Sunday, February 23, 2020

More Observations of Indonesia, two book reviews, more pic

The view of the river as our group starts the float


More pics by David T and two Book Reviews of the same book: Indonesia, Etc, by Elizabeth Pisani



A much younger Pisani, closer in age to her early years spend in Indonesia in the early 1990s as a  Reuters journalist


THB had no recollection of having read the book 5 years ago, even though he liked it. Sooooo many books under the bridge in just 5 years.




Book Review #1 (2015, in its entirety): Indonesia Etc., Exploring the Improbable Nation, Elizabeth Pisani: a pretty decent eclectic primer of the recent history and vastness of Indonesia, told from POV of a itinerant traveler island hopping. Recommended


Probably closer in age when the book was written in the early 2010s


That's it, short and sweet. Now the book review from 2020, re-read after getting back from Indonesia. DB also read it after our return. 




Book Review #2 (2020): Pretty much the same as the first time, using more words

Indonesia Etc., Exploring the Improbable Nation, Elizabeth Pisani: basically, an excellent explanation of what you see when visiting Jakarta, Bali and a few other non-industrialized islands. Many people living a life un-imagined in the 1980s and many living the same life pre-1980s all the way back to the 1500s. Highly recommended if you are soon to go to, are in, or have just left Indonesia





And, another repeat of a book review, this one of a 2019 Highly Recommended book, a full book on a place Pisani visited in Indonesia in 2011 for a few days (and a few pages). Of note, for thousands of years the Indonesians did not have to work for very many days a year to sustain themselves for the entire year:

The Last Whalers, Three Years in the Far Pacific with a Courageous Tribe and a Vanishing Way of Life, Doug Bock Clark: Masterly told, the story of a small tribe, maybe 1500 total combined living in the village on an island in the Savu Sea and ex-pats, the Lamalerans are dealing with an ever infringing modern world on their primitive subsistent hunting of whales as a means of survival. Much larger topics are gently addressed as part of the deep reporting on village life: conservation, merging of different religions, honoring the livelihood and territorial claims of indigenous people, integrating widely disparate sub-groups into a nation. If you travel to any “under developed” country, this is a great book to read while there, especially Indonesia. Very pertinent when THB and DB will be in Raja Ampat early next year.  





Ring of Fire, and Indonesian Odyssey: 5 TV episodes by the Blair Bros and a 6th episode in conversation with Lawrence Blair




Pretty typical "island" with an overhang over the water, and lots of similar vegetation from island to island (no matter the size) and not much blooming

Our Planet: THB is back and has wrapped up all 8 episodes. Remember, the last 10 minutes of episode 4 highlights Raja Ampat and THB thinks was filmed at two of our best snorkel spots. The two bright spots on the planet: Raja Ampat and Chernobyl. Without humans, the area around the explosion and melt-down of one of the reactors has been regenerated with wildlife. It gives a glimpse of what life might like in 20,000 years (though most of the nuclear meltdowns are unlikely to be covered with massive tons of concrete)

The band tuning up and getting plenty of help from kids under 10

The 12 cruisers and many of the off-boat support crew + a few of the crew enjoying part of a day off

Monday, February 17, 2020


Observations: all pics by David Teitel (and he may be in one)

Giant clam


THB has already done two sets of observations for this trip, so this list will focus more on Indonesia and some of the mundane stuff THB likes to highlight after the trip is over.

Weather: Only one day out of 19 where the temp didn’t get over 80 (or felt like it was over 80)



Light Switches: THB continues to be totally baffled by the myriad versions of ways to turn on and off lights in hotels and resorts. By far the easiest was at the Crowne Place, a very functional room in all respects. Now there are so many different control points and even “master” switches don’t really turn off all the lights. Nothing is labeled, everything is trial and error. Some switches cancel others out. Some lamps need to be turned on individually. DB has become our go-to a/c and safe expert. She does an excellent job and yet on this trip someone had to confirm the safe in our cabin on the Aqua Blu was indeed broken as was the master key. THB knows they have post-it notes on board or else Adrian used them all up attaching them to sprinkler heads in the galley.



Big Cars: How did Indonesia and Singapore come to have a much higher percentage of big cars on the road than almost any other country THB has visited. And each is loaded with motorcycles, few scooters, and almost no bikes.



Temples: As mentioned earlier, THB and DB have been to many temples in the last 10 years of travel. The best overview to-date was that given by an old man (by THB’s reckoning he might have been in his mid-80s, surely older than THB’s 71) using a pictorial PowerPoint computer presentation for just the two of us. He could connect the dots as he traced the migration of Buddhist and Hindu temples from north to south. Maybe this amateur historian has a talk on YouTube? THB will see if he can find out. Priceless. Totally unexpected. Arranged by K’day, one of our fave all-time local guides.



Pork: Real pork, the kind that comes from pigs. Most of Indonesia does not have pork available. THB suspects it has to do with all the dead pigs in China (another scourge that happened last year or the year before and reduced the pigs by what THB believes is about 1/3….that’s a lot of dead pigs). Of course, THB and DB had roast suckling pig on our day with K’day; that pig came from a local village and the leftovers shared with the providers and others in K’day’s compound. Even places like 6 Senses couldn’t get pork. It wasn’t on our omakase at Capella. It was available in Singapore because we had several types of dim sum at the beginning and end of the trip with pork.



Guides: THB and Db have got into the habit of hiring guides for some of our travel e.g, for art, food tours, foreign locations where we don’t feel comfortable touring on our own. Sometimes the guide is also the driver (like on our Atacama – Salta trip), more often there is also a driver (sometimes a very knowledgeable guide as in Jakarta).  We’ve done it enough that it feels like we’re old hands at being led around. Our stay in Bali was a bit odd: the guide provided by the travel agency was nowhere near as good as the guides for the local sites. K’day was terrific; Agung (admittedly the creator/curator/collector/landscaper) at Arma was like having the most knowledgeable art person lead you around. Valentina was someone we got great leadership from at last year’s Biennale. Same-same except different, both exceptional.

Blue Starfish seen on almost every snorkel, spread out among coral


Arranging the simple (to THB) stuff went by Budi: no open market visit, no top-level batik/sarong shopping. A full day of a cooking class as the major activity for the day with zero value added, the driver could have handled that day (even with his limited English).

THB thinks this is a Needlenose Trumpet fish; we only saw them on one snorkel (with the sharks)


And, Budi was a nice guy, charming at times. And yet he seemed like a guy “mailing it in.” Sometimes the guide is just a guide, and that was Budi. However, he may have been seeing his future income dropping dramatically (read Coronavirus below), and SARS had a huge impact when it rolled through China so Budi knows better than us what is coming for him. The “setting up” to buy a quick sketch from a friend of his at ARMA was unconscionable though it is easily possible Budi didn’t know how to extract THB from this seemingly random meet-up.



Climate Change: The existential threat is here (what would a set of Observations by THB be without including Climate Change; like baseball with 14 teams in the playoffs?). Even in the remotest parts of the world you can snorkel over fields of bleached coral, even if the water seems 10 feet deep you can see the onset of bleaching and death. Jakarta has flooded multiple times this year and the damage looks to be permanent in some areas. Indonesia plans to move their national government from Jakarta to higher ground on another island. 

Grouper getting groomed including a tooth cleaning 

THB thinks this is David T getting up close to the grouper and hoping to avoid a trip to the dentist


On other hand, our cruise took place in a large sanctuary and THB and DB were very lucky to have seen one of the most pristine ocean places left on the planet, where even the most hard-bitten (non-coral) species are making comebacks. With the rising temps and acidity in the ocean, it is not clear how long this will last, especially for the coral (the Great Barrier Reef has lost huge swaths of sea life, including coral)



THB continues to espouse three things:
-        1. He’s a collapsarian, the tipping point has been reached and things are going to be different, starting now (well, it was reached a long while ago, so starting back then)
-        2. The race for renewables has to be world-wide, aggressive, and costly. Best way to start: pay many trillions to the owners of coal, oil and gas and leave it in the ground. Subsidize solar, wind, etc. in large quantities. Not gonna happen.
-     3. Start the Manhattan project of reducing CO2, bringing scientists (remember them…they are the group that has been discredited by those in power for many a year now) from everywhere and start implementing their ideas now. Going to cost more trillions. Spend it now and for years to come. Not gonna happen.



      To get a better understanding of the current state of the viability of the planet. THB recommends watching Our Planet, 8 episodes narrated by the Voice of God, David Attenborough. He cites the wins (few) and losses (many). One example: 1/3 of the deep sea coral has been destroyed by sea bottom strip-net fishing. If we don't see it, it didn't happen. And, the blue whales have made a great comeback since the 1986 ban on commercial fishing. 

THB thinks this coral may be at beginning of bleaching, not sure


Lastly, there is one more item THB is adding to this list: reduce the number of people on the planet … which leads to the next Observation:

Coronavirus: While the rest of THB’s followers were getting articles and updates on the spread of the virus, THB and DB were somewhat close to the epicenter since any event like this gets a broad brush, and not as worried (well THB wasn’t). We were actually many miles from anything significant. In Singapore, maybe 15-20% we’re wearing masks. In Indonesia it was far less, almost none. There is concern in these places. Yet people in the airport in Singapore were sneezing without covering their mouth.



Basic health issues kill more people in Indonesia every day than a virus (outside of a few cities in China). Bad water, poor neo-natal and delivery care, poor medical assistance, poverty, flooding, large families with many young children, in many places no real education of those under 12. It’s a third world country that has moved up, especially on their more affluent islands where the government has supported the population in lifting living standards



And, tourism is going to be impacted for months (assuming at some point the number of cases declines to negligible, otherwise we’re talking years). Many tours have cancelled, the resorts we stayed at we’re for most part empty (low season norms? THB does not know). People from this part of the world may be prevented from traveling even if perfectly healthy. Chinese tourism is big here. Basically, if you are from China you are not allowed in. Maybe not even allowed out if airlines refuse to fly to or from China (or Hong Kong).



So, another solution on Climate Change: drastically reduce the earth’s population and/or thus the use of fossil fuels (a mini-version of this happened in 2008-9 when the great recession was in full swing). Very dystopian, hard to imagine, and yet possible.

Here’s something THB hasn’t thought of until drafting this post: maybe THB and DB should quarantine ourselves after we reach E-ville. No visits to/with the twins, no visiting friends, no eating out. Hmmmm….the most draconian thing THB can envision now is the postponement of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games (shades of Zika).




Friday, February 14, 2020

Day 19-20: Singapore to E-ville


Day 19-20: Singapore to E-ville

The most bizarre check-in ever. The guy checking in at the Crowne Plaza has a mask on. He is communicating with a woman with luggage on a cart in the far background. They are using hand signals and some language though of course THB can't understand it (let alone hear her). She must be 30-35 feet away. Maybe she doesn't want to get coronavirus from him? From THB? THB is not wearing a mask though he still has Budi's gift.


Quote of the Day 19: 

Oh yeah Tell me baby, what's my name
Tell me honey, can ya guess my name
Tell me baby, what's my name
I tell you one time, you're to blame

Oh, right

What's my name
Tell me, baby, what's my name
Tell me, sweetie, what's my name


Weather: Another scorcher.


There's a monkey at lower left, very camouflaged, on the road leaving 6 Senses
DB notices the burn holes in THB's rash/sun guard. She also notices it really isn't a rahs/sun guard, rather a lightweight undergarment that THB used in Antarctica. Doesn't leave 6 Senses
Budi gives us a going-away present: a pack of 5 very thin face masks. If these worked then 9 billion people would be wearing them now. 


Today in FC the a/c is on and there are no mats. Breakfast same as yesterday except we try hot dishes as well. Nothing special. DB waits 20 minutes for a buggy to take her back to the room while THB climbs the stairs and beats her by 18 minutes.

More mistakes at breakfast. It’s a drumbeat here at 6 Senses: lots (and lots and lots) of idle chatter and many, many mistakes. They have been open for almost 2 years. In our 36 hours here, THB has talked to two managers, accepting humble apologies (one THB called when they hadn’t moved us to an a/c capable room; the other came to us when lemonade never appeared). THB has rarely talked to a manager at any hotel, so 6 Senses here in Bali really stands out. It is way below its sister in Portugal and we’re very happy we didn’t stay in any in Bhutan (they were brand new). And Capella looks better and better.

As Budi says, they have no spirit. So true. Budi and Wayan come to 6 Senses to shuttle us in an easy ride to the airport and we deliver their tips.


We're now in our room at Crowne Plaza, the view from our window

Business person's special: desk, long ledges

We have a courtyard view, this is the pool around 4pm, mostly abandoned

Just like the Remota in Chile, a glass bathroom. In this case you can lower a shade inside the bathroom for privacy


Then we do something we’ve never tried before: we check our two bags through to SFO even though we’re spending the night in Singapore. Will they make it to SFO when we do? Stay tuned for breaking news. It makes our moving around in the Singapore airport much easier.

We spend time in the lounge; a very easy 2 hour plane ride to Singapore (huge plane is maybe only 30% full).

The Jewel from the outside

A massive water structure




The view from the bottom looking up

Our dinner spot, all these food places are "fast" food...no fancy dining spots that we could see. The American places (e.g., A&W, KFC) are the busiest places


THB is having hot-ish tea, it is a metho day so no alcohol, forward or not

Bok choy

Bake pork bao at top and rice noodle rolls with pork at bottom




Back to Singapore, a dollar here is about 75 cents in US

Every receipt comes with a chance to win a million Singapore dollars (not rupiah) and you go to a kiosk and of course you have to enter a bunch of personal data...THB and DB give their dinner receipt to the ice cream scooper


Not bad, apparently made with raw milk (is that different than not raw milk?)

DB has gelato, made with Italian amor?

This pre-light show: more like Beverly Hills lights at corner of Wilshire and Santa Monica



We’re spending the night in the Crowne Plaza, right in the airport and visiting “The Jewel” which is sort of an amusement park/food court next to the CP. There’s a huge waterfall attraction with a tedious light show (5 minutes seemed like 50 to THB) and ancillary activities you can pay for and many eating and shopping establishments (100s of each….it’s staggering). Dim sum and ice milk softee and gelato for dinner, grand total $55. Both places take AMEX. We’ve timed the trip just right: no Singapore dollars or rupiah left over (though THB thinks he may have saved the 500 rupiah coin he received somewhere in Indonesia).

Day 20:   Continued


One oddity with our CP room: there are two "windows" that don't look out (good thing because on the other side of the wall is the hallway outside our room) 


Quote of the Day: James Baldwin, from the epitaph of the book reviewed below, referring to Leonel Gomes Vides, Carolyn Forche’s mentor / inspiration

For the strangest people in the world are those people recognized, beneath
one’s sense, by one’s soul – the people utterly indispensable for one’s journey

Weather: Preciously cool in E-ville at 7:45am


How do you know your trip is coming to an end? You have just enough pills for one, maybe two days. THB thought about making this a pictorial pop quize, Name These Meds. Winner gets a free refill of her or his choice. The A-reds (for mac degen and the calcium/D pills are kept separate for some bizarre reason)

Waiting for the sky train between terminals. Today we took a tram, a plane, a train and Uber, and walked a bit


Up early at Crowne Plaza and find our way quickly to Terminal 3 to verify our check-in at Denpasar. 


What does THB do in the biz class lounge when not blogging or eating...studying his Kindle


All good, except our flight to SFO leaves from Terminal 1. This airport is so huge that we need to leave the Singapore lounge 1.5 hours before take-off. Singapore Air does not have a lounge in Terminals 1 or 2. We ride the Sky Train (really a tram), so we didn’t need to leave so much time.


First lunch

Inedible, THB isn't actually hungry

Strawberry ice cream (made with raw, semi-raw or not raw milk) and supplemented with Trader Joe's chocolate. 

Sky piracy worries are over, Sngapore Air now gives you THREE real knives, enough to hijack two planes in the pre 9/11 days.

2nd meal is slightly better: both THB and DB remove the fish chunks and eat the sushi rice (THB adds soy and wasabi to his)


Here’s a surprise: instead of SFO we are on way to Mumbai. No, wait, we’re going to Chennai. The boarding area is at least 80% Indian. It is so stark that DB checks with the red headed guy next to her (no, on her other side, THB has some white strands sticking out of his scalp, nothing approaching red) and asks where this flight is going. He confirms that it is indeed bound for SFO. DB likes to double-check, she asks one of the stewardesses who has no idea for this “imbalance.”

Book Review: What You Have Heard Is True, Carolyn Forche’: A beautifully written memoir of the poet’s time spent in El Salvador 42 years ago (or so) just as the country was about to dissolve into civil war, and brought current with what is really  a short epilogue. It is frightening in its naivete of the danger the author was enmeshed in all those years ago and how complicit the US was in fostering yet another destabilization of a much poorer country for reasons that have always seemed to ignore the needs of the many for the benefit of the very few. Corruption and force are a terribly potent combination, always lurking there in humanity to the detriment of the many. And, a brief and intense glimpse into the life of a highly unique activist/philosopher. Highly Recommended and most likely will be THB’s top book by year-end


Singapore Airlines delivers, our bags are some of the first to arrive on the carousel, so the drop and hold from Bali worked great!! 
The happiest kids on the block after realizing that THBs' and DBs' bags made it back safely