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Oz to Ice
Ok so this is my first attempt at putting together a proper ride report and it probably wont be very good. The reason for that is that ive also got a blog going too (http://oztoice.wordpress.com/) and I have a feeling that maintain both a ride report and blog will end with me getting bored of sitting in front of a computer and give it up altogether.
So a brief introduction is in order I guess. My name is Rob, im from Wollongong in Australia and my bike is the venerable DR650 named Emily. Shes a 2003 model that I bought second hand from a guy in Melbourne that had only done 1800km before deciding to get rid of it. My first ride was straight back home, some 1000kms and the start of a beautiful long distance relationship. Since then shes not only took me to university and work from day to day, but has also taken me on a 4 week, 10 000km ride to Cape York and a 4 week 9000km ride through central Australia and across the French line through the Simpson desert. https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/..._3826363_n.jpg a little digging ahead of me https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/..._4831560_n.jpg theres a lot of sand dunes out there http://vimeo.com/78136613 Now im attempting to ride from Australia to Iceland. No set time frame, im working as I go when needed and the only limiting factor is my interest in the whole trip. So far its been 2.5 years since leaving home and counting. This isn’t a race around the world, nor visit as many countries as possible. Its just travelling, but with a bike, and mainly so that I don’t have to follow the crowd and get locked into a 30 year mortgage just yet. Right now we are both in Malaysia, trapped here while sorting out some financial issues, but more about that later. Emily has 140 000km on the clock, 38 000 of those km attributable to this trip. For now ill leave everyone with a few photos from the trip so far and start catching up on the blog entries. Ill try to stick to photos and videos on the forums and leave all the wordy parts for the blog site for anyone that interested. Theres a facebook page for those that prefer to follow along on there too https://www.facebook.com/oztoice https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...49687605_o.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...85716513_n.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...18433101_o.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...43898042_o.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...21687360_n.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...day-92-340.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...96609147_n.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...y-93-316-3.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...ay-101-302.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...ay-102-019.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...80737888_n.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...03543412_n.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...84940268_n.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...21736978_n.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...56204075_n.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...55023871_n.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...88524286_n.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...85369959_n.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...64610375_n.jpg http://vimeo.com/57304411 http://vimeo.com/58947154 http://vimeo.com/59834233 |
hmmm cant seem to get the embedded vimeo links to work. anyone got any tips on doing this? heres the links until i get it worked out
The first year Part 1 on Vimeo https://vimeo.com/58947154 https://vimeo.com/59834233 |
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For now, just use the links method. :blushing: You might want to edit your post in order to remove the bad code and put in urls. |
will do, thanks for the quick reply Grant bier
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This trip started like most trips; stressful and unorganised, taking a few days to settle in, get the packing just right and get comfortable on the bike. After that it felt like just another ride minus the plans for a return trip.
I met up with some friends in Sydney and rode with them until wisemans ferry , just north of Sydney before they headed back and I continued on north. Another stop in at casino to see an old uni friend had me washed and well fed again before he joined em for a day of off roading through the Richmond range national park which was a good test of the bikes capabilities to handle offroad while fully loaded. https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...70315626_o.jpg one last beer at st albans pub with Sean and Kai http://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/2...pg?w=640&h=413 Ross and Lorraine, complete stranger to me from northern queensland also showed unprecedented hospitality when Ros, who was volunteering at the local tourist information centre that I had set my tent up behind for the night, offered me a bed back at his place. Both of them are horticulturists and slowly building an ‘off the grid’ house for themselves and homestay with solar panels and wind turbines, a whole flock of hens and ducks, large vege patch and fruit trees filling all the spaces inbetween. https://fbcdn-sphotos-c-a.akamaihd.n...99311704_o.jpg queensland has the right idea about rest stops https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...74947627_o.jpg Ross and Lorraine https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...03787765_o.jpg Preparing a homegrown dinner https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...37619290_o.jpg Ross and Loraine loaded me up with eggs and avocados when i left The rest of the run to Normanton was along long, straight and boring roads as the midday temperature steadily increased to 45 degrees C and the jacket got stowed. Also visiting Normanton was Pam and Kev an Irish couple now living in Australia and were making a TV series about travelling around the country with their two young kids (more info atwww.somewhereoutthere.com.au/). They even let me join them on a free tour of the Gulflander museum in town the next day, which is dedicated to documenting the history of the Gulflander rail system, a diesel engine powered narrow gauge rail system that connected the Croyden gold fields to the river port of Normanton. https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...53193161_o.jpg the gulflander museam https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...03030968_n.jpg view from the drivers seat https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...52217767_o.jpg roadside views https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...04850445_o.jpg big buckets https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...62090046_o.jpg wheat country https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...30078468_o.jpg beautiful skies after a breif and vicious storm passed through https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...94399633_n.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...13100264_o.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...70298367_o.jpg normantons infamous purple pub https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...89142385_o.jpg apparently the biggest croc ever shot was killed just up the river from normanton. great news considering i was about to head onto a road with multipule river crossings more here: http://oztoice.wordpress.com/2011/10/16/queensland/ |
So this is where I start getting into the real guts of the trip. One thing that I noticed while pouring over ride reports while dreaming of doing my own ride was the sheer number of people doing RTW trips these days and how many of them are taking fairly similar routes. For me, the idea of riding around the world has always been that it would be a massive adventure and following the major highways (or what passes for a highway) never really appealed to me. I was inspired and amazed by people like Carl Stearns Clancy who rode around the world in 1912-13, before petrol was even a readily available commodity, let alone motorcycle tires or spare parts that could take 6 months to ship, or alternatively, you would have to get made from scratch like he did in spain. These are the heros of motorcycle travel for me and their modern equivalents are the guys that choose the path less travelled into places that most of us have never even heard of.
Now I doubt im ever going to be considered a great adventurer but I am going to try to stay off the main routes as much as possible on this ride, which is why from Normanton to Darwin, I would take the gulf track. At over 1000km in length and much of it unsealed with the odd saltwater crocodile infested river crossing, it was adventure enough without the physical problems I was about to encounter. The gulf track has everything you could want from an outback Australian road; flat endless plains pockmarked with termite mounds, road trains kicking up bulldust, the odd unchecked bushfire burning its way through the scrub and river crossings filled with saltwater crocs while giving a sense of extreme isolation throughout. Some of the river crossing had causeways across them that were both a blessing and a curse, smoothing out the rough riverbed underneath but slipperier than a steel plate covered in grease. I found out just how slippery when the front end washed out on me, dumping the bike on top of me in the shallow, still water. The thought of massive reptiles with big teeth being attracted by the sounds of splashing had me out from under the bike and running for the shore like a little girl faster than anyone in history. As for the special physical challenge, it turns out I am prone to having my sciatic nerve getting pinched around my hips. For those that aren’t physiotherapists, the sciatic nerve is the big one that runs down your spine and splits into two slight less large nerves to run through your hips and down the back of your legs. What that means in the real world is that when it gets pinched, its no longer free to slide around when you bend at the waist which includes walking and standing up from a seating position. The pain can range from being slightly uncomfortable to pain that stops you from breathing. I had the breath stoping kind. Walking meant stopping every 50m to let the pain subside and even more dangerous was moving from a sitting to standing position on the bike. As I stood up the pain would take over, blurring vision and halting my breath just long enough to see me fly into deep sand or rocks with my eyes closed and arse only inches off the seat. Not ideal. The gulf track wasn’t going to let me go that easily though with the day before hitting the Stuart Highway threw up a few more challenges. The chain oil container split, covering a lot of my spares in the sticky mess, the sidestand broke in two and the GPS screen stopped working properly. After getting the sidestand welded I decided half a day spent swimming in bitter springs was well deserved before heading to Darwin. https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...04775352_o.jpg long, straight and empty https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...19952320_o.jpg a field full of small termite mounds https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...85716513_n.jpg hitting this cattle grid in the centre would give you good little wakeup call https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...32027246_o.jpg gets hot out there too https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...09855900_n.jpg camped out along the Gulf track somewhere https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...68281868_o.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...73677273_o.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...68380637_o.jpg ordering some pizza for dinner https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...06530671_o.jpg outback voyeurs https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...53419889_n.jpg where i went down, you can see the marks the front tire left in the slime https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...62629935_o.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...29991287_o.jpg first casualty https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...94066128_o.jpg getting the sidestand welded up https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...20487437_o.jpg Bitter Springs more here: http://oztoice.wordpress.com/2011/10/23/the-gulf-track/ |
Darwin was a great place to relax, wash some clothes, collect some spare tires for timor leste/indonesia and get my back into proper working order again. The hostel I stayed in was 90% german backpackers so good times were assured while the acts of the seedy hostel owner provided a constant talking point as he regularly attempted to get the girls to come to his house and wash his BMW in their bikinis for money.
I was more interested in trying to find a yacht that might be willing to take the bike and me to timor leste, some 800km to the north. Unfortunately the encroaching cyclone season hampered my attempts, but I did get to spend a few weekends with some awesome people, racing on their yachts and learning to sail. I found one couple quite inspiring as they were not only NOT wankers like most yacht people ive come across in the past (in fact, if you are ever in Darwin, get down to the Dinah Beach yacht club where there are some of the most down to earth people ive ever met; a genuine and friendly bunch that just happen to love being out on the water). This young family live on a yacht, a $60 000 house and ‘land’ package, with very little annual taxes, waterfront views, seafood restaurant right below your feet and if you don’t like your neighbours, just pull up the anchor and let the wind relocate you. Sounds a lot better than having a half million-dollar debt and being stuck in the one place. While waiting for a few leads to make a decision about weather they could take the me to timor leste, I took off into nearby Kakadu and litchfeild national parks for a fairly uneventful few days. It not only allowed me to kill some time, but also saved on hostel fees while I was sleeping in the tent despite almost getting washed away by the monsoonal storms that were slowly increasing in intensity as the days ticked by. The yachties noticed it too; in the end everyone had already pulled their boats out of the water or sailed for calmer waters, so I was left to deal with perkins shipping to take the bike and a flight for me to Dili. https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...43898042_o.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...16641784_n.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...82297168_o.jpg swimming in the waterholes of kakadu NP before the wet season raises the water levels enough that the crocs can swim upstream https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...02507686_o.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...24945214_n.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...40959386_o.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...18433101_o.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...68007668_n.jpg darwin sunset https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...14273376_n.jpg the wet season announcing its arrival https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...65080718_n.jpg messing around with the germans https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...66771882_n.jpg |
Great Pics, keep up the good work, will be following the RR
Enjoy it Wayne |
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What a great read.
G'day Rob, Thank you for sharing your great adventure. You're not bad behind that camera, nice photos and amazing video work and editing from a one man crew.
There was another aussie adventurer Alby Mangels that made a few bucks with his trips. I hope someone gets behind you and helps you along. You've made me realise as I sit here on my arse behind this computer I really should get out more and enjoy life lol. Stay safe and travel well. Hooroo, Kevin. |
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Ive only ever been outside of Australia once in my life before this trip on an organised tour to Vietnam with a girlfriend that made the whole experience a nightmare. Dili, the capital of timor leste seemed like as good a place as any to start experiencing the world alone and with minimal tourist infrastructure I got somewhat of a cultureshock. It was a mild introduction to asia but still about as far removed from life back home as you can get, from the moment you step off the plane an line up on the runway to get the visa on arrival to the traffic that looks completely chaotic to the open air markets in muddy laneways and families that live on the street, sleeping under ice cream cart umbrellas and living off the money they make selling overpriced cold drinks and cigarettes.
Then theres the crumbling infrastructure and disorganised nature of everything. Every property is surrounded by high walls topped with broken glass, steel spikes or razorwire while marks left by bullets in the concrete walls and telegraph poles bear witness to the 25 years of violence brought in by the Indonesian military. All this only serves to emphasise the friendliness of the locals towards foreigners who are more than happy to invite you back to their humble houses, even if only for the opportunity to practice their English for a while. Getting an Indonesian visa is a nightmare that starts at 4am and still isn’t a guaranteed process. Get it wrong or omit any of the required documents that no one tells you that you need until after you’ve been standing in line for 5hrs and youll be repeating the same nightmare at 4am the next day. One dutch guy who was standing in the line for the 4th day straight finally spat it at the consulate staff when they told him he needed another piece of paper and would have to come back a 5th time the following day. While I commended him for telling them how backwards the whole process is, he did make an arse of himself by throwing his application at the staff which included his passport which he then had to ask for politely to be returned to him from behind the bars of the counter. Toll perkins shipping, despite being an Australian company, was very much operating like a timor leste country. The managed to loose the shipping container 3 times before it arrived in their holding yard and even then they had managed to strap the tenere that was sharing the container with my bike over the plastic fairings, braking them in more than one place. The german owner of the bike looked about ready to murder someone by that stage. Christmas in dili was a bit of unique experience too, with a big feast of local food being put on for everyone by the only hostel in Dili while in the cities main square there was a big festival on. Watching all the Christmas plays and traditional performances put on by the locals was the president of Timor leste, sitting comfortably amongst the crowd which was a bit of a surprise considering it’s the closest ive ever been to the leader of a country and rather refreshing when compared to the pedestal that western leaders put themselves on. https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...81504776_n.jpg the documents required to apply for an indonesian visa from timor leste https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...93250765_n.jpg in the markets https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...44884437_n.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...16693124_n.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...07944262_n.jpg the markets have everything, even gambling https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...07944262_n.jpg the roads in the capital have their fair share of surprises https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...13009363_n.jpg christmas in Dili https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...16349568_n.jpg while well intentioned, only one of these lanterns actually managed to get airborne https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...05754955_n.jpg dinner on the beach in the rain https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...65138008_n.jpg the Dili art gallery is located in a crumbling, abandoned government building. they are allowed to use the space free of charge, as long as the government doesnt want it back https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...46397983_n.jpg football is massive in this part of the world and the locals do whatever they can to get their fix. this the field for the Timor Leste championship semi finals https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...70081519_n.jpg by day these guys would annoy the shit out of foreigners to buy water and cigarettes off them for twice the going rate. by night they sleep on the street. after taking this photo i didnt argue with them over prices anymore https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...47277989_n.jpg fresh food from the market every day https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...02177735_n.jpg the little guy was rather protective of his mum and older sister https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...69811051_n.jpg pig anyone? more here: http://oztoice.wordpress.com/2011/12/26/dreams-of-dili/ |
After getting the bike, I tackled my first bit of SE Asian traffic and it was like everyone said; its ok once your in it despite being slightly terrifying while watching from the footpath. It helps having an off road oriented bike here too. The roads are so bad that the extra suspension travel means that you don’t have to split your concentration between the traffic and crumbling road systems.
Getting the bike also means getting out of Dili, first stop a little place called Bacau, a small town build on a hillside by the beach. Beautiful crumbling Portuguese era buildings sit amongst the massive trees of the jungle while nearby rivers run alongside the road and even into the concrete public pool, closed for cleaning while I was there. Down on the beach a family of Timorese teach me that the local way of waving someone over uses the same gesture as telling someone to piss off back in Australia. Combine that with being yelled at in a language I don’t understand and you end up with some rather confusing situations. Thankfully this one ended with bbq horse from a bucket and cheap Portuguese wine from an imported flagon. Further east I enter the town of Los Palos in a rather unique fashion; racing one of the local boys on his little scooter, launching the bike off the old steel trellis military bridge and past the local policeman who is just laughing at us. Even if he did want to pull us up for being idiots, I don’t think he would know what the speed limit there was anyway. With roads this bad, drivers generally govern their own speed anyway. Los Palos is home to a man I was lucky enough to meet called Maleve, a rather unremarkable man apart form his stature; shoulders as broad as his are somewhat of a rarity in these parts and hint at him having been very physically powerful in days gone by. However, it’s the deep scar across hi brow that gives the biggest hint as to his past life as a militant fighting the 25 year long occupation of Timor Leste by Indonesia’s military dictatorship from 1975 to 1999. The scar was given to him by the butt of an Indonesian rifle but isn’t the worst of the reminders that the community bears. Maleves brother carries a scar running vertically up his stomach, a souvenir from an Indonesian bayonet, while all through the town there are vacant houses and plots of land, abandoned due to the superstition that the land is cursed after a violent death occurs there. One of the most striking conversations that I have with Maleve was in regards to the number of Indonesians currently working in Timor Leste. When I asked if there was any resentment towards the Indonesians, he told me that the Timorese people had made the distinction between the Indonesian military and government, who they despise, and the people of Indonesia who had very little input in the decision to invade. https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...68825538_n.jpg some of the views on the way east out of Dili https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...29685195_n.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...00652278_n.jpg the old portugese markets in Bacau https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...43352439_n.jpg the natural rivers running through town mean the water in the fountain is always crystal clear https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...62765481_n.jpg the old portugese barracks, now the local school https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...39674772_n.jpg the public pool is also fed by the clear waters running through the town, when its not closed for cleaning https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...76605474_n.jpg these two started cleaning the bike without being asked but were more than happy to ask for money for their services once i got back https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...03145333_n.jpg the revolutionary vibe is strong in the village of Los Palos https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...59085786_n.jpg Maleve, one of the only men ive ever met that has the right to wear a che guvera tattoo https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...84768377_n.jpg drinks and music with the locals https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...21375357_n.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...17174303_n.jpg a little of the local delicacy, possum foetus wine https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...04279835_n.jpg keeping motorcycles inside is still a novelty but nothing has ever felt more right |
Great photos
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apologises for the poor photos in this post, the rain kept the cameras tucked away for most of this story :puke1
Back on the road again and the rain set in as I headed for the south coast of Timor Leste. Things went smoothly until I got to a village with a short, steep and one-way hill. The rain had turned it into a potential landslide zone, the only way down being with both legs out, the rear brake locked and looking for a pile of soft mud large enough to stop me smashing into the truck that was bogged at the bottom of the hill and filling the road. With the rear wheels buried up to the axle in the sticky red clay, the local men were rather optimistically pulling on a steel cable in an attempt to pull it up the slope. I like to say that they were dreaming but have since learnt that Indonesians have more than a few surprises up their selves The rain continued and so did the bad roads until it ended at a 200m wide riverbed with a river that was slowly rising as the rain continued to fall. The nearby Chinese workers camp wasn’t much help as to what was going on and the village id just passed through looked deserted. I eventually tumbled on some kids out playing in the rain, one of which spoke some pretty rudimentary English but managed to get me to understand to follow him. He took me to the temporary bypass track that looked as though it had been temporary for a number of years. With all the rain it wasn’t much more than a muddy track and I had about as much hope of getting up it as I had the hill I had slid my way down. Trapped between two unrideable slopes and with the rain still falling, I gave up for the day and was led back to the small hut that the kids occupied, all 8 of them along with their parents. They gave me a small patch of grass to put my tent on while the father cut two of the biggest palm leaves ive ever seen to be used as a cover for my bike. While putting a couple of leaves on my bike doesn’t seem like much, the fact that he was willing to go out into the rain just so he could help protect the property of a complete stranger spoke volumes about the culture of these people. Eventually I’m all set up for the night and changed out of my muddy riding gear when the mother of the kids come over to hand me a bowl of instant noodles and some kind of unidentifiable meat. It tastes amazing and curiosity get the better of me so I ask what the mystery meat is and am promptly shown the empty shell of a sea turtle laying next to the remains of a fire. Not something I ever thought I would get the opportunity to eat. We spend the night laughing about how we cant understand each other and I teach some very basic English to the kids. The next morning I’m farewelled with more turtle meat and even some turtle eggs cooked inside lengths of bamboo over the fire. During the night, the rain stopped and its under clear skies that I tackle the muddy slope that forced me to call it a day only 12hrs before. https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...05814657_n.jpg the families hut that managed to sleep 8 people https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...79909249_n.jpg a shot of the kitchen area https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...41644174_n.jpg the all natural bike cover. it doesnt pack down real small but the price is about right https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...66231417_n.jpg the most exotic food scraps ive ever seen https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...42997077_n.jpg the guys standing on my right is a grown adult and a pretty common height for these parts http://vimeo.com/85722360 More here: http://oztoice.wordpress.com/2012/01/03/nye-2012/ |
Timor Leste is heaven for camping. Being less populated than other parts of SE Asia, there’s plenty of land to pitch a tent on, be it on the beach or up high in the mountains. Be careful on the beaches though as salt water crocs inhabit these waters too, something I got warned about after the locals saw me bathing in the ocean one afternoon.
One of the strangest things was the peoples reaction to me camping there. Naturally they want to check out all the weird gear that I’ve got but generally not before asking if they can come and look. Even when camped in the fields they keep their buffalo in, they would stand some way off just watching and waiting for me to signal them over before approaching. It was almost like they respected my own space. Or maybe they are just wary after 250 years of having their land and resources taken from them by foreigners and are a little wary about why I’m here too. https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...day-85-070.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...day-87-005.jpg camped by the beach as the sun sets behind me https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...day-92-229.jpg flowers at 2000m https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...day-92-340.jpg one of the more memorable campsites https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...day-93-098.jpg wild horses running through the mountain tops at first light https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...day-93-195.jpg visitors were always super curious. would have been great to have a better conversation that "Hi. Robert. Australia" then laughing https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...day-85-070.jpg cooking in the tent is a no-no but cooking from inside the tent is still ok https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...92-382_3_4.jpg a HDR shot of the sunset from 2000m More here: https://oztoice.wordpress.com/2012/0...n-timor-leste/ |
Riding a motorbike around foreign countries give a unique insight into the culture that your immersed in, unlike package holidays or following the tourist trail, armed with a copy of *insert mass produced travel guide here*. I still get to see all the touristy spots but also get to see all the pieces in-between that haven been set up to accommodate for tourist and maintain a more genuine feel.
The story was no different in Timor Leste where I got a feel for how a country might work without the need nor desire for interference from a centralised government. Watching an extended family pitch in to build a new house was something of a revelation to me. They used what they could to get by, salvaging materials from other construction sites and substituting restrictive building legislation with experience and common sense. While I’m sure the house they were building would have won any design awards, it still served the same function as the McMansions back home and they probably had more freedom in its design than most people do. It was good to see people getting on with life without the need for people sitting in offices telling them how to do it. The cock fighting match was another experience altogether. I’ve never seen it before and its becoming more of a rarity in SE Asia as countries like Indonesia try to ban it from happening (countless cocks kept under woven bamboo baskets throughout Indonesia tells me the government is loosing that battle) but in Timor Leste its still completely legal and happens all over the country. Even in some of the most remote corners of Timor Leste large sums of money are exchanging hands while roosters try to avoid razor sharp blades strapped to their opponents spurs in the hope that they wont become tonight’s dinner. With it so heavily ingrained in the culture, even the kids have their own roosters that they are taught to raise properly in order to one day turn them into money making machines in the local arenas. A small table off to the side of the cock fighting arena that served as a kind of roulette table with minimal moving parts turned the former rice paddy field into a veritable village casino. https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...day-92-046.jpg the men of the family pose for a photo before i leave https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...day-92-077.jpg all concrete was mixed by hand, the stones and sand mined from local rivers and sized manually while water was carried on the back of motorcycles from a nearby stream https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...day-94-050.jpg the arrival of a foreigner at this village cock fight was enough of a rarity to halt proceedings until i had been introduced to everyone and the obligatory questions had been asked like "where are you from, how many cc, how old are you, how did you got so big?" https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...day-94-088.jpg the fighting and gambling quickly got underway again https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...day-94-120.jpg a future hopeful champion https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...day-94-189.jpg some fights ended quickly and cleanly, others were drawn out with plenty of blood and excitement from the gathered crowd https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...day-94-245.jpg when things in the cock fighting ring got a little boring, everyone migrated over to the roulette table to try their luck on a ball rolling around on a divoted surface more here: http://oztoice.wordpress.com/2012/01...e-family-home/ |
Passing through Timor Leste wouldn’t be complete for an Australian without a visit to the small and rather unremarkable village of Balibo. Most people will never have heard of the place but this is where the Indonesian government of 1975 first invaded Timor Leste, which began 25 years of military rule that resulted in the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Timorese. Australians will know it as the place that 5 journalists reporting on the invasion for Australian news channels were murdered by the invading military and the proof of what happened destroyed when their bodies and footage were burnt. It was also the beginning of the Australian governments dubious history with Timor Leste as they turned a blind eye to the murder of the Australian journalists and the Timorese people.
https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...day-94-386.jpg https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...day-94-399.jpg a couple of locals by the roadside https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...day-94-493.jpg with very little support from the government, this family were walking back home after clearing a large tree off the road using only their parangs (machetes) https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...49260332_n.jpg pretty standard fuel stop in these parts https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...day-95-125.jpg a very old and very cool looking truck that looked like it had been parked up for a while https://oztoice.files.wordpress.com/...day-95-145.jpg this was a buffalo about 2 hrs before this. now its almost dinner https://vimeo.com/94924137 more here: http://oztoice.wordpress.com/2012/01/12/balibo/ |
Excellent pics & report Rob :thumbup1:
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