Monday, February 19, 2024

Week 22: Indonesian Scuba and Chinese New Year

 

Ever since I was a little guy going to the dentist I've imagined how cool it would be to scuba - floating weightless like a spaceman, surrounded by sea creatures just like the ones in the tank there in the waiting area. Also, it was in a scuba class in college where my parents first met. So this whole idea has been pretty romanticized for me. This last weekend, I finally got my chance to go get an open water certification. 

The three of us flew to Banda Aceh, Indonesia (about an hour away) and then took a ferry (also about an hour) to the island of Pulau Weh. A couple of things I learned about this place in the lead up to our departure: 1) Banda Aceh to a huge beating from the 2004 Tsunami - of the 230,000 people that died that day, 160,000 were in northern Sumatra where Aceh is located. 2) The state is under Sharia law and is a semi-autonomous district of Indonesia. All this meant it's not really known as a tourist destination like a lot of other places in southeast Asia...I was hoping all this meant that the Lunar New Year crowds that were building in Penang and every other destination wouldn't be a thing we'd have to deal with there. 

We were not disappointed. We stayed in bungalows on a secluded beach with just a handful of other divers and locals. The only exception was one morning where a some partiers got pumped up with a speaker blasting Metallica on the beach at first light...but that was as rowdy as it got - in a strictly Muslim town where booze is hard to find and drug possession will get you 3rd-world prison time or worse. 


But besides that it was uber mellow and just right. Which was good because I'd say the scuba instruction and skills demonstration wasn't really low-key. Huge kudos to Abbi who did the whole thing while fighting a cold (not recommended) and Jo who overcame mask and ear issues. And our instructor Anna, who was so excellent at helping us master the skills

And then kudos again to all of us, when we found on our 3rd dive and final skills test that we were in the middle of a jellyfish hatch, and surrounded by about a million of them...that apparently learn to sting as soon as they're born. Arms, face, lips, neck, pretty much all of us. It was painful but nothing a little vinegar shower and Benadryl couldn't fix. Actually that part sucked. But we were still able to finish and the payoff for our final dive was 100% worth it - the fish, creatures, and coral were incredible


Here's a couple more shots from our bungalow and the surrounding jungle








Also, some cool land creatures too. Like this thing - which Abbi informed me was a flying fox. I'm pretty sure its actually Dracula - it was enormous


Our travel logistics didn't lend themselves to a departure that would get us all the way to Penang in one shot - so we ferried back to Aceh and then spent the night there. I was interested to see the famous Baiturrahman grand mosque. To be fair, it wasn't famous to me until I started looking for what people do when the visit - this was #1 on the list. 


What makes it special is that it was the lone survivor of the tsunami. Here's a pic from the internet showing what it looked like right after - protected by God from the destruction

My experience in visiting it was memorable - besides it being really beautiful, I definitely felt a little of the "what are you doing here" vibe from the locals - lots of questions about where I was from, what my religion was, and some initial reluctance to letting me enter. Once I was able to make it more clear that I just wanted a few pictures on the grounds and wouldn't go into the building during prayers they let me take off my shoes and enter. Pictures of course don't do it justice.


Following the theme of faith and miracles, I offer you our Grab (think Uber) driver while we were in town


This guy picked us up from the ferry and took us to the hotel - giving Joanna just enough time to leave her glasses behind in his car. Despite calls to the taxi company we weren't able to connect. So we wrote them off and figured Jo could feel her way home or learn braille. The next day we called a Grab - and guess who showed up! He had searched for them in his car without success. Jo slumped into the back seat and then -  voila! found them in the door pocket.

In Penang there are hundreds, maybe thousands of Grab drivers - I don't ever expect to get the same one twice and never have...fortune smiled upon us that day.

To celebrate, he played a little American music for us in the car. In a strange callback to the only other American music we heard on the trip it was....the mighty Metallica. I loved it so much I shot a little video in the car.


Lunar new year festivities are called Chinese new year in Penang. Maybe because the island is 60% Chinese ancestry. Anyway, its quite a fiesta. Even at work, where the gods of good fortune prowl the halls handing out oranges


And where Lions dance


And midnight fireworks look could pass for the artillery of an invasion (ack. Abbi for this video - I fell asleep before the shelling reached its peak

Semi- related (maybe only because it happened during the holiday week) we did a work lunch and then popped in next door to the snake temple. Where they have one of these you can befriend


One last thing... It kind of looks like a firework, but instead its a burning bus as seen from our apartment. Good news - everyone got off safely. I was interested to go check out the aftermath the next morning

I strolled up to the burn site and they were just finishing patching the hole that got burned in the road. I took a few pictures and the foreman got nervous. After I complimented him on how fast he got it done and how good the patch job looked he asked if he could pose for a picture. 
Love this place.


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