Jakarta is one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities in Southeast Asia. Established in the fourth century as Sunda Kelapa, the city became an important trading port for the Sunda Kingdom. At one time, it was the de facto capital of the Dutch East Indies, when it was known as Batavia.
Jakarta is the second largest city in the world (metro population 35,000,000) and the most polluted (according to our guide).
We were scheduled to arrive at noon, but during an early lunch the captain announced that we would be delayed up to two hours because our dock was not prepared. This created a problem for us. Prior to the cruise we book the included tour for a 1:30 departure and the tour was 3 1/2 hours long. After the cruise started, they modified the tour to add the National Museum (which we were visiting on another tour the second day) and increased the tour time to 5 1/2 hours. Now with the delayed docking, this would make us about 9:00 PM returning to the ship and we have a 7:30 AM tour for 8 1/2 hours on Wednesday. We decided to cancel the tour on Tuesday.
There were dozens and dozens of container ships outside the harbor waiting to enter as we arrived.
It is fascinating to me that the professional sailors on the work ships love to take photos of the cruise ships. You would think they see enough of them!
Mid-afternoon, Kay and I decided to go to the Explorers lounge to on deck 7 to read and for me to get some photos. We were greeted by the bar-man by "welcome to your private bar", and it almost was. For the first hour there were only about a half dozen people in the entire space.
I did get some good photos though. All of these were taken from deck 7 forward. As you can see, we were in the center of this busy commercial port. Jakarta port is tremendous in size. As we entered and exited by coach, it took about 15 minutes.
While enjoying the view and our drinks, we got a pleasant surprise. Danu, one of our dining room attendants, came in with his family. He lives in Jakarta and was given permission to bring his family aboard, and then he was going to be able to spend the night at home. Danu was one happy man.
On our second day, Wednesday, we had a full day tour which began at 7:30. This is our guide for the day, Nanang. He is a native of Jakarta and lives about 40 km outside of the city.
Personally, I enjoy watching the people in there ordinary activities.
I loved the rakes all the gardeners used, they seemed to be very effective.
As we made the 1 hour drive to our lunch at the Indonesian International Hotel, we saw what seemed to be hundreds of these motor-bikes with the drivers wearing green jackets. Our guide explained that these were bikes for hire, like a taxi.
The Hotel was dated on the exterior, but quite modern and elegant on the inside. I understand that at one time it was the best hotel in the city. The buffet they provided was impressive with dozens of dishes, various breads and again dozens of desserts. Unfortunately, I found the food to be sub-par to the meals we have had at much less impressive locations in Indonesia.
Here is our guide again, notice his little finger on the left hand. I caught this photo while he was doing an explanation. I had noticed the long nail on his pinky, but thought it might be inappropriate to ask about it. Instead, I did what any reasonable person would do, I Googled it. As it happens, some Indonesians wear this long nail as a status symbol. If you can maintain a long nail, it signifies you do not do manual labor.
By comparison to our standards of museums, it was pretty non-impressive, but they were proud of their displays. It had only recently been reopened after a fire in October of 2023.
As at the park, there were many, many school kids on field trips.
After leaving the museum, we then traveled for another 45 minutes back toward our pier and stopped at the Old Harbor. For me, this was the best part of our excursion. It was like stepping back in time 75 years. In fact, when I first saw the ships, I thought it was a ship graveyard, but no, these were working ships.
I watched this process for a while. These men were unloading a load of kaolin by hand.
I don't think I mentioned that we had two police escorts on motorcycles for the day. They were not for protection, but to just get us thru the city. As I said earlier, it took about 1 1/2 hours to go 20 miles. We were told that without the escort, we might never get back! And I believe it.
Thursday we spend one day sailing the Java Sea and will arrive in Singapore early on Friday. I am looking forward to Singapore, it is my favorite large city. Singapore is clean and safe with a lot of green space for a city so densely populated.
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