Storyteller, Author, Publisher, Photographer, Human Rights Activist, Social Justice Campaigner and sometime poet
'Pa Joe's Place' Reviews
▼
3 April 2020 - SPIDER WEB RICE FIELDS IN INDONESIA
SPIDER WEB RICE FIELDS
IN
INDONESIA
G'day folks,
The unique design of these rice fields was created by the traditional way communal rice paddies were divided up among the indigenous people.
The colorful rice paddies found throughout Asia are commonly laid out
in rectangular plots, or sometimes as stepped terraces, adding to their
natural beauty. On the island of Flores, however, the rice fields form a
delightfully unique shape, one that looks like a giant spider web.
This wonderful insect resemblance was not intentional, but rather the
result of the traditional communal agriculture of the
indigenous Manggarai people. Centuries ago, the cultivated land, known
as lingko, was shared by the entire village. The communal fields were circular, with the lodok at the center, where ceremonial rituals were held around the harvest.
Each family was allocated a segment of the rice field, radiating from
the center outward. (Each was inaugurated by the sacrifice of a water
buffalo.) The more resources a family had, the larger their slice of the
pie; at the time, the rice fields were shaped like pie charts. Later,
the paddies were further subdivided by the decedents of the original
owners, leading to the striking, web-like shape of the lingko today.
Clancy's comment: I've photographed some of these in Bali. The trip up the mountains was not easy, but my first view of these was just gob smacking.
Hmmm, certainly interesting looking from abave. What did they use to separate each section?
ReplyDeleteFrom what I have seen it is a narrow waterway or gutter.
DeleteCT