Australian Geographic

Spice of life

WE’RE ON A forest trail climbing Gamalama, a 1715m-high volcano in eastern Indonesia. Our goal is Afo, which, at more than 400 years old, is said to be the world’s oldest clove tree. The mossy path edges past a mountain stream where orchids greet us with wand-like spikes of creamy yellow flowers.

Higher up, beneath the forest canopy, there are cooling breezes, a hubbub of birdsong, and lacewing butterf lies flitting between plants. We make it only as far as Afo’s younger sibling, Cengkeh, a 200-year-old, mostly bare-limbed relic. But no matter – just being here, deep in the ancestral forest of the spices that changed the world is inspiration aplenty.

This outing is a chance to shift tempo. Since sunrise, when our ship, Coral Discoverer, had eased into the passage between the volcanic peaks of Ternate and Tidore islands, my 39 fellow passengers and I have been on the go.

Once ashore in Ternate city, we were ushered through the hectic downtown to Fort Tolukko. Built by the Portuguese during the 16th century, the fort’s stone parapets reveal a sprawling vista of iron rooftops, shops and mosque spires.

At our next stop, the nearby sultan’s palace, we were treated to an official welcome with a joko kaha ceremony

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

More from Australian Geographic

Australian Geographic1 min read
Big Picture Historic hop
THIS IS THE first moment in more than 70 years that a woylie (brush-tailed bettong) has leapt free into Central Australia’s desert country. Once prevalent across much of the mainland, the woylie is now extinct or critically endangered in most of its
Australian Geographic7 min read
Aust Most Endangered: Spreading the Joy
RECOVERY FOR MOST threatened Australian mammal species is rarely about just rebuilding numbers. It’s also about reclaiming the range they formerly occupied. And that’s more true for the numbat – Western Australia’s faunal emblem – than for most speci
Australian Geographic5 min read
Your Say
Political prisoners are nothing new (AG179). From its earliest days, Australia was used as a dumping ground for Irish rebels and anyone else who dared to challenge British authority. In the 1830s, however, events in Canada would bring a new complexio

Related Books & Audiobooks