TRAVEL NOTES
Colourful Becak in Tulungagung

 A number of possible routes lead from Yogyakarta and Surakarta (Solo) to East Java. The fastest and busiest follows the course of the Solo River, through Sragen and on to Ngawi, passing to the north of Mt Lawu. A southern route from Solo skirts the south side of the mountain and leads to Ponorogo. A third possibility, but only for strong motors, is the scenic mountain pass, which winds up through Tawangmangu and crosses the border at Cemara Sewu. From here the road descends to the picturesque lake resort of Sarangan and continues to Magetan and Madiun.
We chose the fourth possibility, the southern route from Yogyakarta, which passes through Wonosari and across the arid region of Gunung kidul (the southern mountains). The border crossing is at Donorejo, a village famous for its agate cutting tradition. Stone working and polishing is a popular home industry here, since the raw material is in plentiful supply. Large lumps of unworked agate, quartz and other semiprecious stone can be seen on display outside the numerous small production centres. The exact age of this craft is impossible to determine, but there is good reason to believe that it stretches back for millennia. Stone tools along with other evidence of human settlement dating from at least 10,000 B.C. have been discovered in the nearby coastal district of Pacitan, suggesting that the craftsmen of Donorejo may possess one of the longest continuous artistic traditions known to mankind.

Besides agate cutting, Donorejo is also well known as one of the last surviving centres for an ancient form of the wayang theatre. Wayang beber is related to the popular wayang kulit, or Javanese shadow play. Instead of using the flat,
leather puppets, however, the dalang, or puppetmaster, narrates a wayang story painted on a long scroll, rather like reading a comic strip. The scroll is unrolled slowly, one scene at a time. Characters and events gradually come into view on the right hand side of the picture, while the 'past' is rolled up on the left. The dalang sings the narrative and plays the part of each character.As a living art, wayang beber has all but vanished today, proficient dalang being probably a rarer species than the Javanese tiger. Some ancient scrolls, however, may still be seen at Donorejo. Considered sacred, they may only be opened at certain times, following the performance of a special ritual.Before descending to Pacitan Bay, where we were to spend the night, we stopped to visit Tabuhan Cave, where for a small fee guides displayed their musical talents, using the natural stalagmites as instruments, producing strange, unearthly melodies, not unlike the music of the gamelan.



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