Wanderlust

The Spice islands

I cursed Christopher Columbus. It was because of him that I was dragging myself up this confounded volcano: scrambling along a path of shifting scree, grabbing at tree roots to secure myself as I slipped yet again.

“Bloody Columbus!” I grazed my elbow after walking into a sticky spider web in the pre-dawn half-dark. It was all his fault. His success had inspired my first travels; his failure had led me here, to the slopes of the Gunung Api volcano. The explorer had spent a lifetime trying to reach the Banda archipelago – this corner of Indonesia’s Spice Islands. But Columbus had landed on Hispaniola instead, half a world away.

Inspired by him, I’d tried to visit the Spice Islands for decades. They were too expensive to reach from Bali in my backpacker days and too difficult when I returned with more money many years later. But local airlines now fly in, connecting with traditional sailing schooners – small wooden ships with distinctive dark sails unique to Indonesia and the Philippines – like my ship, the . For centuries Indonesians slept on the deck of the original , leaving the hold for cargo and cockroaches. But with private cabins, was boutique-hotel comfortable, my temporary home for a ten-day, 700km cruise around Banda and the forest-swathed archipelago of Raja Ampat – islands sprinkled like mossy pebbles in the deep sea around Papua New Guinea. As it turned out they could be deceptively steep, especially in the dark.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Wanderlust

Wanderlust1 min read
Five More Indigenous Communities In Costa Rica
One of Costa Rica's largest Indigenous groups (nearly 17,000), the Cabécar people reside in the remote Talamanca mountains. They are a matriarchal community, who maintain centuries-old knowledge of the forests and trails, passing it down the generati
Wanderlust1 min read
Vienna Exhibitions
The Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien's Rembrandt–Hoogstraten: Colour and Illusion (until 12 Jan 2025) exhibition creates a dialogue between two 17th-century artists of the Dutch Golden Age, exploring the relationship between the master (Rembrandt) and h
Wanderlust3 min read
Edo Dining In Modern Tokyo
Japan's Edo period (1603–1868) is defined by the shogunal decree of national isolation that began in 1633 with the first of a series of edicts; the country only began to reopen in 1853, 220 years later. It was during this era that the Japanese honed

Related Books & Audiobooks