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Old Man of the Forest

by Mark Eveleigh

For the moment Gunung Leuser is still probably the best place to see this most enchanting of apes in the wild

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Gunung Leuser, in northern Sumatra, is one of the biggest national parks in the world. Its steep, rainforested valleys and hills are home to gibbons, monkeys, elephants and some of the Indonesia’s last tigers and rhinoceroses. I would be happy with any of those sightings but I was trekking into these remote hills because I specifically wanted to visit the orangutan, the ‘old man of the forest,’ in his jungle home.

Logging, poaching and a growing human population have reduced Indonesia’s orangutan numbers to a dangerously low level and only about 7,000 are now believed to survive in Sumatra. Most live in the highland jungles of the far north and over recent years guerrilla warfare in Aceh has further depleted their numbers. Unfortunately baby orang-utans make attractive pets and mothers are often killed so that the orphan can be adopted by people who find its child-like grief and subsequent affection for the foster parents alluring…until it grows up.

Conservationists believe that in fifty years there will be fewer than 250 Sumatran orangutans left in the wild and, since this is not a viable gene-base for a healthy population, total extinction will be just around the corner.

For the moment Gunung Leuser is still probably the best place to see this most enchanting of apes in the wild.

A steady drizzle was coming down as we climbed away from the river that runs through Bukit Lawang village. The track was slippery and tangled with roots, and my guide Adit warned me that we had a long way to go before we could set up camp in the jungle. Still, he was confident that the weather would not hinder us and that within the next three days he would be able to lead me to wild orangutans.

As we struggled, slipping and sliding, up the slope a troop of gibbons began to follow us. They swung gracefully through the canopy as if to show us how easy it could have been if we ‘higher primates’ had never turned our backs on the trees. Then, as we crested the hill, a pair of hornbills flew past with their mighty wings making chugging noises like steam-locomotives. These sightings, adding to the simple thrill of being back in the jungle, made the day’s trek pass quickly.

But the ‘rainforest’ continued to live up to its name and by the time we had eaten our evening meal of fried rice we had been driven under the cover of the large plastic sheet that served as our tent. I was woken the next morning by a family of macaques that were intent on getting at our breakfast before we did and, as I pulled on my damp clothes, a big monitor lizard slithered out of the jungle to flick his tongue around our campfire.

These visits seemed like good omens and we had only walked half-an-hour away from our camp when Adit suddenly stopped and crouched down. He pointed into the trees, doing his best to show me my first wild orangutan. You would imagine that a large, bright-orange ape would be easy to see amongst a sea of greenery, but during several sightings in the next few days I would realise just how secretive and elusive these animals can be.

Finally I spotted what Adit was pointing at - not one, but two orangutans!

The orangutan is the only ape that is almost entirely solitary but we had been lucky enough to find a mother with a young baby. It was amazing how silently these creatures were able to move. Their combined weight would have been about the same as a seven year old child’s, but the mother could judge exactly how much weight the thinnest branches could take and was able to swing herself and her baby almost soundlessly between one tree and the next.

Adit estimated that the mother might be as old as thirty-five and the baby would not yet be two. We worked our way slowly closer and neither animal seemed to be disturbed by our presence. In fact, the pair ignored us completely, at one point swinging within a couple of metres of the spot where I crouched with my camera.

I would see other wild orangutans during the next few days but the peaceful hour that we spent, sat in the drizzle, watching this mother and her baby stands out in my memory as one of the most unforgettable wildlife experiences I’ve ever had.


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