

Clint and I rented motorcycles in Senggigi to travel around the west and north sides of Lombok Island. This is the main intersection in Bangsal. From here you can catch a boat to three small islands off the northwest coast.




All along the road side on the cliff's edge, corn is roasted for an evening snack.

Rice padi fields are flooded in the planting season and drained as the harvest season approaches.





Petrol Station

Taxi ride from the bus stop in Bangsal to the marina to catch a boat to Gili Trawanggan, the largest of the three islans off the northwest coast of Lombok.


Canoe/Snorkel trip around Gili Meno, the middle of the three islands.
Ice Cream Man

Small village farm on Gili Trawanggan.

Hangin' out with Lenny.
Sunset from the hill on Trawanggan, which is covered with old Japanese cave hideouts from WWII.
Back to Lombok from Trawanggan.

Backporch at Senaru on the foothills of the Rinjani Volcano.


Walking to the Senaru Waterfalls.
Coffee
1st falls
2nd falls
Clint and our guide, Joe.
The innaugeral float of the Senaru Irrigation Canal.




Fruit Man in Senggigi
Hotel in the middle of the village in Senggigi.

We took a taxi to the port town of Padanganbai,
Bali, where we caught a 4-hour ferry boat to Lembar, Lombok. It was already late in the afternoon and too
late to catch a boat straight to Senggigi, but we decided to rough it and try
to get land transport from Lembar to Senggigi after dark. On the ferry we met a
Japanese guy and his Sesak wife from a kampung close to Senggigi. They were also headed to Senggigi and the
husband was going to stay in a cheap hotel while his wife went to stay with her
family for Hari Raya Haji. Lucky for us,
cuz I can only imagine what a nightmare and how expensive it would have been to
negotiate ourselves transportation from the ferry to Senggigi. The Sesak wife negotiated the ride and took
us straight to a cheap (30,000 rupias, about $3) but nice place to stay in the
middle of the kampung close to the beach.
The next morning after breakfast, we rented motorcycles and
cruised up to Senaru to check out the waterfall but just got information enough
to know that we needed to come back when we had more time. Because after the 3-hour drive there, we
still needed time to return to Senggigi before dark in order to avoid the bug
in the face attack that is a serious consequence of driving a motorcycle in
Lombok at night. The drive from Senggigi
to Senaru and back is an amazingly narrow, windy and steep up and down road
with vista views of the ocean, cliffs and sandy shorelines, the rice padi
fields, farmers and villagesall the while dodging goats, chickens, cows,
children, other bikes, and cars that are too big to fit in the lane that was
just a nice size for motorcycles. The
drive would not have been nearly as fun in a car.
After 2 nights in Senggigi we took a bemo (like riding in
the back of a covered pickup truck, basically) to Bangsal where we rode in a
horse cart to the marina to catch the public boat to Gili Trawangan. We had to
wait a while for enough people to arrive to fill the boat.
After dinner, our first night on the Gili Trawangan, we took
a little stroll down to the end of the jetty to sit on the edge and watch the
water and sky. I coughed a little and a
Trawanggan woman who was also wasting some time on the end of the jetty came
over and started doing some black magic/prayer/healing physical therapy to
me. She was right in my face and talking
very fast and loud in either Sasak or Indonesian language. It was difficult to
remember how to speak in Bahasa, although I could pretty much understand what
she was saying to me. She massaged my
head and neck and hands and prayed multiple times facing each direction, then
took my scarf and twisted it up and wrapped it around my head and pulled it
tight while mumbling some voodoo mantra.
While sitting on the jetty with my legs straight out in front of me, she
pushed on my hips with her foot while pulling and moving my leg around with her
hands. Then she asked me if Clint was my
boyfriend or husband. I said no, just
friends. She looked at my palm then ran
over to Clint who was sitting quietly in the corner by himself, grabbed his
hand and checked his palm. All the while
she was talking loud and fast, and of course he couldn't understand a thing she
was saying. She came back and told me
that I must marry him because our palms are the same. She continued to tell me about herself.
It was hard to understand, but what I got out of it was that she was
married and her husband was at mainland with another of his wives. So she was alone that night just killing some
time on the jetty, helping sick tourists.
The next morning after breakfast we headed down to the beach
with our snorkel and fins. After
swimming around for a while, checking out the fish and coral, I saw a guy
paddle by on his canoe and decided I'd rather be on top of the water rather
than in the water. He cruised by and
asked if I wanted to rent his canoe for 20,000 rupiahs for the whole day. So I took it.
I paddled around for a little while and then went back to check on. We sat on the beach for a few minutes looking
across the way to the next island, Gili Meno.
I thought since I had the canoe and all, I might as well head over there
and check it out. As I was preparing for
my voyage, the 'Pard' Ketut, who I rented the canoe from came by and asked
where I was going. ('Pard' is a hick talk
nickname meaning 'pard-ner' given by Clint to all the people who went way out
of their way to help us.) I told Ketut I
was heading to the other island, and he asked if I wanted him to go with
me. I didn't mind the company and the
supervision, so I agreed and we paddled out across the channel. Rather than just going straight across, Ketut
wanted to go all the way around the island.
It took a few hours to get around, so by the time we got back to Clint,
I was pretty pooped.
The next day we moved down to Ketut's guest house and hung
out with his friends for a couple of days.
We decided to canoe around Gili Meno again, but this time bring Clint
along for the ride. We stopped for lunch
at Meno. While relaxing in the gazebo
and looking at the sea and Gili Air, I got the bright idea to buy two canoes
and take them back to Perhentian so I could play with them there and also rent
them out to customers while I'm busy wakeboarding. I just so happened that someone next door to
the restaurant had some canoes that they wanted to sell. So that was the day that I dropped a couple
mil (rupiahs, that is) on 2 canoes. Pard
tied them to his canoe and towed them back to Gili Trawanggan with us. We were about half way back when Clint had
the painful realization that we were going to have to deal with hauling them
all the way back to Pulau Perhentian.
Together with Pard's friends, we brainstormed a few options for shipping
the canoes to Malaysia
in order to avoid having to haul them ourselves.
We headed back to Lombok the next day
to rent motorbikes and go back to Senaru to check out the waterfalls. Pard asked to come with us in order to take
us to some cargo shipping companies in Mataram and we said okaythat was a
mistake. We rented 2 bikes in
Bangsal. Pard Ketut rode on the back of
my bike, which I think was a little too exciting for him. When we arrived in Senaru, on the beautiful
foothills and rice paddies of a huge volcano, Pard Joe, whom we had met several
days earlier at the Senaru marina, saw us cruising up the hill and led us to
the guesthouse where he worked. The
porch of our room overlooked a deep canyon of rice paddies and had a great
view, when it was clear, of the volcano.
Joe took us to the waterfalls on a trail that hugged the
steep canyon wall with an irrigation canal running along side. More than half of the canal went through
tunnels in the cliff side, with windows built all along the way so that the
tunnel diggers could see what they were doing.
The first waterfall was pretty, but had no swimming hole, so we
continued on to the second falls. This
one was probably the best waterfall I've ever seen. It was truly amazing, with a couple of great
swimming holes and nice rocks to jump off.
As we were walking back down the trail, Joe asked if we wanted to walk
through the tunnels. Of course the
answer was yes! As we walked in the
canal through the dark tunnels with the occasional bat flying past our faces,
Clint and I got the bright idea of floating the Senaru canal on inner
tubes. So that afternoon Joe took me
into town to buy some tubes in preparation for our inaugural float of the
Senaru canal the next morning. Everyone
at the mechanic's shop where we filled the tubes told me I was crazy. I just smiled and said it's true.
There was a bit of an incident when Ketut woke up in the
morning and couldn't find his wallet. We
searched the room to find nothing so he went and got Joe. Joe came in the room for a minute to help us
look, then went and got his boss. The
boss came down. I randomly decided to
lift up the mattress because sometimes that's were I put my valuables, and low
and behold, there was his wallet. Ketut
freaked out and threw it against the wall.
Joe and boss left and the crisis was over. Ketut asked if I had put the wallet under the
mattress. I'm pretty sure I did
not. So he thought that Joe took it and
then when he complained that it was missing, Joe put it under the mattress when
he came in the room to help us look for it.
I had given Joe some U.S. dollars as a partial payment for the
canoes. Later he told me that $20 was
missing, so I'm not sure if Joe was the offender or if Ketut was the
offender.
After breakfast we headed back up to the waterfall with our
tubes and floated most of the way back down the canal. It was like a spook alley water park ride,
and a really long one at that. That
inner tube float was definitely worth the 5 bucks it cost for the tubes!
From Senaru, we decided to take the scenic route to Mataram,
around the north and east side of Lombok and up over the
high volcano mountains. It was an
amazing and beautiful drive, with incredibly steep and windy, narrow roads
through the jungle and over the mountains.
It was amazing and beautiful up until we hit the cloudburst. We and all of our belongings were soaked
within seconds. My hands started to get
so cold that my fingers were going numball the while with Ketut still on the
back of my bike. We were pretty much out
in the middle of nowhere and there was no shelter to stop and wait out the
storm so we just kept driving.
Finally the rain cleared up, but the roads were still wet,
my fingers still numb. Far from any
villages and high in the jungle-covered mountains, as we cruised up over a
steep slope and around a sharp bend, three guys jumped out in the middle of the
road waving their arms and shouting, "Stop! Stop!" I thought they were up to no good because
they had no vehicles there with them. I
wasn't going to stop and just cruise by until Ketut said to stop. When he said that, I turned my head back to
look, thinking that maybe they actually needed help or something. As I turned my head back to the front, I was
heading straight off the road. I
couldn't straighten the situation out fast enough to keep from crashing. The bike went down and I landed on my
side. Ketut landed on top of me. I know because I heard his helmet hit
mine. I was laid out flat in the middle
of the road. The first thing that hurt
was my hip that had been broken before in my car accident and I thought, "Great,
what did I break this time." Clint drove
up around the bend to find me lying next to my tipped over bike. It took me a few minutes to gather my senses
and stand up. A couple of guys came by on their bikes and stopped to help me
pick up the bike and move it off the road.
As I squatted next to the bike, warming my hands on the exhaust pipe,
Ketut was up talking to the 3 guys. I
asked the guys that helped me with the bike why those guys had stopped us. They told me it was because they wanted to
take our money. Then Ketut came back
down and took out his Leatherman, pulled out two of the blades and hid it in
his jacket before heading back up to talk to the guys some more. Clint and I didn't know exactly what was
going on, but the situation was getting a little less than comfortable. A few vehicles passed, including a bike with
a family and a car with the village elder inside. They stopped to see if we were okay, and I
think that caused the offenders to back off a little bit. I just wanted to get the hell out of there so
I told Ketut to get on and let's go. We
hauled ass down off the mountain to the nearest village to relax, warm my hands
on a cup of hot water and clean up my wounds (which aside from the black and
blue on my hip and thigh, only required one bandage). Everyone in the village gathered around to
find out what happened to us. Man, has
the sunshine never felt so good.
Due to that little delay, we didn't make it to Mataram in
time to check out the cargo shipping company, which was the whole reason we
brought Ketut with us in the first place, so we just headed straight back to
Senggigi for the night. I slept while
Clint and Ketut went out to party it up with the locals. The next morning when I woke up, I found Pard
sleeping on the floor and foaming at the mouth so much that it was bubbling up
in an inch high dome out of his mouth.
It almost made me hurl, but then it was pretty funny later when I told
Clint about it.
We headed back to Gili Trawanggan to pick up the
canoes. We stayed there for one night,
rigged up the canoes with sarongs as shoulder straps to carry them, and headed
out the next morning for Bali. We loaded them onto the public boat early in
the morning, then onto a horse cart at Bangsal, then onto a mini bus to
Senggigi, then onto a small boat out to a bigger boat, then on the big boat to Bali,
then on another mini bus to Legian, where they stayed for a week while we
cruised around Bali.
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