BadakSumatera. Badak Sumatera beradaptasi dengan baik untuk hidupnya di kawasan hutan pegunungan yang padat. Catatan sejarah menyatakan bahwa keberadaan Badak Sumatera ini terdapat di hampir seluruh wilayah-wilayah terpencil di Sumatera dan TNGL merupakan tempat dengan dokumentasi yang baik (Van Strien in Jatna dkk., 1996).
HutanGunung Leuser sangatlah lebat, seperti hutan pantai dan hutan hujan tropika. Di dalamnya terdapat beberapa sungai, danau, sumber air panas, lembah, dan air terjun. Ekosistem di dalamnya terdapat dataran rendah (pantai) hingga pegunungan.
Mendongengmenjadi agenda TNGL di hari ketiga Pekan Lingkungan Indonesia 2015. Kegiatan ini dilaksanakan di main stage Assembly Hall, JCC. Puluhan anak mendengarkan dongeng yang dibawakan oleh Mama Cella. Dongeng mengisahkan tentang Nadine, Deyva dan Kiya yang tersesat di hutan. Tak sengaja mereka melihat pemburu liar yang menangkap orangutan. Cerita berlanjut hingga Polisi Hutan menemukan []
Fast Money.
Taman Nasional Gunung Leuser merupakan salah satu kawasan konservasi yang berada di Aceh. Kawasan dengan luas lahan hektar ini mencakup berbagai tipe ekosistem, sehingga berbagai jenis satwa dan tumbuhan yang dapat dijumpai sangat beragam. Bentangan alam di TNGL juga sangat mempesona, terlebih lagi beberapa area kawasan ini pada mulanya adalah tempat wisata. Hal tersebut menjadi nilai tambah tersendiri, sehingga sayang untuk melewatkan panorama taman nasional ini. Sejarah Taman Nasional Gunung Leuser Kondisi Alam Taman Nasional Leuser 1. Letak dan Topografi 2. Iklim dan Hidrologi 3. Ekosistem dan Zonasi Flora dan Fauna Taman Nasional Leuser 1. Flora 2. Fauna Kegiatan dan Destinasi Wisata 1. Sungai Alas 2. Hutan Rekreasi Gurah 3. Hutan Sekundur 4. Suaka Margasatwa Kluet 5. Stasiun Rehabilitasi Orangutan 6. Gunung Leuser 7. Pendakian Gunung Kemiri 8. Gunung Simpali 9. Gunung Perkinson 10. Lau Pengurukan Sejarah Taman Nasional Gunung Leuser Sebenarnya pengusulan pembentukan taman nasional di kawasan Aceh Barat sudah terjadi sejak lama. Diketahui bahwa pada tahun 1928 FC Van Heurn telah mengusulkan daerah Alas, Kluet, Sungai Tripa, dan seluruh tipe ekosistem seluas total hektar kepada pihak Belanda selaku pemerintah kala itu. Pada tahun 1934 A Ph Van Ahen, Gubernur Aceh, mendirikan Suaka Alam dari Gunung Leuser seluas hektar. Setelah itu kawasan konservasi di sekitarnya juga ditetapkan, yaitu Suaka Margasatwa Gunung Leuser, Suaka Margasatwa Kluet, Suaka Margasatwa Langkat, dan Suaka Margasatwa Sikundur. Selanjutnya pada bulan Desember 1976 kawasan konservasi tersebut diperluas dengan menambahkan Suaka Margasatwa Kappi, Taman Wisata Sikundur, dan Taman Wisata Lawe Gurah. Tidak lama kemudian, status kawasan konservasi yang terdapat di Gunung Leuser kemudian menjadi Taman Nasional Gunung Leuser. Keputusan tersebut dikeluarkan berdasarkan Surat Pernyataan Menteri Pertanian dengan menambahkan Hutan Lindung dan Hutan Produksi seluas hektar, sehingga total keseluruhan taman nasional menjadi hektar. Kondisi Alam Taman Nasional Leuser 1. Letak dan Topografi Secara geografis Taman Nasional Gunung Leuser terletak pada koordinat antara 02°55â â 04° 05â Lintang Utara dan 96° 30â â 98° 35â Bujur Timur. Sementara secara administratif kawasan ini berada di lima kabupaten, yaitu Kabupaten Aceh Tenggara, Kabupaten Aceh Selatan, Kabupaten Aceh Timur, Kabupaten Langkat, dan Kabupaten Tanah Karo. Kelima kabupaten tersebut meliputi wilayah di dua provinsi, yaitu Provinsi Daerah Istimewa Aceh dan Provinsi Sumatera Utara. Adapun kondisi topografi di taman nasional ini yaitu datar, berbukit, bergunung-gunung, sampai dengan curam. 2. Iklim dan Hidrologi Suhu udara rata-rata di Taman Nasional Gunung Leuser antara 21,1° â 27,5° Celcius dengan curah hujan berada pada kisaran â mm per tahun. Curah hujan paling tinggi berada di kawasan Leuser dan Simpali, sedangkan yang paling rendah di kawasan Lembah Alas yang hanya mm. Adapun musim penghujan berlangsung sepanjang tahun, tanpa kemarau yang berarti. Kelembaban udara di kawasan ini berada di antara 62% â 100% atau rata-rata per tahunnya 86,9%. Sungai yang mengalir di taman nasional ini yaitu Sungai Alas dan Sungai Mammas, serta anak sungai yang berada di deretan Leuser-Simpali dan juga Alas bagian barat. 3. Ekosistem dan Zonasi Beberapa tipe ekosistem yang ada di Taman Nasional Gunung Leuser yaitu ekosistem mangrove atau bakau, ekosistem hutan hujan tropis dataran rendah, ekosistem hutan tropis pegunungan, serta ekosistem pegunungan sub-alpin. Ada delapan zona yang diterapkan oleh pihak taman nasional dalam mengelola kawasan ini. Kedelapan zona tersebut adalah zona inti, zona riba, zona pemanfaatan, zona rehabilitasi, zona tradisional, zona religi, zona khusus, dan juga zona abu-abu. Flora dan Fauna Taman Nasional Leuser Ada banyak sekali ragam flora dan fauna yang dapat dijumpai di Taman Nasional Gunung Leuser. Mulai dari spesies yang familiar dan kerap ditemukan dalam kehidupan sehari-hari, kelompok endemik Pulau Sumatera, sampai spesies yang tergolong langka dan hampir punah. 1. Flora Jumlah flora yang berhasil diidentifikasi di Taman Nasional Gunung Leuser lebih dari jenis tumbuhan. Flora tersebut juga bervariasi mulai dari pohon dengan buah yang dapat dikonsumsi hingga tumbuhan jenis langka. Steemit Kelompok tumbuhan dengan buah yang dapat dimakan antara lain dua spesies durian hutan Durio exyleyanus dan Durio zibethinus, rambutan hutan Nephelium lappaceum, jeruk hutan Citrus macroptera, duku Lansium domesticum, rambai Baccaurea montleyana, dan juga menteng Baccaurea racemosa. Selain itu juga ada rukem Flacourtia rukem, limus yang memiliki buah seperti mangga Mangifera foetida dan Mangifera guardrifolia. Semua spesies tersebut adalah sumber plasma nutfah yang memiliki prospek jangka panjang yang cerah untuk dikembangkan. Flora langka yang tumbuh di taman nasional yang berasal dari kawasan Gunung Leuser yaitu pohon payung raksasa Johanesteisjmania altifrons, liana dengan bunga parasit yang diameternya bisa mencapai 1,5 meter Rhizanthes zippelnii, dan juga Rafflesia atjehensis. Dapat pula dijumpai anggrek sepatu Paphiopedilum liemianum dan kantong semar Nepenthes sp.. 2. Fauna Tercatat ada lebih dari 127 jenis mamalia yang menghuni kawasan Taman Nasional Gunung Leuser. Sementara itu kelompok aves diketahui berjumlah 387 jenis dengan 350 spesies yang menetap. Bahkan juga diketahui ada sekitar 89 spesies satwa yang tergolongkan langka hidup di taman nasional ini. Pixabay Beberapa spesies langka tersebut adalah badak sumatera Dicerorhinus sumatrensis, orangutan atau mawas Pongo abelii, rusa sambar Cervus unicolor, kucing hutan Prionailurus bengalensis-sumatrana, dan siamang Hylobates syndactylus. Sementara itu ada pula kambing hutan Capricornis sumatraensis, rangkong Buceros bicornis, serta gajah Sumatera Eephas maximus-sumatranus dan harimau Sumatera Panthera tigris-sumatrae yang merupakan dua spesies endemik di Pulau Sumatera. Adapun satwa lain yang juga dapat dijumpai di Taman Nasional ini yaitu tupai Callosciurus albescens, kelinci Sumatera Nesolagus netscheri, ungko atau kedih Presbytis thomasi, dan tikus hoogerwerfi Rattus hoogerwerfi. Kelompok reptil yang paling banyak dijumpai di kawasan ini adalah spesies buaya Crocodillus sp. dan juga ular berbiasa. Adapula jenis ikan endemik yang hidup di Sungai Alas yaitu ikan jurung Tor sp., ikan ini memiliki ukuran panjang yang bisa mencapai 1 meter. Kegiatan dan Destinasi Wisata Ada banyak sekali obyek wisata yang dapat dikunjungi di Taman Nasional Gunung Leuser. Oleh sebab itu berbagai kegiatan pun dapat dilakukan dengan lebih menyenangkan di kawasan ini. Mulai dari kegiatan yang sederhana seperti pengamatan satwa, sampai yang cukup ekstrem seperti arung jeram dan mendaki gunung. 1. Sungai Alas Salah satu sungai yang berada di Taman Nasional Gunung Leuser adalah Sungai Alas. Sungai ini biasanya digunakan oleh para pengunjung untuk melakukan olahraga arung jeram. Sambil berarung jeram menyusuri aliran air deras dan ganas yang menuju Kabupaten Aceh Selatan, pengunjung juga dapat menikmati pesona dari hutan tropis serta pemukiman tradisional masyarakat di tepian sungai. 2. Hutan Rekreasi Gurah Hutan Rekreasi Gurah atau juga biasa disebut sebagai Taman Wisata Lawe Gurah merupakan salah satu lokasi yang menarik untuk dikunjungi di taman nasional ini. Panorama yang dimiliki hutan ini sangat mempesona dengan berbagai jenis flora, danau, air terjun, lokasi pengamatan satwa, dan juga sumber mata air panas. Pihak pengelola wisata juga telah menyediakan trek khusus untuk pengunjung yang ingin trekking. Trekking dimulai di Gurah, kemudian berlanjut sampai ke sumber mata air panas yang berada di dekat Sungai Alas. Waktu yang dibutuhkan biasanya sekitar dua jam dengan jarak sejauh 5 km. Ada juga menara pandang yang dapat digunakan pengunjung mengamati kehidupan yang ada di hutan hujan Leuser. Selain itu jika pengunjung ingin menikmati sensasi hidup menyatu dengan alam, maka dapat berkunjung ke area perkemahan yang berlokasi di kawasan hutan atau dapat menginap di guest home. 3. Hutan Sekundur Selain Hutan Rekreasi Guruh, ada juga Hukan Sekundur yang berada di Sekundur, Langkat, Sumatera Utara. Kawasan seluas hektar ini memiliki gua alam serta panorama yang masih begitu alami. Apabila datang di waktu yang tepat, pengunjung dapat berjumpa dengan berbagai spesies satwa liar seperti gajah dan rusa. Selain itu, pengunjung bisa camping juga di kawasan sini. 4. Suaka Margasatwa Kluet Suaka Margasatwa Kluet merupakan kawasan yang didominasi oleh ekosistem hutan pantai seluas hektar. Oleh sebab itu kegiatan yang cocok dilakukan di sini adalah bersampan di sungai dan danau, menikmati panorama alam di pantai, serta menjelajahi gua alam. Meskipun begitu sebagai habitat harimau Sumatera, pengunjung dihimbau untuk berhati-hati. 5. Stasiun Rehabilitasi Orangutan Pusat rehabilitasi satwa langka orangutan ini memiliki luas sekitar 200 hektar dan berlokasi di antara Bahorok dan Bukit Lawang, Langkat, Sumatera Utara. Menariknya tidak hanya orangutan yang bisa dijumpai di sini, melainkan juga berbagai spesies dan kelompok primata lainnya 6. Gunung Leuser Gunung Leuser merupakan puncak gunung tertinggi yang berada di Taman Nasional Gunung Leuser, nama kawasan taman nasional juga diambil dari gunung ini. Ketinggiannya mencapai meter di atas permukaan laut. Mongabay Sebagai gunung tertinggi, waktu yang dibutuhkan untuk mencapai puncaknya adalah sekitar 14 hari. Meskipun begitu pengunjung harus memastikan fisik dan mental sudah kuat karena perjalanannya cukup berat. Pendakian dimulai dari Desa Angusan yang berada di bagian sebelah barat Blangkejeren. 7. Pendakian Gunung Kemiri Gunung Kemiri adalah puncak gunung tertinggi kedua yang berada di Taman Nasional Gunung Leuser. Ketinggian gunung ini mencapai meter di atas permukaan laut. Pengunjung yang menyukai petualangan alam dapat mendaki puncak gunung ini dengan waktu sekitar lima sampai enam hari. Sepanjang perjalanan pengunjung akan menjumpai berbagai satwa seperti siamang, gibon, dan juga orangutan. 8. Gunung Simpali Puncak gunung lain yang dapat didaki ini berada pada ketinggian meter di atas permukaan laut. Lama waktu yang dibutuhkan untuk mendaki Gunung Simpali sekitar satu pekan dengan titik awal berada di Desa Engkran, lalu menyusuri Lembah Lawe Mamas. Lembah ini menjadi lokasi habitat dari salah satu hewan langka yaitu badak. Terdapat pula Sungai Lawe Mamas yang mempunyai arus sangat deras, sehingga menjadi tantangan sendiri bagi para pengunjung. Sungai ini bersatu dengan Sungai Alas yang berlokasi sekitar 15 km di bagian utara Kuracane. 9. Gunung Perkinson Salah satu keberuntungan bagi pengunjung yang mendaki ke puncak Gunung Perkinson adalah salah satu titik perjalanan akan dijumpai bunga unik dan langka, Rafflesia. Bunga ini tumbuh di kawasan yang berada pada ketinggian sekitar meter di atas permukaan laut serta hutan lumut yang mempesona. Lama waktu tempuh untuk mendaki puncak gunung setinggi meter di atas permukaan laut adalah sekitar tujuh hari. 10. Lau Pengurukan Lau Pengurukan adalah surga bagi pengunjung yang tertarik menjelajahi gua alam. Pasalnya di kawasan ini ada banyak sekali gua seperti Gua Pintu Air. Gua Pintu Angin yang merupakan gua terpanjang dengan lorong sejauh 600 meter berlubang vertikal. Ada pula Gua Palonglong yang juga mempunyai lubang vertikal, Gua Patu, Gua Pasar, Gua Rizal, Gua Pamuite, dan Gua Pasugi. Cara untuk mencapai lokasi ini jika tidak membawa kendaraan pribadi yaitu dimulai dari kota Medan dengan menumpangi bus jurusan Bukit Lawang. Setelah itu pengunjung dapat menyewa mobil yang biasanya berjenis Jeep Land Rover. Perjalanan kemudian dilanjutkan menuju Dusun Tanjung Naman sekitar satu jam. Setelah itu barulah berjalan kaki menuju Lau Pengurukan kurang lebih dua jam.
Stretching into the northern province of Aceh on Sumatra, Gunung Leuser National Park is home to Sumatran orangutans one of the two endemic species to this island, Thomas-leaf monkeys endemic to the Leuser rainforests, bands of macaques, hornbills, sun bears, unique butterflies and the last remaining populations of Sumatran elephants, tigers and rhinos. This rainforest is a treasure of biodiversity, impenetrable and covered by a dense tree canopy, but under threat from oil palm plantations, illegal logging, population pressure and wildlife poaching. On one side of the park the busy tourist season brings in more visitors than is probably sustainable, while on the other it brings barely enough for it to be a real alternative to other lucrative activities. As is the case in most parts of Indonesia, the choices we make as visitors here represent the difference between tourism as a harmful activity, and tourism as a catalyst for improved livelihoods of locals and for preservation of biodiversity. SEE OUR PHOTO STORY FROM GUNUNG LEUSER NATIONAL PARK FOR MORE INSPIRATIONGETTING THERE The main gateway community to the park is the charming village of Bukit Lawang in the North Sumatra province. Heading into the Aceh autonomous province, the best option for accessing the park is from the small village of Ketambe. In both cases the closest major airport and city is Medan. If youâre flying from Jakarta there will be plenty of direct flights from which to choose that can get you to Medan. Indonesian airlines donât have the greatest reputation for safety, but luckily we didnât experience any negative events. From Medan there are cheaper public transportation options to Bukit Lawang, but some say itâs a bit of a hustle and not really suitable for late arrivals. Guesthouses and hotels in Bukit Lawang can also arrange private transportation to the village that includes airport pick-up. This option should be around US $40-$50 per ride in 2018, and if it suits your budget we would definitely recommend it. It takes several hours to reach Bukit Lawang from the airport in Medan, not because the distance itself is very long, but due to traffic and road conditions. We arranged our transportation through the guesthouse, Samâs Bungalow. Once in the village someone from your accommodation will likely wait for you to take you to where youâll stay, as the side of the village where most of the tourist accommodation is located can only be reached by foot. From Bukit Lawang we had to make our way to Ketambe, in Aceh, and opted for a shared ride which was also arranged through Samâs Bungalow. This is a long trip, which takes up to 9 hours, so it will not be a comfortable, easy day and the traffic will seem chaotic and aggressive. The public transportation alternative will take longer in minibuses that wonât be much more comfortable than a crammed car, but they will be cheaper. Reaching Ketambe on public transport from Bukit Lawang could take two days. Going back to the Medan airport from Ketambe we arranged for a private ride which cost us around US $60 and lasted about six hours. GATEWAY TOWNS/WHERE TO STAY This map will come in extremely handy and it takes some time surfing the web for it. Itâs the best we could find and includes the range of activities available at each gateway community. Bukit Lawang is the most famous tourist village with lots of accommodation options, giving you access to the east side of the national park. It became so famous because it was the location of the Bohorok Orangutan Rehabilitation Center which functioned as a rescue and rehabilitation facility from the late 70s up until the early 2000s. They have successfully reintroduced several dozens of orangutans into the rainforest close to Bukit Lawang, which is why trekking here almost guarantees orangutan sightings these sightings come at a cost though; continue reading below about the issues in Bukit Lawang. In the past the orangutans used to return to a feeding platform daily, which would help supply them with extra nutrients and help the staff monitor the state of the newly released apes. Visitors were allowed to come at the feeding platform and watch the orangutans assemble in the morning and afternoon, but this activity has stopped in 2016. Although the platform was shut down, a lot of the older orangutans that were part of the rehabilitation centerâs program are still used to human presence and associate it with food. We arrived in Bukit Lawang in mid-April, outside of the fruit season. When the trees have fruits wildlife is easier to see, but visiting outside this season meant smaller crowds on the trails around Bukit Lawang. We stayed at Samâs Bungalow, which also has an excellent restaurant suitable for any meal of the day. Samâs family and all his staff and guides are either from Bukit Lawang or from the surrounding villages. He and his guesthouse manager helped us book everything we needed and connected us with one of the most respected guides in Bukit Lawang, Wanda. Wanda is related to Sam and has in the meantime opened his own guesthouse just outside Bukit Lawang. Another gateway community on the east side of the park is Tangkahan, at the meeting point of the Buluh and Batang rivers. This is where a lot of the oil palm plantations have taken over the natural habitat and have set fires that destroyed the forests. Amid the destruction there is still secondary forest here with mix dipterocarp vegetation, where orangutans, elephants, and sometimes even tigers can be spotted along the rivers. The main attraction in Tangkahan is a patrol of tame elephants used by the parkâs rangers to mitigate human-wildlife conflict to patrol the rainforest, but nowadays they seem to be there mostly as a tourist attraction. Visitors can ride the elephants and meet the rangers in Tangkahan, but as far as we could figure many guides in Bukit Lawang seem to think that this activity is in a grey area of ethics and sustainability. As a result, we avoided the experience because we couldnât find anyone to confirm that itâs beneficial to conservation. In general, elephant rides at any destination hardly go well with the idea of ethics and humane treatment. In Aceh, in the central part of the national park, your best option for a gateway community is the small village of Ketambe, a low key destination on the Alas river, where the Ketambe Research Station is located. This station, unlike the one in Bukit Lawang, was dedicated specifically to research and remains closed to tourists. In Ketambe we arranged accommodation at the Thousand Hills guesthouse owned by Joseph, who speaks English very well. Everyone working there was very friendly, and they had some excellent nature books and good food. The village of Ketambe is very small and doesnât have a lot of alternatives for eating out or for buying supplies. We arranged our trips into the national park through the guesthouse, which has started working with most guides in Ketambe that have a good reputation. Further north and much more off-the-beaten path lies Kedah, a village that has started to enter the radars of adventure travelers that want to go deeper into the national park or climb Mount Leuser, hiking through the pine forests. It is located nearby Blangkejeren where there is a small office of the national park. By car it takes at least another four hours to reach from Ketambe. We have no experience regarding the west side of the national park, but it seems like the only gateway settlement is the Ujang Padang Village from where an 8-hour ride by boat would get you to the Laot Bangko Lake where there are no tourist developments. However, itâs really hard to find proper information regarding this destination. The west side closer to the ocean is also at a higher risk of destruction caused by oil palm plantations. ABOUT THE PARK & WHEN TO GO There are so many iconic species to see in this national park that you could spend a lifetime returning to see them all, provided that their habitats will survive the expansion of oil palm plantations, poaching, road construction and illegal logging. The last years have seen an improvement in protections, but there is still much to do. The good part is that, given the chance, the rainforest returns quickly and the original vegetation takes over previously cleared lands. Gunung Leuser is named after one of the mountains which rises prominently in the northwest of the national park, and is a protected area roughly shaped like two lungs spreading over 1 million ha million acres of rainforest, pine forest and alpine habitat, lowland dipterocarp forest, peatlands and mangroves. It was designated a national park in 1980, one of the first five in the country. The park, together with two other national parks is also a UNESCO World Heritage Site, known as the Tropical Rainforest Heritage of Sumatra. And since the mid-2000s, responding to local and international efforts by various NGOs, local governments have agreed to recognize and strive to protect an area more than double the size of Gunung Leuser National Park, known as the Leuser Ecosystem. There are almost 4,000 species of plants residing in what is Southeast Asiaâs largest expanse of rainforest, with giant rafflesia flowers, impressive strangler figs, ancient banyans and other dipterocarp tree species with massive buttress roots, towering above the canopy at 60 m 200 ft high, and connected by thick, twisted lianas. The thick vegetation of the rainforest and the many emergent tree species that rise above the canopy do a tremendous job of hiding wildlife. Spotting any of the 380 species of birds, 194 reptiles and amphibians or the almost 130 species of mammals that live in the park will be a hard-won victory. This is especially true if youâre visiting outside the fruit season, when strangler figs and other fruiting plants have already finished sharing their bounty. Coming here during the fruit season, roughly November to February and usually peaking in December-January, will offer better chances of catching a glimpse of the stunning hornbills, wild Sumatran orangutans and maybe some elusive siamangs. This is also when the wet season is in full swing, so heavy rains will be part of the daily experience and should last until March. However, when we arrived in mid-April we still experienced a good amount of rain. For a more insightful look into the ecology of the national park, you can check this online guide from the Orangutan Information Centre. VISITING THE PARK The trails in the Gunung Leuser National Park are unmarked and intricate â a maze difficult to solve â with steep and slippery ups and downs, which is why venturing long distances without a guide is not advised and against the parkâs policies. There is an entrance fee around US $20 which can be paid as part of the price of the guided trip. There are several types of trips from every gateway into the park, with many one day options, 2D1N, 3D2N and even longer. There is the possibility to go on a weeklong trek on an off-the-beaten-path trail which connects Bukit Lawang to Ketambe, a wilder experience with higher chances of spotting the more elusive species that stay away from human settlements. Guides will provide all the sleeping and food arrangements. Wild camping on your own is against park policy. Prices for guided trips vary they arenât dirt cheap but not expensive either and start at around US $40 pp for a day trip. Cheap services in sensitive conservation areas like Gunung Leuser can be the reason why those areas become endangered from excessive tourism when we visited in the low tourism season we did not witness such prevalent destructive behaviors as described in this article, but did see some illegal practices from a few guides and tourists. Although Gunung Leuser is home to so many species that are considered âiconicâ, like Sumatran orangutans, tigers, rhinos and elephants, you have to bear in mind that most of them shy away from human presence, have plenty of space to hide and survive today in very small numbers. Most of them are only seen by camera-traps. Orangutans, however, are not a rare sight, especially in Bukit Lawang. Visiting the park from here can almost guarantee a sighting, and that can be a problem. Most of the orangutans seen around Bukit Lawang were part of a rescue and reintroduction program at the center across the Bohorok river. Since 1978 theyâve been recovered by authorities from the pet trade, from forests cleared for other developments, and in general from difficult situations. They were prepared for a long time to be released into the forest and take on to a semi-wild existence. For decades they were fed twice a day on a platform at the center, where visitors could come and watch. This practice has stopped in the past few years due to controversial practices, but many guides will use to their advantage the orangutansâ habituation with the idea of humans giving them food in order to get their clients up close to the animals. Thatâs why you should say up front when youâre looking to book a tour with a guide that you specifically donât want them to feed or interfere with wildlife. Wanda, our guide, is one of the oldest in the national park and frowns upon these practices. Many of the orangutans you will see around Bukit Lawang wonât behave fully wild â they may approach you and sometimes walk around at ground level, but the encounter with them is still a moving one. Youâll share the trails with more people than in Ketambe and certainly than in Kedah, but itâs still a good introduction to the national park if done with the right guide and with the right intentions. These orangutans are mostly survivors of traumatic experiences, and one female in particular, Mina pronounced Meenah, has a bad reputation of behaving unexpectedly and attacking guides if they refuse to give her food. According to Wanda, however, Mina has been an excellent mother in the wild and has successfully raised several offspring. On the less visited side of the park, in Ketambe, the trails get even harder to follow and the leeches are much more determined to hitch a ride in your socks, shirt or on the neck. This is a place where the eyes of your guide will make a difference, because wild orangutans arenât as keen to show themselves to human visitors, and they keep to their nests up in the canopy. Hiking or backpacking from Ketambe is a wonderful experience despite the mud and leeches and the only minus are the campsites, where garbage and plastic pollution by the river are a common sight. Once again, given that the rangersâ presence and the infrastructure are limited, it all depends on the visitors and the guides they choose, in order to leave behind the places better than when they found them. We hiked for a few days with Said pictured, the guide recommended by Joseph at the Thousand Hills guesthouse, and it was an excellent experience. He is from Ketambe, proud to be a guide in Gunung Leuser National Park, and with a desire to contribute to its betterment. He spoke up to younger guides that werenât collecting their garbage and packed out what we collected around the campsite from others. With plenty of temptation to make quick money from helping collectors to poach precious wildlife like hornbills, local people like Said make a huge difference in keeping these practices at bay and in understanding that their livelihood is connected to the wellbeing of the species that exist in the park. In bringing our money as visitors to places like Ketambe we can help people like Said to continue guiding in and caring for the national park, as long as we do our part and put no unnecessary pressure to get close to wildlife, leave no garbage behind or not care whether the places we explore will survive into the future. If you have any questions or want to get in touch, donât hesitate to contact us or to send us an email at contact
pada hutan gunung leuser terdapat khas hutan