on tree hammocks under the eagle watch of their young siblings… and before we can introduce ourselves, our own children blend right in joining the fun of Hmong life. As the night falls and despite the never-ending activity around the village, we all collapse under the bright Milky Way.

It is 3:00 am (yikes!) and the Hmong families are up again ready to tackle yet another active and lively day. By the time we slowly crawl out of our hut, eyes partially shut (6:30 am) it is clear that we have already missed out on a whole lot of cooking, milling, kneading, washing, playing, preparing… oh well…

We feel grateful for the opportunity, for the experience and for the adventure. Thank you, Hmong village. It is time to continue on. A long hike back to Muang Ngoi awaits ahead. Off we go, ushered far beyond the limits of the village by a handful of local kids until, eventually, we part ways with a heart felt goodbye.

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A hike to a local waterfall
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And a cold dip!
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Good times
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Trekking adventure in search of the Hmong tribal village
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Hello, water buffalos. Nice mud bath there!
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A break is much needed. Well done, intrepid trekkers!
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I am only 3 but I sure can carry my baby brother for a walk
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This little girl is the same one that was carrying her baby brother on the picture above…
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I am also a toddler but I can rock my newborn sister for nap time
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And surprisingly, the baby ducklings survive the “love” from little hands. Chasing, picking and caressing ducklings provides endless hours of entertainment
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A quick visit to the local school that serves the Hmong and Khamu villages
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A stop at a sacred cave riverside on our way back to Luang Prabang
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Buddha and flower offerings populate the sacred site
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Back in Luang Prabang. Nothing like beers shared among good friends after a great trip

Our jungle trek over the hills is full of adventure and our adrenaline rises quickly at the sight of a herd of water buffalo “stampeding” through our narrow trail. We laugh hysterically while running through leech-infested stretches, picking the creepy crawlies off of our skin and the kids even scream at the sight of a big snake slithering right past them.

Back in Luang Prabang, it is time to part ways with the Creviers. Albeit a sad goodbye, we feel grateful for the time spent together and we are excited about what lays ahead as our trip takes us back to Cambodia: a second glimpse at the Angkor temples, flooded forests, floating villages, mishaps on the waters of the Mekong River and a truly inspiring, fulfilling and eye-opening experience volunteering at a small, off-the-bitten-track local school (more on this coming on a different post!).

It is back in Siem Reap that we dance the night away to the tunes of live rock’n’roll music to say goodbye to 2016 (what a year it has been!) and greet the new year together. Cheers to a 2017 full of fulfilling challenges for all!

 

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Back in the Siem Reap area we visit the village of Kampong Pluk. Accessible only by boat, all homes are built on super tall stilts. 
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During the dry season, the village is not fully underwater and children can run around and play
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Shrimp bags are placed on the ground to dry
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A visit to the  flooded forest, the only place in the area where women are allowed to earn some wages by taking tourists paddling among the trees. 
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It was very peaceful
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Volunteering at an off-the bitten track school from a fantastic organization called Camboya Sonrie (more on this coming soon!)
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Classroom 1
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Classroom 2
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My little English teachers extraordinaire!
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Peeps are ready to celebrate New Year’s Eve
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Last ice cream of 2016… in style!
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And we did dance the night away (literally, took over the dance floor!) at the Hard Rock Cafe Angkor. As Clara put it in retrospect: “Everybody there was really having a wonderful time”
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Surise over Siem Reap on our way to the airport. Thank you Cambodia…