The volcanic cone of Ijen dominates the landscape at the eastern end of Java. Ijen Crater or Kawah Ijen is another volcanic tourism attraction in Indonesia. The place is located at Bondowoso Regency, East Java. On the elevation of 2,368 meters, the place is really giving beautiful natural panorama.
The crater itself is a lake with green water which has zero pH (acidity), capable to melt one’s finger. The temperature is about 200 Celcius degree. Kawah Ijen is the world's largest highly acidic lake and is the site of a labor-intensive sulphur mining operation in which sulphur-laden baskets are hand-carried from the crater floor. It is filled by a spectacular turquoise blue lake, its surface streaked in wind-blown patterns of yellow sulphur. Many other post-caldera cones and craters are located within the caldera or along its rim. The largest concentration of post-caldera cones forms an E-W-trending zone across the southern side of the caldera. Coffee plantations cover much of the Ijen caldera floor, and tourists are drawn to its waterfalls, hot springs, and dramatic volcanic scenery.
Visiting Ijen crater is more interesting if we observe the local people doing their daily job as sulphur miners. Why is it interesting? Because the miners only use traditional tools and they should carry chunks of sulphur on their shoulder. Its weight is about 85 kilograms; they should walk up and down the caldera to deliver the sulphur to Pos Bundar, a place to weighting the chunks. The miners get wages IDR 300 for one kilogram. In a day they usually carry 85 kilograms. The sulphur is transported entirely on foot. In the past, horses were used but they were found to be less practical on the hazardous terrain. Today, the mine yields nine to twelve tons of sulphur per day.Individual loads of up to 70 kg are carried by men, often barefooted, up to the rim of crater and then 17 km down the mountainside to a factory near Banyuwangi. The porters are paid by weight. The most important advice if you are travelling to Ijen is: "If you lose your way, just look out for the sulphur trail". The meaning was clear, since a continuous flow of two way traffic, carrying the sulphur down the mountainside from the lake and trudging up again to re-load, had left a yellow trail on the well worn path.
HOW TO GET THERE:
Surabaya - Bondowoso :by bus (191 km)
Bondowoso - Sempol :by bus (165 km)
Sempol - Banyuapit :by bus (14 km)
Banyuapit - Paltuding :by minibus, or car (4 km)
Paltuding - Ijen Crater :on foot (4 km)
OR:
Denpasar, Bali - Banyuwangi :by bus and ferry (140 km)
Banyuwangi - Jambu :by minibus (18 km)
Jambu - Ijen Crater :on foot (21 km)
OR:
Just visit http://www.agro-ptpn12.com and get there via online reservation.
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