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The Nature Reserves


Permits are necessary to visit the nature reserve which can be obtained from the PHPA office in Bogor or local offices. Facilities in the reserves are generally undeveloped and mast travel has to be done of foot or horseback. Some of the more important ones are:

Park and Gardens
The mast common form of the traditional Indonesian private garden, the so called pekarangan, differs considerably from that familiar to the West. Still found in its old form mainly in rural areas, this type of garden usually grows fruit, medical herbs and other useful plants such as bamboo.
It is often marked off from neighbouring lots by low hedges or bamboo fences but seldom entirely enclosed for privacy. Closer to the conventional eastern concept of a garden and of greater interest aesthetically, is the big "pelataran" garden which surrounds the homes of the aristocracy and other members of the social elite in Java.

Usually covered with carefully brushed river sand and shaded by tall cinnamon trees, these aristocratic gardens exhume an air of quiet dignity and bear a character all their own. Unlike the small common gardens, they are normally entirely surrounded by high walls to provide complete privacy.
Similar in concept to the "pelataran" is the alun-alun, the traditional town square which usually found in front of the ruling royal or princely house, or the highest local government administrator, the Bupati. Western influence has to a certain extent pushed aside the old traditional concept and nowadays most town gardens and all parks apart from the alun-alun are more, or entirely, a realization of the modern western concept.
A further development has been the establishment of national and tourist parks for the purpose of conservation, research and recreation in many parts of the country.

Bogor Botanic Garden
The most renowned of public gardens and one which has won international acclaim, is the Bogor Botanic Gardens, 60 kms south of Jakarta.
Laid out initially at the orders of the British Lieutenant Governor Sir Thomas Stamford Raffles with the help of experts from the Kew Gardens, the Bogor Botanic Gardens were inaugurated in 1817, after the end of the five-year British interregnum, by Dutch Governor General Van Der Capellen.
It covers an area of 87 hectares [about 217,5 acres) and has a collection of more than 15,000 native and foreign plant species, including orchids and the giant Rafflesia which blooms only once a year.
Affiliated with the Botanic Gardens are the Herbarium Bogoriense containing preserved plant species, the Zoological Museum and the Treub Laboratory.
Branches of the Bogor gardens are the Cibodas Mountain Garden, the Purwodadi Gardens in East Java and the Eka Karya Garden in Bali.

Cibodas Mountain Garden
Founded in 1862 for the study of mountain flora and fauna, it covers an area of about 80 hectares [about 200 acres) at an elevation of 1,200 metres on the slope of the Gede volcano, West Java. Attached to this garden is a forest reserve of more than 1,200 hectares 13,000 acres) extending up to the summit of Mt. Pangrango 13,000 m) and the crater of Mt. Gede, east of Bogor. The Cibodas collection includes imports from a number of sub-tropical countries.

Purwodadi Garden
This garden in East Java was founded in 1914 for the study of plants growing under relatively dry climatic conditions. It is situated on the lower slopes of Mt. Arjuna at an altitude of about 3000 m and covers an area of 85 hectares (212.5 acres).

Eka Karya Garden
Founded in 1959 for the study of the mountain flora of West Nusa Tenggara (The western part of the Lesser Sunda Islands). Located at Candi Kuning on the slopes of Mt. Pohen in Bali, it covers an area of 50 hectares l 125 acres) at an altitude ranging from 1,250 to 1,450 m above sea-level. Attached to the garden are three tracts of nature reserve covering an area of about 1,600 hectares 14,000 acres).

Sibolangit Garden
This North Sumatra garden was founded in 1974 and is situated at Sibolangit on the slopes of the volcano Sibayak at an altitude of about 500 m, it covers an area of 20 hectares 150 acres) and has a forest reserve of about 100 hectares 1250 acres) with an altitude of between 300 and 550 m. Though historically falling under the jurisdiction of the Bogor Botanic Gardens, the Sibolangit Garden has for practical reasons, been given an independent status.

Setia Mulia Garden
Founded in 1955 at Padangtinggi on the slopes of the Bukit Barisan mountain range in West Sumatra. It covers an area of 60 hectares (150 acres) at an elevation of 350 to 900 m. Attached to it is a nature reserve of about 3,000 hectares 17,500 acres).

The Orchid Garden
Apart from those in the Bogor Botanic Gardens, which serve a mainly scientific and experimental purpose, commercial orchid gardens are found in Jakarta at Slipi and in the Taman Mini Indonesia Park. produces some of the most exotic archid species, including the black orchid (bualagna pandurata) which grows in the Kersik Luway reserve of East Kalimantan.

Taman Mini Indonesia Indah
Opened in 1975, this 120 hectares 1300 acres) park called Taman Mini Indonesia Indah [Taman Mini for short) presents the cultural and ethnic diversity of the Indonesian archipelago in permanent exhibits of traditional architecture representing the 27 provinces of the country. The pavillions are life size replicas of the most famous samples of traditional architecture found in each province.
Moreover, the pavillions are set within a man-made environment approaching as closely as possible to the native natural environment of the province in question.
Performances of traditional art and folk theatre are held regularly. Museum Indonesia gives people an insight to the diverse life-styles of the various Indonesian ethnic people.
Its collection includes such national treasures as gamelan musical instruments, traditional costumes and household utensils and contemporary arts and crafts.
It also has its own aviary with about 600 bird species native to Indonesia, and an orchid garden with representatives of about 3,000 species.

 



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