Showing posts with label beautiful sunset. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beautiful sunset. Show all posts

Sunday, July 13, 2025

Flores: Labuan Bajo and beyond

Sunday, July 6, 2025


We leave for the airport shuttle right after the Gathering in the hall. No other blonds are in sight, as usual.

You know that feeling when you're vaguely hungry but not for anything in sight? That's us at the Jakarta airport. We settle on a cup of noodles. At least the bookshelf overhead is interesting.

With an unpredictable travel time (today it takes 4.5 hours instead of 3), we stay overnight in the airport hotel.

 Monday, July 7, 2025

The flight out is uneventful and the Garuda meal is not memorable but palatable.

We reach the island of Flores in early afternoon, landing at Komodo Airport in Labuan Bajo. A volcano erupts at the opposite side of the island, throwing ash 11 miles into the sky. The winds must be blowing it the other way since we don't notice any effects. Many Bali and east-Java flights are cancelled and a half-dozen can't get rescheduled flights so they miss the conference.

The styles of batik are unique to each island or people group.

At the end of our hotel corridor is a view over the fields and mountains.
From the balcony, we overlook a pool shaded by tall palm trees.
Supper is the first group activity. I order one of the cheaper items. For under $10, I get three enormous prawns that taste like lobster tails. They fill a dinner plate.
Cattle roam in the scrub along the ocean shores.
We walk along the beach to meetings at the next hotel a few times a day.
The sunset is beautiful. The tide is out when we walk home in the dark. We shine a flashlight and watch for the ropes securing the boats that have caught water and float near shore. Little crabs scurry across the sand.
Tuesday

We wake to a stunning view of the sea. Not bad for $70/night. W has done his research for a bargain rate near the conference hotel.

The organizers have left a few hours open this afternoon. These conferences used to be mostly interactive but now are scheduled with more meetings. We enjoy the speaker. 

In our free time, a few of us decide to walk 2 1/2 miles into town since we've been sitting most of the day. There's a Mexican restaurant with good ratings, and ... why not? The food is surprisingly authentic and delicious.

The post-dinner debate is whether or not we walk home. Why not? We joke about it being mostly downhill. We go slowly enough to pause to smell (and see) the flowers growing wild along the sidewalk.
The come in many textures, colors, and shapes.
Some blooming trees overhang the walkways.
Some weeds are bursting with white flowers, too. No smell to these, though.
We're happy to get our 10,000+ steps in as the sunset lights up the sky.
Wednesday
It's our "free day" to explore and interact. 40 or 50 of us are island-hopping on a long speed boat. 
Within 15 minutes, we're at a swimming beach with some corals and warm water.
The next stop is a reef with a strong current - the boat keeps repositioning as we drift across the anemones, corals, and clouds of tropical fish.

Komodo Island isn't open so we get off on another island with the big lizards. Apparently they're good swimmers so inhabit several islands. At night, tourists come here to see snakes. During the day, those are in hiding. The lizards are lying in the shade. They don't like heat above 95oF (35oC).
We walk through the habitat of the Komodo dragons with tour guides who carry long forked sticks in case one attacks. Komodos are very quick when they want to be. A few were lying in the shade near the snack stand. They can scent prey 3 miles (4 km) away through skin and tongue sensors.
One guide takes photos of us, crouching 15' (5 meters) behind a 10' (3 meter) lizard. Looks impressive from that perspective. We were all happy that he was dozing and uninterested in us. They are aggressive hunters: 15 feet per second sprints, anyone?
We get a pep talk before and after the stroll. I wipe out on a slow descent, the hard soles of my water sandals rolling on round pebbles and dry leaves. They're not trail shoes, that's for sure.
At the next beach, we eat a box lunch of chicken, rice, and vegetables.
The little kids sit in the warm water up to their tummies or chests. A watchful dad tosses a rock to chase away a small shark (2-3'?) from the play area.

"Not a dangerous shark," says a bystander. "It eats little fish but leaves us alone."
I skip the 10-minute climb to the top of hill since my soles are slick on the sandy steps. W captures the view from the peak.
At a little market by the hill, I buy some fabric (2.5 meters @$8) for a tablecloth or bright wall hanging. I help another tourist bargain with my limited language. She gets what she wants at a price she's willing to pay. The seller is happy so there's contentment all around.
A decision is made to cut short the day in mid-afternoon: the little kids are getting tired. Maybe 10 youngsters are along, plus a few energetic teens (who could play all night). We skip the promised ocean sunset and the last swimming beach and putt back to the harbor.
W and I walk back along the beach from the drop-off point but are showering by 5 PM. I take a long bath before an early night to bed.

Thursday
It's our final day in Flores. After all-morning meetings and conference photos, we get a few hours off for lunch and conversation. I take a quick nap in our hotel room before walking back to the meeting place.

Tourism seems to be the only industry and that's not booming. In mid-afternoon, the bus takes us to a farewell dinner cruise for Dave and Gigi. They have lived in Indonesia for over 30 years. They'll retire next year but this is theoretically their last conference. (That's assumed ... before they are made honorary lifetime members of the group.) They are friends and mentors to most of us.
We're on a big boat and pass a variety of seacraft and islands.
We're told to watch out for Komodo dragons. Strong swimmers, they range between islands. None in sight.
As the sun goes down, many boats move in the same direction. We're heading near the mangrove island from where fruit bats migrate to another island each evening to eat fruit.
Another stunner is watching the shadows of islands emerge on the horizon as the light changes.
As we're drifting with bats flying overhead, the full moon rises. "Yesterday was overcast. You couldn't see a thing," says the boat crew. "Tonight is perfect."
We are blessed with perfect weather and views on every side.
The full moon rises. We eat a wonderful dinner before the boat lights and music come on. We return to harbor at 8:30 PM. Julie and I climb stairs at the side of the hotel instead of taking an elevator. It looks like 3 flights - but then there's a platform - nope, locked out of the building so up we go another 2 or 3 flights, and a long car ramp past laundry rooms and offices ... we go up 10 flights according to my watch. We come out on the opposite side of the entry and have to walk back to the lobby, fending off taxi drivers. 

When the bus pulls in and loads, it's a short ride to the drop-off hotel and a quarter-mile walk back in the dark to our place. We relax into the night but I'm wired so stay awake until midnight.

Saturday
It's a lazy morning. After breakfast, I take a long bath and then sit on the balcony overlooking the ocean. Hillocks poke out of the sea on every side. Tourist boats, cargo ships, and fishing rigs share the calm water. When the wind kicks up in late afternoon, whitecaps will punctuate the water.
The flight is delayed so several of us hang out in the airport, There are no decent meals available but lots of ramen and pastries. I nap on a sofa in the airport before our flight boards. It's a short flight (2 hours+) and we're in Jakarta before we know it. Our luggage comes quickly and the shuttle bus leaves within a half hour of buying the ticket.

But the driver is sloooowwwww, yo-yo-ing between 60 - 90 km/hr (40-55 mph) though the highway is mostly empty after leaving Jakarta. Cars pass on every side and disappear into the distance while I pray that the driver isn't falling asleep. There are only 4 passengers and W sleeps soundly all the way. Because we're accelerating and drifting, I am wide awake.

We get into Bandung before 2 AM. W hails a cab, which looks like it's parked across the street. W knocks on the window to wake the driver, schlepps our suitcases across the concrete divider, and we're home within 15 minutes. I leave my luggage closed, shower, and fall into bed with relief.

Read more:

*God reveals deep and hidden things. Daniel 2:22

*Your love, Lord, reaches to the heavens, your faithfulness to the skies. Your righteousness is like the highest mountains, your justice like the great deep. You, Lord, preserve both people and animals. How priceless is your unfailing love, O God!

People take refuge in the shadow of your wings.  They feast on the abundance of your house; you give them drink from your river of delights. For with you is the fountain of life; in your light we see light. Continue your love to those who know you, your righteousness to the upright in heart. Psalm 36:5-10

*Jesus prayed, “Righteous Father, the world does not know you, but I know you, and these know that you have sent me.” John 17:25

Moravian Prayer: Loving God, help us to be good stewards of the gifts we have received. Help us to care for ourselves, our families, our communities, and your world. Let us not forget that you have provided us with all that we have. Amen.

Sunday, January 19, 2025

Light and life

 Wednesday, January 15, 2025

It's a wild scramble to get on the movie night list on Mondays when the invitation is posted. But eventually everyone is included: usually there are 50-60 attendees. The sun goes down late at this time of year, just south of the equator. I take this picture at 6:20 PM, admiring the sunset with several young adults. By the time everyone else arrives, it is dark.

Cautiously, the newcomers venture into the group. Once people get their food, the room starts to warm up. We always have first-time visitors ("First time, a guest") along with returning attendees ("Second time, a friend.")
Our greeters are those who have come many times. They make sure others feel welcome. ("Third time, you're family.") The line stretches out the door as we load up our plates. Today, we come from 11 countries.
It's good to see people fill their plates and their hearts, chit-chatting as they make their way into the kitchen, and back out to find a seat for the first half of the movie.
Students and (mostly) young adults sit on the porch or inside. We've gradually set up the room with a chair for each person, not just a beanbag or pillow. After the first half of the movie, it's time for desert. Then we finish watching The Wild Robot with attending "ooh!" "oh no!" and "AHhhh!" as the scenes unfold.
What lively discussions afterward! The helpers have washed up and taken out the garbage before 10 PM. By 11, everyone's gone home. We shower, pray over those who came - that they experience God's care, friendship, and health ... and fall fast asleep.

Thursday
We leave for the mountain hike at 7:30 AM, after picking up Veronica and Brunhild, her friend from Germany. The route starts with a narrow chasm between cliffs. The trail is elevated over the muck below with bamboo stalks. Where the bamboo has begun to rot, boards are nailed across the span to hold the bamboo off the wet ground. We step from board to board. It's slippery but not difficult.
As the crest of a hill, the dogs watch hikers climb the trail behind us.
It's mostly downhill though 3 climbs upward lie between those descents.
As usual, the vegetation catches my eye.
PakG drops us at Ethnic for our post-hike lunch. Several retired hikers join us. We're only a few blocks from home, so W and I walk back. A hot shower is in order. I treat myself to tea and Trader Joes peanut butter cups. (Oh oh, the TJ container is half empty - we bring one home each October. Must space out my treats better.)

IbuA has baked pretzel buns, so W snags a hot roll on his stroll through the kitchen. The women have put the furniture back in place and the floors and shelves have been washed. The kitchen is tidy again. 

The women are glad that we've simplified the movie night setup. Art is still taken off the "screen" wall, and we bring chairs from upstairs down and back. But most of the room stays intact. (They used to haul rugs, the dining table, and shelves away.)
Supper with visitors from Germany is at their hotel nearby. The city sparkles from the opposite hill outside the windows. We enjoy lively a conversation about who God is and how he is at work in the world. 
W and I walk home in the warm mist. It's not worth putting up an umbrella. There are few public streetlights. Instead, every household must turn on lights near their entry to guide passersby. Most have automatic lights like ours that turn on at dusk.

On the Porch, W rehangs the lamp he put aside for movie night. The LEDs sparkle; the plastic bulbs tap against each other in the wind. Eight years ago, we found three of these chandeliers in an ACE Hardware Christmas clearance ($4). They faithfully ward off the dark.
Friday
Before 5 AM, I'm finally wrestling with ideas for Sunday.  In movie week, there's no capacity for anything but that - until we are refreshed by nature and the house is reset.

Sunday is coming ... and the topic is parenting. I've been tossing around the topic for 2 weeks. How does one raise children to love and serve God? I turn to the scriptures to see what God teaches us as our heavenly Father.

Then I walk around the block to reset my head. The Padma hotel is dressed for Chinese New Year, coming later this month.
We pick up a white birdcage and PakG takes home 2 free hamster cages for his kids, thrown into the deal. As we pass the main mosque, cars are double-parked for blocks as men gather for the week's prayers.
PakG cleans the new cage. "Oh look at this!" he exclaims. He points out a gap in the blue budgerigar's wing and a hole bitten in its body. "Probably was a rat!"

I put some tissues in the corner so the bird will have a warm "blanket" if it chooses. It hops into the opposite corner.
PakG and W doctor the wounds with iodine and put the bird and its companion into the new cage. "Usually a bird will die if it is injured like this," PakG tells us. It hops around a bit. Let's see.

This week, I've met with most team members, one on one. I'm asking, "What do you sense that God intends to do in you this coming year?" and, "What goals are you setting for your work?" The answers intrigue me and give me direction for prayers.

Saturday
The budgie is alive and moving around the cage. I cruise the yard to see what's blooming. The flowerbeds are filled with color.
The lemon tree is fruiting, big clumps of lemons hanging from its branches.
Under it, seedlings from a potted red flower have matured and are themselves creating seedlings.
I spend most of the afternoon puttering. I walk +4000 steps, back and forth between rooms, returning art to the walls, clearing office storage, and storing the final Christmas items. Finally, I put some prints (from Penang, last year) into frames and sort the papers on my desk.

The last stacks of books from my office get shelved in the little library in the main room. The space has become a tranquil corner to curl up to read or meditate. I dig my toes into the shag rug beside the armchair.
Read more:
*In you, Lord my God,

    I put my trust.


I trust in you;

    do not let me be put to shame,

    nor let my enemies triumph over me.


No one who hopes in you

    will ever be put to shame,

but shame will come on those

    who are treacherous without cause.


Show me your ways, Lord,

    teach me your paths.


Guide me in your truth and teach me,

    for you are God my Savior,

    and my hope is in you all day long.


Remember, Lord, your great mercy and love,

    for they are from of old.


Do not remember the sins of my youth

    and my rebellious ways;

according to your love remember me,

    for you, Lord, are good.


Good and upright is the Lord;

    therefore he instructs sinners in his ways.


He guides the humble in what is right

    and teaches them his way.


All the ways of the Lord are loving and faithful

    toward those who keep the demands of his covenant. Psalm 25:1-10