A Tight Corner

Eating cold fried eggs and soggy white bread in the convent, under the scrutiny of a spreadeagled plastic Christ and an increasingly baleful Pope, Z and I await the return of our dead motorbike from the bowels of the volcanic valleys below this highland town.

Going overland from Bali to Papua on a motorbike, with the nipper, was supposed to be an adventure.

Now, I’m a realist. I’d expected there to be lows.

But I hadn’t expected the kind of grinding tedium of more than a week of visa hassles followed almost instantly by a broken bike.

We’re on a travel downswing, no question of it. And to add a whole new level of joy to proceedings, I’m sneezing like a b.i.t.c.h.

Yes, travel is fabulous. And yes, it is wonderful to travel the world, work nomadically, and have quality time with my son. And, yes, we are incredibly lucky.

But it really doesn’t feel that way right now.


A calls me from the base of the convent driveway. The chicken bus which is transporting our defunct bike from the village where it has spent the night is approaching the repair shop, where his brother, F, is waiting.

We hurry down with him to meet it.

As the conductor, a passenger and our lads lever our poor bike through the narrow doorway, nuking one of our mirrors in the process, it dawns on me that the repair shop looks, well, uncontroversially boarded-up.

“It’s not open,” I say, roughly at the same time as a Greek chorus of bus passengers make the same point.

“There’s a Honda dealer,” someone suggests, serenely unbothered by the route variation.

“Great!” I say. “Let’s go to the Honda dealer.”

Z, the boys and I scramble onto the bus, over the bike and into the aisle, I hand over another 10,000 rupiah, and the bus reroutes through town towards the Honda dealer.

It has flying pennants. Loads of ’em. Mechanics in pristine nylon uniforms, pitstop style. Neat signs.

Things, I figure, are looking up. And the mechanic speaks amazingly good English.


I don’t know if you’ve seen a motorbike being mended. But it’s sort of like peeling the wings off a beetle. There is no bonnet, as on a car, so you strip off all the exoskeleton – the seat, the gap for the helmet, the side panels, even the number plate, till you’re left with the naked machine. And then you take out each part, one by one, and hose them down to clean them.

“I think it’s the battery,” says the guy, after a few minutes.

This seems unlikely to me, given the circumstances of the bike’s demise, but I don’t like to argue with mechanics.

He checks. It isn’t the battery.

He breaks the bike down further. I feel a waft of sympathy for our poor bike, nude and violated, the skull and crossbones stickers that Z so lovingly affixed lying useless on the panels, its parts disassembling ever further into tubes and nuts and steel…

Our guy sucks his teeth, a sound I recognize as the universal language of mechanics everywhere.

He doesn’t quite say, “This is going to cost you, luv”.

He says, “No oil.”

And then he sucks his teeth some more for emphasis.


The mechanic continues his deconstruction, turning parts into smaller parts, piling up screws by the second. The other guys getting their bikes fixed have been and gone. It’s just me, Z and the boys.

“The piston is broken,” he says. “You ran out of oil and it needs replacing.”

“Oh,” I say. “How much will that cost?”

“No parts,” he says. “No parts here. No parts in all of Flores, I think. We’ll need to get the part from Bali or Surabaya.”

Oh Jesus, I think. That’s three or four decent sized islands from here, and I doubt they’ll be flying the parts in. “How long will that take?”

“Two weeks?” he says. “A month?”

My stomach sinks. “We can’t spend two weeks in Ruteng!” exclaims Z. “There’s nothing to do here.”

“No, we can’t,” I say. “Apart from anything else your visa will expire.”

We are, it appears, shafted.

“I can’t wait two weeks,” I say, despairingly. “Is there any way you can find a second-hand part?”

“You want a second-hand part?”

“Well, if it works…” I say.

“I’ll try,” he says. “Call me at 3pm.”


At this point, all I want to do is go to bed and hide until the problem goes away. “You want to come to our boarding house for tea?” asks F.

The last thing I want to do, right now, is make small talk with the boys’ mates at their boarding house. (Their parents are farmers, so like a lot of village boys they live in boarding houses in town during the school term.) It’s really sweet of them to offer. But I can’t face it.

“I want to rest,” I say.

“You can rest there,” he says.

Oh god.

I’ve paid them some money for their help today. Not that they asked. I think they did it from a sense of duty and friendship.

And it’s not about the money, anyway. It would make the boys’ day to bring back two real live foreigners to meet their mates. But I just can’t face an afternoon of stilted small talk.

Not for the first time, I’m seriously contemplating jacking this jinxed mission in, and getting out of Indonesia and into Laos, thence to China and Nepal.

Maybe I can get some sort of cash exchange for what remains of our bike, I wonder?


Z and I jump a motorcycle taxi back to the convent. “This is a disaster,” he says.

“Yep,” I say, sneezing liquidly into our last strand of loo roll and chugging back yet another antihistamine.

“Let’s work out some solutions,” he says, pulling out a pen, paper and – amazingly – a ruler. Leaning on his Beano annual, he draws up a neat little chart.

One column is headed “Solution”. The next is headed “Liability”.

“So, we can’t spend two weeks in Ruteng,” he says. “How about we go back to Bali?”

“I don’t want to go back to Bali,” I say. “The whole point of this trip is that we’re going overland to Papua. If we fly back to Bali, we might as well bail out. And we can’t do that, cos I spent north of a thousand dollars on the bike. I can’t just leave it here. I need to get it fixed. Or sell it.”

“Oh no!” he says, horrified at the financial outlay. “Well, how about we go somewhere else in Flores?”

“That’s practical,” I say. “We could hire a bike, tool around, and come back here. But that way we don’t make it to East Timor before your visa expires. Even if it’s only two weeks, we still won’t make it.”

I realise with a sinking feeling that I haven’t heard back from the East Timorese consulate about our visa application. So the visa run to East Timor is looking sketchy in any case.

As sketchy, I realise, as the prospect of a nation the size and level of development of East Timor having someone to answer its emails, even if its website does authoritatively tell you to apply for your visa online…


“So we need to go somewhere to get a visa?” Z says.

“Yeah,” I say. “We can either fly to East Timor and fly back here, which will cost a lot of money and leave us retracing our steps, which isn’t really the point of overland travel. Or fly to Bali, get a dodgy visa, and fly back here, which will cost a lot of money, and mean retracing our steps.”

“Oh god,” he says. “This really is a nightmare.”

“I’d like to go to Bali,” I say. “But we left there.”

“I know,” he says. “I miss Bali.”

“Yeah,” I say. “I know you do.”

He has made not one entry on his little chart. “There’s just no easy solution, is there?” he says.

“Nope,” I say. “We’re fucked. Let’s just watch a movie and see what the mechanic says when we go to see him at 3 o’clock.”

Few of our films are convent-friendly, so we watch them with the volume very, very low. I drift off into a semi-dose, punctuated by sneezing fits and turbulent half-dreams involving long, long bike rides on rickety dirt roads.

15 Responses

  1. That is a complete and utter shit. It reminds me of the couple that had already spent 5 days smack bang in the middle of the Nullarbor when we passed through. Their van had broken down and they had to get parts in from Perth. To make matters worse, they were paying top dollar in a shitty caravan park just so they could pay a fortune to repair a bomb. What else can you do but wait? Well, you can cut your losses and abandon the van and hitch to the nearest city and not much else. I’m not sure what they ended up doing, but I reckon they went through some of the issues you are.

    Best of luck and I hope things work out.

    • Theodora says:

      Thanks, Adam. I think things have started to work out again… In the end, it only took him a day and a half to fix it. The real killer about it is that the oil is checked as part of the 2000k service. So if I’d done it slightly earlier, I wouldn’t have had the break down.

  2. I heard of someone breaking down in remote Western Australia. They were going to be charged $8000 just to get the car to the closest mechanic!

    Other than that – Flores! I want to go there just for the dwarf species. Is there anything for the public to go to see the Homo floresiensis?

    • Theodora says:

      We didn’t go to the cave, because a bunch of people told us it was a long walk just to see a stick where they found the hobbit. I think they might have an exhibition about it at the museum in Maumere… At $8000, I guess you just have to write the car off — crikey!

  3. Sorry your life sucks, but you know what — it makes for GREAT READING!
    I’m really looking forward to the next installment. I feel a bit like I’m in the 1950s waiting for the next episode of a radio show.

    I can’t wait to read your book. 🙂

    • Theodora says:

      Aw, thank you Barbara…. I need to start thinking about how I turn this into a book…

  4. Ainlay says:

    Yep, this is a bad patch, no question. I’d say sell the bike to the mechanic and hightail it out of there – definitely go to Luang Prabang in Laos. It has the same feeling of peace that Ubud has (living with tourists instead of living off them) and give yourself a little time to recover before heading out onto the rugged road (which are quite as unpaved as in Flores btw). The great thing about being your own boss is you can change your mind!

    • Theodora says:

      We loved Laos — we were there twice last year. But I think we’re plugging on, for the moment. I’m a little behind on the blog vs. real life thing, but we’ve made it through Flores, and East Timor coming up soon. I don’t want to bail just yet…

  5. Natalia says:

    Another one voting for a bail. While it makes compelling reading, you don’t sound like you are enjoying yourself. And you have to ask – aren’t you meant to be doing this because you want to, not because you have to?

    • Theodora says:

      I see your point. On the other hand, I sort of want to see this mission through. But we shall see. We can, of course, always bail. At almost any point (but now, when Z’s visa is about to expire). It does feel jinxed, though. We’ve been struck down with the snots…

  6. Nicole says:

    That visa thing is really stifling. I really want you to go to Papua. I’m waiting for you to get there! I’ve dealt with auto breakdowns in the developing world. A guy went to work under the hood of our truck and took every part out of it. For months and months he worked on it. We ended up getting a second truck, which my husband repaired using things things like a coat hanger. Can you sell the motorcycle in the state it’s in and try something else?

    • Theodora says:

      He actually got it fixed in the end. It wasn’t his mechanics skills that were the issue — it’s a licensed Honda dealer — it was whether he could find the relevant part. But he did, which was a huge relief…

  7. caroline says:

    Agh we’re all waiting for news!!!

    • Theodora says:

      Well: the bike is in good nick. We are extremely snotty and flu-ridden. But we’ve made it to Timor. So one more island to go… Except we have to go all the way across this one and back again for the visa…

  8. Glad to be reading this a couple of days after the fact, knowing that things turned out okay!

    Z’s chart – priceless. 🙂