Passengers are rounded up. The larger, buky luggage gets stowed on the roof while the smaller baskets come into the main cab. A woman sitting beside me has a selection of fruit and veg I have never seen before. Finally we leave for the mountains. FOr the next 90 mins we climb through some fairly dramatic scenery. THere is some fairly intensive agriculture here. Rice paddies give way to every concievable type vegetable. Onions, carrots, Potatoes, cabbages, vegetables I don't recognise all stretch up the sides of the valleys. The landscape is a mottled chequerbpard pattern of greens and browns. People in the fields tending the crops are bent down low as they work diligently. We stop in each small village along the way, dropping people off, picking people up. Some schoolkids get on. The older lads clamber up onto the roof. We pass groups of children in uniform walking along the roadside to school. Each school has its own uniform. All the kids are turned out immaculately.
I have to change minibuses at Sukapura and we're off on the last leg of the journey. We're in the high mountain valleys now. We pass through the pretty village of Ngadisiri and crawl the remaining 3km up steep mountain roads to Cemoro Lawang. I'm dropped off at the hostel and showed to my room. Its as simple a room as you'll find. Its cold up here. We're now over 2,000m up. THere was a very threadbare looking blanket on my bed so I nicked a second one from the adjoining room hoping it would remain vacant for tonight.
Cemoro Lawang is a small, sleepy village with a dramatic location. Its perched at the top of a steep valley on the rim of a massive volcanic crater of Mt Bromo. The diameter must be a good 4 miles wide. In the center of the crater rise a number of younger craters. Gunung Batok rises up with a classic cone shape. Beside it the gaping, active crater of Gunung Bromo itself belches a constant cloud of brilliant white sulphurous vapour into the atmosphere.
The hostel overlooks the crater and the view this morning was spectacular. The smoking volcanoes stood out impressively against the backdrop of a clear blue sky. Two plumes rose into the sky. The brilliant white of Bromo and, in the distance, the grey brown plume from Mt Semeru which rises to some 3,700m.
I was tired after the overnight journey. I lay down for about 90mins before heading for the volcanoes. I woke up and struggled up bleary eyed. Outside everything had changed. The blue skies had disappeared, replaced by clouds. With this the temperature had dropped and it was quite cool. Still it was a nice change from the heat, humidity and mosquitoes. I struck out for the volcanoes. I climbed down to the crater floor and followed a small trail across 3km of flat sandy terrain to to the first of the small volcanoes, Mt Batok. The sides of the volcanoe were steep and covered in gorse. It got steeper the closer you got to the summit but it wasn't difficult following the tiny track that winds its way up the slope. I spent an hour at the summit of Batok looking around its dormant crater taking in the views, looking down into the wide, smoking mouth of Mt Bromo.
Descending Batok in bright sunshine the temperatures quickly rose while the sky remained clear of clouds. I reached the sandy base and strolled over to Mt Bromo. I was looking forward to seeing this active crater and imagined seeig a gaping mouth of bubbling lava but when I reached the crater rim and peered down it was very different. Down in the bottom of the crater there was a small opening through which the vapours billowed. There was a continuous soft hiss. Members of a local mountaineering club had climbed down into the crater and written the name of their village in rocks beside the open vent. Alongside me were 4-5 local lads from a nearby village. They had come over on motorbikes and were loungin around on the crater rim smoking and snacking on peanuts and jasmine tea. They had English and we chatted briefly. It appears its a common outing for locals to take a spin over to Mt Bromo of an afternoon.
I started back to Cemoro Lawang. At the base of Bromo there was an old guy with a motorbike who offered a lift up to the village. At first I refused but feeling tired a motorbike ride back sounded good. I went back and we bargained a price, agreed on 10,000 rupiahs, and I climbed aboard behind the auld lad. 15mins later I was back at the village.
During the evening fog descended over the village. The volcanoes had disapeared behind a veil of mist. I bumped into a Scandinavian couple from Finland, Alex and Marianne. They had arrived during the afternoon and were going to head for Bromo for sunrise in the morning. They were a lovely couple and I ended up spending the evening with them, chatting over dinner as we watched the fog become heavier, swirling around the windows of the restaurant. By 9pm I wa wrecked I would be up again around 3.30am for a sunrise trip high into the mountains so I went to bed. It was cold in the room. On top of the two threadbare blankets that covered my bed I bundled my coat and all my warm clothes over me to avoid shivering through the night.
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