SIBETAN VILLAGE
Sibetan Village from Subagan, the village
in the solidified lava flow outside Amlapura slowly putting itself back
together, a road heads west along the foothills of Gunung Agung. It meets
the Klungkung Besakih road at Rendang, and thus makes possible a round
trip in Karangasem
The island route provides a chance to explore seldom-visited villages
of the beautiful east. Women carrying loads of sweet potatoes, spices
and bound piglets, men leading cows for sale, make their way to the village
markets which teem with activity until around moon. Large markets come
round every three days, that at Bebandem being especially interesting.
A few kilometers farther west is Sibetan, rich in rice and fruit, famous
for sank, a brown fruit with the texture of an apple and clothed in a
skin resembling that of cobra. Plantations of the low thorny sank palms
cover the range between Sibetan and Selat. From Selat a back-road leads
through lseh and Sideman to just east of Klungkung.
Iseh, a mountain village where people grow rice and white onion, was chosen
in 1932 by the German artist Waiter Spies as a site for a country house.
For many years after, Theo Meier, a Swiss painter, lived in the same house
that gazes out on an uninterrupted view of the great volcano. The massive
slope is cut by deep ravines, forming serpentine shadows descending to
a wide valley of rice fields. In the landscape, hues vary from luminous
yellow, to opulent green-light of mature rice, to red-stemmed buff of
stalks just before harvest.
Wherever you travel in the east. you take away impressions of serene landscapes,
rustic villages and undulating rice fields often dotted with fruit trees,
papaya, durian and bananas. The larger festivals are amazing: temple buildings
and tall bamboo structures hung with colored cloths and decorated with
rice cookies; the swell and bustle of the crowd; women running around
with offerings; and the gamelan playing-all in worship and honor of the
gods who have made it so.
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