Part II. Rereiket River
After a sweaty sleep, we awake to our alarms at 5:30am to meet our guides for a 6am departure. Bags ready, bellies full of Mee Goreng and sickeningly sweet local coffee, our newly organised guides are nowhere to be seen. Two hours pass of dwindling faith in this adventure when Ricky (guide 1) shows up. We think to ourselves, "T.I.I".
In no particular hurry, Ricky sparks a Samporo, pulls up a seat, orders some food and goes about explaining how we need to pay more for food supplies and a cook. This is news to us but we're not prepared to let this stop our adventure. We hand over more Rupiah and make our way to the docks.
Our "boat" is an 18-foot canoe with an outboard engine and no more then 2 feet wide. Bags and supplies securely packed in the bow underneath a tarp, we set off with myself up front, John behind me, then Ricky and Alfonse (guide 2) captaining the 'ship', all sitting on planks of timber raised just above the water already inside the boat.
The first hour of this three-hour journey takes us through a gradually snaking river system flanked by dense coconut trees, jungle and a smattering of small villages. The river is about 40m wide, water is brown from the tropical storms and the air is thick with humidity and roughly 32 degrees. We pull up at one of the small villages to collect our cook, Mary, a 20-something year old woman who seems to be just a friend of the guides cashing in on our naivety. Nevertheless, John and my excitement levels are through the roof as we've gone from being abandoned by our initial contact to somehow organising a whole new program from scratch and are underway, snaking through the surreal jungle.
5 hours into the supposed 3 hour journey, the river narrows to between 3 and 6 meters wide. The bends become so tight they start to double back on themselves, water draws away to less than 6” deep and we find ourselves having to walk the 18ft canoe loaded with supplies most of the way.
7, 8 and 9 hours pass of jumping in, out, in, out of the canoe. Pushing it barefoot over submerged stones, logs and who knows what kind of tropical marine life. With the engine running, we might get a nice patch of 20m of turbulent forward movement, bouncing over the submerged objects, before we run dry once again and have to push once more. Under any other circumstances, going through something so far from what we'd been told would be smooth sailing, tantrums and dummy-spits would've occurred. However, the situation, our location and the unknown adventure of what lay ahead didn't dampen our spirits.
11 hours passes and it’s now pitch black. We’ve well and truly lost faith in the legitimacy of our new guides. Head torches on and covered in tropical insects, we run out of water to push the canoe any further, are utterly exhausted, have no idea where we are, who we’ve brought with us, where we’ll stay or how welcomed a pair of white guys will be in the middle of a jungle we know nothing about.