Day 2, Bandung – Magic Java

Bandung the capital of West Java province, located about 180 kilometres (110 miles) southeast of Jakarta, is the fourth largest city in Indonesia. This once upon a time idyllic, quiet town has been hit by urbanization and is now a cramped and over populated metropolitan area, a living space for over 2.5 million people!

photo credit : Jalan Braga, Bandung circa 1935-1938 wiki

photo credit : Jalan Braga, Bandung circa 1935-1938 wiki

During the Dutch occupation, Bandung was known as the ‘Paris of Java’, making it a resort town for colonials. Today, it is touted as the new Jakarta by some locals and often visited as a cool weather getaway since the temperature drops several notches. Bandung is 768 m (2520 ft) above sea level and we found it cool in the evenings and cold even when it rained! Many come here for its rich history, art deco building heritage, the shopping malls all around the city and factory outlets in Setiabudi, Dago, Jalan Riau and Cihampelas. Outdoor adventure seekers and nature lovers will not be bored as they can escape to jungle trails in Dago section of town, Tangkuban Perahu volcano to explore, Ciater hotsprings and even more green attractions in the outskirts. (We will cover these places in our coming posts)
We chose Bandung as our first destination instead of Bogor to cover more ground enroute Yogyakarta. Arriving evening in a downpour, we found shelter at Pasteur Hyperpoint – a small shopping mall with Malaysia’s Giant Supermarket as its anchor tenant. After an average tasting dinner, a purchase of a local prepaid number and a 2hour wait, the rain subsided to a drizzle and we began our accommodation hunt. Most mid level accommodations in Bandung are in a poor state. After walking out 2 hotels nearby we decided to catch an angkot to Cihampelas. Not having found our bearings in this very large town, the angkot dropped us off at a large dark intersection (most places in Java are dark). A friendly ‘lady’ on the street pointed us to Cihampelas Street (see photo attached later in the post). After a long search with help from locals, we settled on Hotel Cihampelas. A mid end hotel which had a sister hotel not too far away. At Rp280,000, this was a mid end hotel, not terribly clean or new, but it was late and we were tired from trudging on broken sidewalks in the rain. As mentioned before, the mid end hotels are dilapidated and this was just acceptable. We crashed onto the beds wishing for those nice affordable guesthouses in Thailand.
Morning. Our second day in Java and our first of the many, many, many Nasi Goreng and Roti Bakar (Fried Rice and Toasted bread) breakfasts from the hotels.


Welcome to Bandung.. !

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Bandung. We were here to experience the ‘magic’ first hand.

Funny how bittersweet this turned out to be – it was an outcome for something that was wished for but with unforeseen consequences. We were taken with the land, the people, the food but shocked by the appalling depth of poverty. Apparently, the government has made strenuous efforts to alleviate poverty by stimulating economic potential in the province through an economic cluster strategy, such as developing sugar producing centers, but this was not evident in the state of affairs around us.

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Zany, upbeat and optimistic people everywhere.

The t-shirt reads ..Young, Rich, Handsome and FREE


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BB rifles/Air rifles are sold openly by the roadside and Java seems to feel safer than Malaysia


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Traffic on Cihampelas Street is constant, ..up till 10pm even

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Cihampelas street – shopping mecca for jeans and very memorable with its giant superhero statues

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monkey business

As we made our way from Cihampelas street to the train station, we saw some interesting street  ‘performances’.

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The Indonesian government itself says that least 8 million people in Java are still categorized as poor, since 6.5 million of them are under-employed with no proper job, while 1.5 million others are registered unemployed. The poor people in the province are scattered across almost 9 thousand villages and sub-districts in 36 regencies. The number of poor people is still above the national average – around 15 percent of the total population.

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under the flyover, beggars wait for kind souls to give them money.

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my pets, my monkeys, my daily income.

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take anything, but don’t take my friends.

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Waiting

Sometimes, business is slow under the flyover.

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This is who I am

This kind-hearted person we met was a really nice “lady”. On the day we arrived, the city shrouded in darkness and rain beating down relentlessly from the above, she actually pointed us in the direction of our hotel on Cihampelas Street. Never judge a book by its cover.

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Another ‘must not miss’ in Bandung are the local snacks/oleh-oleh shops along Cihampelas street. The pisang salai goreng or smoked banana fritter is to die for.  Anyway if you are wondering which shop to buy from,  Odjolali is one of the popular snack shops. Their fried snacks are fresh and crisp and you can see them packing them right there in front of the shop. Once you enter Odjolali, you’d be amazed at the variety of snacks available. They have banana fritters, dodol, keropok (varieties from very spicy to not spicy at all) and all sorts of sweet savories. Plenty of sampling available!

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We bought many packets to eat on the long-haul between towns.

Java

The second “cannot miss” in Bandung is the infamous Durian ice-cream. Cumi shudders at the thought of eating the ‘king of fruits’ since he doesn’t enjoy the lingering stench after consumption. He made an exception this one time since he likes ice cream. In case you are wondering what’s so special about Durian ice-cream here, the Bandung one comes with a huge durian pulp (and seed) in it.  Other towns may have the pulp already blended in with the ice cream. How is it served? 2 scoops of vanilla ice cream (we actually couldn’t taste much vanilla), a durian pulp, another 2 scoops of ice cream then topped with your choice of evaporated milk, chocolate syrup, chocolate sprinkles and/or black glutinous rice. The taste was simply magnificent!  This had been one of our favourite eats in Java. There are varying degrees of  good tasting durian ice-cream since its dependent on the quality of the durian. Our 1st vendor was the best since his durian was the bittersweet variety. There is a no sure fire way of knowing which one is the best unless maybe re-visiting the same vendor but then again he might not always have the same fruit from the same source.

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animal coffins. notice the cross is the wrong way round.

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This is the same guy with the rifle in the 1st two photos.

Rifles, guns, leather, metal music and coffins.

Welcome to Columbine Bandung!

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More snacks. Various oily fritters. Banana, Tofu, Tempe (soya based) and Yam. That white one was just fried flour.

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Various dodols (gooey candy made with palm sugar/jaggery, coconut, flour) in various flavors

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A perfectionist scrutinizes the barber’s cut.. and us.

Mirror doubles as weapon.

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Street barbers only use the imported blades from Czech! Don’t be duped by imitators, homey!

Also doubles as a weapon! (hehe)

Interesting contraption above. Cumi’s dad had one that was purpose made, unlike this street version. With this one, it brings a whole new meaning to a perfect hair design since you can adjust the shave to varying degrees.

P1020269-2” Toni&Guy” Bandung

Reservations FULL for next 3months

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the huge sign on the roof translates to ” There is only one word for success.. Quality!”

Notice how dilapidated the station and the buses. Quality.

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On this entire 9 day trip, the best Nasi Padang we had was found in Bandung. This shop by the train station had the most delicious, dry rendang beef that we have ever eaten.

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This is my plate of Nasi Padang and I finished the RICE!

(Ahpa, are you reading this:P)

Nasi Padang, restaurants serving Minangkabau cuisine. Padang people are an ethnic group indigenous to Southern Sudan. Over the next 9 days, we had the pleasure of eating food representing different parts of Indonesia.

Generally speaking, we found that the food in Java tended to be sweet and less spicy if compared with say, for example food from Sulawesi. Sulawesi cuisine tends to be spicy and savory and not as sweet as Java cuisine.

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“magic java” come to take you away..

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Me, waiting for the 4848 bus to take us to Pangandaran, en route Jogjakarta

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Notice the driver sleeping behind me? This waiting room doubles up as a bedroom for the poor tired drivers of the 4848 who have done  more than a few shifts a day. It does not instill any confidence in me. He will probably be our driver pretty soon(and I was right). This is a far cry from the luxurious Cipaganti we arrived in.

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What to do? This is the fastest and soonest way to get us to Pangandaran , en route Jogjakarta and so we decided on it. Actually I am pretty glad we did this because the experience is worth a thousand words. Me and Cumi actually had a great time getting integrated into the system and we will do it again, and again.. gladly! (Anyone out there wanna sponsor our trip to say.. Cuba?! :P)

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Shake and Bake .. 4848!

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What music is Ciki listening to? Place your bets now!

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Compare and contrast the Cipaganti with the 4848 (photo before).. See what I mean?

Next stop.. Pangandaran


Books on Java:


Essentials for Backpacking:

My personal favourite read that covers Indonesia:

Bandung the capital of West Java province, located about 180 kilometres (110 mi) southeast of Jakarta, is the fourth largest city in Indonesia. This once upon a time idyllic, quiet town has been hit by urbanization and is now a cramped 20,000 people/km² metropolitan area, a living space for over 2.5 million people!
During the Dutch occupation, it was known as the ‘Paris of Java’, making it resort town for colonials. Today, it is touted as the new Jakarta by some locals and often visited as a cool weather getaway since the temperature drops several notches. Bandung is 768 m (2520 ft) above sea level. Many come here for the shopping malls all around the city and factory outlets in Setiabudi, Dago, Jalan Riau and Cihampelas. Outdoor adventure seekers and nature lovers will not be bored as they can escape to jungle trails in Dago section of town, Tangkuban Perahu volcano to explore, Ciater hotsprings and even more green attractions in the outskirts.
We chose Bandung as our first destination instead of Bogor to cover more ground enroute to Yogjakarta. Arriving evening in a downpour, we found shelter at Pasteur Hyperpoint – a small shopping mall with Malaysia’s Giant Supermarket as its anchor tenant!. After an average tasting dinner, a purchase of a local prepaid number and a 2hour wait, the rain subsisided to a drizzle and we began our accommodation hunt. Most mid level accommodations in Bandung are in a poor state. After walking out 2 hotels nearby we decided to catch an angkot to Cihampelas. Not having found our bearings in this very large town, the angkot dropped us off at a large dark intersection (most places in Java are dark). A friendly ‘lady’ on the street pointed us to Cihampelas Street. After a long search with help from locals, we settled on Hotel Cihampelas. A mid end hotel which had a sister hotel not too far away. At Rp280,000, this was a mid end hotel above our desired budget but it was late and we were tired from trudging on broken sidewalks in the rain. As mentioned before, the mid end hotels are dilapidated and this was just acceptable. We crashed onto the beds wishing for those nice affordable guesthouses in Thailand.
Morning. Our second day in Java and our first of the many, many, many Nasi Goreng and Roti Bakar (Fried Rice and Toasted bread) breakfasts from the hotels.
Welcome to Bandung..

35 Comments

  • SimpleGirl says:

    interesting post about bandung…..esp the bus travelling comparison!!! 😉

  • Selba says:

    I really love the photo of the the little boy with the little 2 monkeys… it’s so lovely and I really hope that he is treating the monkeys nicely because it’s so heart-breaking to learn how cruel those “human evils” were treating those monkeys before they can break/ use them for earning money.

    You two really did captured interesting things in Bandung 😉

    • cumi&ciki says:

      yea monkeys are not domestic animals/pets and should not be domesticated.. oh, well, this is not the 1st place we have seen monkeys kept as pets or circus pets even. it is pretty cruel even from the point of view that they are suppose to roam free.

  • Brother B says:

    does Air Bandung exist? The ‘luilian’ ice-cream really looked disgusting

  • Carmen says:

    lol.. at the first glance, i thought that monkey is a kid..

    then looking at it again, i saw the tail and then only noticed it is a monkey!! god…

    and the way they cut the hair, AWESOME!!

    • cumi&ciki says:

      the blade was from czech .. cool huh? what’s even cooler it the 1st one with the guy eyeballing us in the mirror, that shot is taken from far.. that look in his eyes came out so clear! They were incredibly friendly people, the Java-ens .. everyone was full of smiles and ready to show us things.. we felt blessed to be there

  • Sean says:

    ya, it can be quite depressing to visit poverty-stricken places. sigh.
    the nasi padang looks yummy. like a cross between nasi lemak n nasi kandar 😀

    • cumi&ciki says:

      yar, but the people have a fighting spirit and a lot of grit.. also incredibly friendly. i use to think that Thailand was the country of smiles. So too, Java!
      Nasi padang is my new addiction ! Yarmie

      • Hock Tan says:

        Malaysian too used to be have those captivating friendly quality. Unfortunately, maybe because of affluent, pressure etc., these days those smiles are harder to come by. What a shame.

        Like your write on this trip. Am considering similar journey.

        Cheers and take care

  • Brother B says:

    Not sure what you were listening but i would like to think you were listening to:
    1. Happy when it rains – Garbage
    2. Sunshine after the rain – Monday Michiru
    3. Super styling – Groove Armada
    4. Sunshine – Gabrielle (Frankie Knuckles remix)
    5. All i do – Stevie Wonder

  • Criz Lai says:

    I saw you made some hairy friends.. haha! Love your adventures. 🙂

  • minchow says:

    Love the look of this place… never been high on my limited radar but no longer! And while I too am durian averse like Cumi, I shall definitely give the ice cream a go!

  • eiling says:

    My company wanted to send me to Bandung for a conference but I’m not going. I don’t think I fancy going there… you are so adventurous la babe.

  • wmw says:

    Love all those travel shots of yours!

  • keropokman says:

    Hmmm they sell me at Odjolali? lol….
    I guess I am available in all kinds of flavour there…

  • fatboybakes says:

    awww, you aitch your rice. good girl.
    what a lovely post. so adventure like. dang, feel like packing mah bags and hopping onto the next flight to bandung.

  • More more more!!

    wah.. no wonder u got yr hair tied up. It must be crazily hot & humid & dusty there!
    Other than the food, i’m not tempted to go Java at all!

  • babe_kl says:

    beautiful pictures!

  • BaliYummyBlog says:

    Cumiiii!!!! As a Bandung girl turned to be Bali girl, I just lovvve what you’ve discovered and experienced in this so called ‘flower city/Kota Kembang’ (but you didn’t see any flower blooming in the city right hehe) , ‘Paris van Java’.
    Can’t wait to read about Yogyakarta culinary story! Don’t forget the ‘Gudeg’, Pasar Beringhardjo (buy that Batik laptop bag!)

  • gabybali says:

    That animal coffin!Is that for real?!! So scary!Where did you see that spooky thing! Did you enjoy you West Java trip so far? You’re in Central Java now ya, are you heading to East soon..Can’t wait to see your discoveries..

  • Ladyceuceu says:

    You might want to consider this guesthouse the next time you travel to Bandung:

    http://dianpaham.multiply.com/photos/album/10/Holiday_Guest_House_in_Bandung

    Nice writing, nice blog. I’m hooked.

  • Bayu Amus says:

    Interesting tips and insight on Bandung, which I can attest myself; given that this is my home town.

    Btw, if I wasn’t mistaken there’s Air Asia flight from either Singapore or Kuala Lumpur that flies direct to Bandung, to save you from the crazy traffic jam upon leaving Jakarta.

    And yes, the sad part is 4848 is the only travel services at the moment (outside public bus) to reach more inland parts of Jawa Barat, and I don’t remember they improving their service in the last 20 year ish.

    • cumi&ciki says:

      Thanks Bayu Amus!

    • andi andi says:

      Ha ha yes 4848 never improve their business, it’s a romantic family tradition business; they serve the past ha ha ha

      St (station) Hall, angkot station only serve Bandung region, but to explore West-Java inland..you can go to Cicaheum Bus Station, there are many huge bus to Pangandaran (the best service is PO. Budiman).

  • andi andi says:

    I loooove the pics and stories :P. Bring my romantic age in Bandung (I stayed there for 18 years before leaving for froze Manchester 🙁 )

    you took 4848!! woow it is the pioneer of Indonesian town-to-town travel agent. The Pangandaran line open in 1971, they still use old Australian Kingswood. The drivers will treat you like a family member when the car is broke. Unfortunately, this unique family business defer to Cipaganti’ new management that offer rapidity and luxury…

    and here a loquaciously
    for picture “Restaurant Padang”, Minangkabau is not an ethnic in Southern Sudan, but Western Sumatra.

    anyway thank you very much 🙂

  • Pham Ngoc Hung says:

    I am from Viet Nam, thanks cumi and ciki

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