With complete expectation that the real travelling part of the trip was just about to get started, we made the most of our day of Singaporean comfort, AC and excellent food before enjoying Marina Bay's light show in the relative cool of the evening in this Asian haven of organisation.
Our expectation was not far wrong as Day 31 saw us gradually moving down in the travel hierarchy from Singapore's commuter shuttle hydrofoil to Batam, to a nine hour Indonesian boat across the millpond like sea to the Sumatran mainland (many thanks to our new friend Aris who turfed some locals out to get us the best seats), negotiating a whole town who wants to get involved search of our baggage - well done Will for such imagination in bringing them onside - and finishing with a three hour cramped minibus ride in the dark along one of the worst roads we've travelled so far this trip, punctuated by the obligatory meal stop in one of the less impressive restaurants and toilets we've had the pleasure of visiting.
The accompanying change through the day from Singapore's skyscrapers, pristine MRT, non-negotiated taxis and shopping malls, to the island houses built on stilts within sight of the Singapore coastline, to the rural, mountainous paddy field landscapes of southern Sumatra told its own story, as we found ourselves ending the day firmly in real world Indonesia, cruising Jambi at 11pm in the almost hopeless quest to find a spare hotel room in this regional at best city - nice to know so much is going on here but really, could it not have been another night?!?
Day 32 was to prove even more of a travel test as again our preferred option to Jakarta was fully booked, leaving us on a second rate luxury bus for the supposed 22 hour ride down through Sumatra, over the short ferry crossing to Java ($1 saw a well deserved upgrade to "executive class", and Rob take an unassailable 1-0 lead in our best of 1 chess match - Will blames the deafening cover band), and into Jakarta. 30 hours, at least 5 meal stops, one fairly major pit stop (involving hammers, wrenches, and removal of part of the bus engine) and little sleep later we finally crawled into east Jakarta, for an ojek (the motorbike ride of your life through Jakarta's reknowned clouds of pollution and traffic jams) and busway ride into town to find our trains to Bali fully booked, a disappointment only softened by the excitment of the "18" hour bus alternative, a meal of Padang and a mini night time excursion of Jakarta's Thursday nightlife...
More next time, off for the next leg through to Denpasar, Bali - wish us luck!
Ps. Check out our updated Google Map of the route and our stop off points (click on the map to zoom in).... "not far" to go now!
Singapore - Batam: 1 boat hour / 20 km
Batam - Sumatra Coast: 9 boat hours / 200 km
Sumatra Coast - Jambi: 3 bus hours / 130 km
Jambi - Jakarta: 30 bus hours / 1,050 km
TOTAL TO DATE: 16,430 km
FUND RAISING TOTAL: GBP 3,420 including Gift Aid - please keep these Doctors of the World donations coming - click here!
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