Some of the junior children at Lake Tekapo School, in the South Island of New Zealand, have sent their Flat Stanley’s on an adventure to Indonesia. Their class is learning about different cultures and their Stanleys are going to help out by sharing their experiences in Indonesia and maybe other destinations.

Showing posts with label forest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label forest. Show all posts

Sunday, 15 May 2016

Bukit Lawang, Sumatra

The Stanleys and I were in a hurry to leave Medan so I spent a lot of money and got a private car to pick us up and take us to Bukit Lawang.



On the way, we drove past a lot of Palm Trees. Companies are cutting down the jungle to grow palm trees so they can make palm oil. Maybe you can do some research and find out what happens to the animals when their homes are cut down or burnt so palm trees can be grown. You could also do some research to find out what palm oil is used for. I think you will be surprised how many different foods and products it is used in.

Palm trees


Bukit Lawang is a small village on the edge of the Gunung Lesuser National Park.


The view from our room
Breakfast time visitors.
One cheeky monkey even ran across the table in front of me.



Here are some of the sights I saw when I was trekking:

A Viper that had been relocated from the village




When I went on a jungle trek, I saw 8 Orangutans; 3 rehabilitated females, each with a baby and 2 wild males.

Orangutans get rehabilitated and released into back into the jungle if they have been kept as pets (which is now illegal) or injured. Bukit Lawang used to have a feeding station where the rehabilitated Orangutans could come twice a day for food if they were unable to forage for enough in the jungle. The people running the feeding station kept the food boring to encourage to Orangutans to fend for themselves.



Long Tail Monkeys (Macaque)

You can see the cuts villages have made to collect rubber.


Fruit snack in the jungle

Picnic lunch
Rice, vegetables, fish, noodles and rice crackers

This guy was attached to the back of my shoulder. It had a good feed of my blood but it still looks hungry.

Termites

Bukit Lawang Village.
The locals swim, wash themselves and their clothes in the river.
Tourists from other places in Indonesia come to go rafting on the river in rubber tubes.

My 'Jungle Taxi' that carried me through the rapids back to the village.
It was made of a large tube tied together with two smaller tubes.


Wednesday, 20 April 2016

Gili Meno, Lombok, Indonesia



From Gili Air the Stanleys and I took a boat to Gili Meno, the smallest and quietest of the three islands.


Arriving at Gili Meno

Still no motorbikes or cars here




There are lots of places to eat on the beach.



Visiting the Turtle Sanctuary






The Stanleys helped me donate some money to the turtle sanctuary
Snorkeling Gili Meno

I didn't take the Stanleys with me but I saw some turtles and lots of colourful fish.



These are the boats used to transport people between islands.






Every morning the streets are swept. The beach gets raked to clean it up after the high tide leaves rubbish behind.

Local ladies are collecting food for dinner while their children play in the sea.



Gili Meno Bird Sanctuary

I could hear lots of birds singing but I didn't see many. I did see LOTS of BIG spiders though.
Watch the video to see the lake, some birds, spiders and some little fish. Listen carefully for the birds. They are there somewhere.












There are lots of cats in the Gilis and none of them have long tails like our ones in New Zealand.

Goodbye Gili Islands!

Leaving Gili Meno

The boat we took back to Bali

Saturday, 2 April 2016

The Sacred Monkey Forest Sanctuary, Ubud

Map of where the Monkey Forest is

There are lots of rules to read before you go into the Monkey Forest. I decided that it was best for the Stanleys if they stayed inside my bag. I didn't want any cheeky monkeys to steal them.



The monkeys that live in the forest are Macaques. There are about 600 monkeys and there are five different groups that live if different areas of the forest.  They eat mainly sweet potato and some fruit. Tourists can buy bananas to feed to the monkeys. While they are eating the bananas they sit on your lap, shoulder or head. Normally the monkeys don't climb on you unless you have food. I had a monkey jump on me while I was crossing a bridge. It was very interested in my bag, but it couldn't figure out how to get inside it so the Flat Stanleys were safe.



You can find out more information about The Sacred Monkey Forest here.