Gallery: Indonesia's tree of 1,000 uses

When Alexander Haninuna was born, his first meal was the juice from a lontar 
palm in his backyard. When he dies, he will be buried in a coffin made from the 
wood of the same tree. 

And all through his life he will be indebted to this "tree of life" for everday 
products such as mats, containers for watering the garden, trays for winnowing 
rice, fans, umbrellas, belts, knife-sheaths, thatch, cigarette papers and even 
bags for transporting chickens to market.

Haninuna, now 49, lives on Roti, the southernmost island of the Indonesian 
archipelago and home to thousands of lontar palms, one of the planet's most 
efficient sugar-producing trees. 

Roti has suffered from surface erosion for many years, and in a great example 
of ecological efficiency the Rotinese have learnt to utilize the tens of 
thousands of lontar palms that have colonized their soil-depleted environment. 
Climbing trees not just for kids

Climbing and tapping the lontar is strictly a male activity and boys begin by 
practicing on shorter palms -- the trees can eventually grow to 30 meters -- at 
an early age.

>From the age of 15 if they climb and work hard, they can win the respect of 
>their family and community, and in particular the adoration of the opposite 
>sex. 

The treasured juice from the palm is called tuak manis, and forms a staple for 
the Rotinese, especially when other foods are unavailable. Two or three trees 
are enough to support a family -- each tree can yield 200-400 liters of juice 
each year for up to 35 years. 

Like most Rotinese men, Haninuna is an expert climber and has been scampering 
up and down these trees since he was a teenager. 

Because of the lontar, Roti and nearby Savu are the only islands in eastern 
Nusa Tenggara that do not experience lapar biasa -- the annual food shortage.
1,000 uses and counting

Roti island tree of life
The leaves of the lontar palm are also used to make ceremonial hats, as 
Alexander Haninuna wears here.
Tuak manis is the first nutrition that a newborn Rotinese baby receives, even 
before its mother's milk. And when a Rotinese dies, he or she will be buried in 
a coffin made from the hollowed-out trunk of the palm. 

Tuak manis can also be cooked to produce gula lempeng -- delicious biscuits of 
set brown sugar.

The leaves are never wasted. Houses are re-roofed every four to five years, and 
the old thatch is burnt in the garden to fertilize it. 

The lontar is also used to make hats called tilangga for different occasions, 
ranging from everyday use to celebrations.

The lontar leaf also provides the Rotinese with a unique musical instrument 
called the sasando; the leaf is fashioned into a hemispherical sounding board 
into which a copper-stringed bamboo tube is inserted, producing a harp-like 
sound when plucked.

When the "tree of life" finally becomes old and unproductive, the trunk, which 
is stronger than coconut, can be shaped into house beams, posts and rafters or 
hollowed out for coffins or pig-feeding troughs.

 

getting there

Access to Roti (also spelled Rote) is via Kupang in Timor. Merpati Airlines 
flies  from Jakarta and Denpasar (Bali) to Kupang (www.merpati.co.id). A 
passenger ferry sails daily between Kupang and Pantai Baru, a small 
mangrove-fringed bay on the northwestern side of Roti.

Public transport on Roti can be slow and unpredictable. If you are lucky you'll 
find a bus going in the right direction, otherwise the other main option is a 
truck. This is the stuff that adventurous travelers revel in. Seated on a 
wooden plank high in the back of a truck with pigs, chickens and villagers as 
fellow passengers, you'll get great views and make rewarding friendships.

Read more: Gallery: Indonesia's tree of 1,000 uses | CNNGo.com 
http://www.cnngo.com/explorations/life/indonesia-tree-1000-uses-419913?hpt=C2#ixzz1Jb2KpT6N




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