Indonesia Tourism Visa Information Online, Embassies Addresses Information, Borneo Adventure Tours, Reservation for Hotel  and Kalimantan Trips Online

Kalimantan Tour Operator in Indonesia, is able to serve your Golden Traveling Routes to the Deep Hinterland of Mystic Borneo / Kalimantan Island, as Jungle treks, Dayak indigenous Culture, Adventure trips in area's as the Apokayan, Kayan River, Mahakam River, Barito River, Rungan River, Kahayan River, Katingan River, Kapuas River, Mount Meratus, Kutai Reserve, Kayan Mentarang Reserve, Tanjung Puting Reserve, Camp Leakey, Orangutan tours, Tangiling National Park, Gunung Palung National Park, Danau Semantrum National Park, Kersik Luwai Reserve, Diving at Derawan Islands, Longhouse Tours, Dayak Hunting Tours, Mahakam Dolphin Tours, Orangutan safari,Safari, Safari Tours, Safari Tour, Adventure Tour, Adventure Tours, Adventure expedition, Adventure Expeditions, Expedition Tours, Expedition tour, Expeditions tour, trip, trek, trekking, Adventure trek, Adventure trekking, Adventure trips, jungle trek, jungle treks, jungle trekking, jungle trekkings, jungle tour, jungle tours, jungle adventure tour, jungle adventure tours, rain forest trek, rainforest trekking, rain forest trekkings rain forest tour, rain forest tours, rain forest adventure tour, rain forest adventure tours, rain forest expeditions, rain forest adventure expedition tours, wild life adventure, wild life tour, wild life tours, wild life expedition, wild life expedition tours, bird tour, bird tours, wild life safari, wild life safari tour, wild life safari tours, safari trip, , travel to Kalimantan, travel to Borneo, wild life travel, adventure travel, expedition travel, traveler, traveling, touring, tourism, backpack tour, backpack tours, backpacker tour, backpacker tours, backpacker expedition, backpacker safari, backpacker traveler, backpacker traveling, of the beaten track tours, of the beaten track expeditions, of the beaten track travel, of the beaten track safari, of the beaten track expedition, Kalimantan of the beaten trek, of the beaten trek, of the beaten trek tours, of the beaten trek adventure, Kalimantan of the beaten track, itineraries, itinerary, tour program, tour programs, pax, travel compagnion, travel friend, cross the border of Malaysia to Indonesia, cross the Kalimantan Border, cross the Borneo border, Tawau to Nunukan, Tawau to Tarakan, cross the border tawau, cross the border Nunukan, cross the border Long Bawan, cross the Border Entikong, fly, flights, airlines, Hotel, Hotels, tour reservation, tour operator, Kalimantan tour operator, Borneo tour operator, eco tourism tour, eco toursim tours, eco tour, eco tours, ecotourism, tours to Sabah, Sarawak etc, etc. Hotel bookings, Taxi / Car rental service, Boat rental, Flight bookings and a lot more can be arranged.
          Kalimantan Tour Operator in Indonesia,serve Traveling Routes to the Deep Hinterland of Mystic Borneo / Kalimantan Island, as Jungle treks, Dayak indigenous Culture, Adventure trips in area's as the Apokayan, Kayan River, Mahakam River, Barito River, Rungan River, Kahayan River, Katingan River, Kapuas River, Mount Meratus, Kutai Reserve, Kayan Mentarang Reserve, Tanjung Puting Reserve, Camp Leakey, Orangutan tours, Tanggiling National Park, Gunung Palung National Park, Danau Semantrum National Park, Kersik Luwai Reserve, Diving at Derawan Islands, Longhouse Tours, Dayak Hunting Tours, Mahakam Dolphin Tours, tours to Sabah, Sarawak etc, etc. Hotel Reservations, Taxi / Car rental service, Boat rental, Flight bookings we can help to create your own Kalimantan tour program. Covering Whole Indonesian Borneo. Programs are Culture, Nature, and Adventure or a combination of it. Our standard programs can be found at Tour Programs Site from where you can choose a Kalimantan tour package or make a combination of two or more Kalimantan packages. Our Kalimantan Tour Packages covering whole Borneo.For Information crossing the borders between Sabah or Sarawak to Indonesian Kalimantan. Now Kalimantan is crisscrossed by giant rivers including the Mahakam River, Barito River, Kapuas River,Kahayan River,Sekonyer River,Kayan River,Katingan River,and the Belayan River. A wide variety of montane and lowland rainforest, each an important genetic resource and wildlife habitat. More then a half of the hard wooden tree species are found only at Borneo, climbing rattan palms, vines, orchids, ferns, and pitcher plants common.The wildlife is unusually diverse, wherever you go animal sounds will follow,with luck you might see several species of monkeys, gibbons, wild ox, wild cats, flying lemur, martins, weasels, fresh water dolphins, orang utans, sun bear, leopard, snakes, hornbill birds, parrots, parakeets, and crested fireback pheasants.many kinds of beautiful butterfliesand meta llic beetles, poisonous polypods, brightly colored millipedes, giant walking sticks, but don’t forget the mosquitos and leeches and the more dangerous bees.The population of Kalimantan is diverse, cause of the booming oil, coal, gold and timber industry, many Indonesians came to Kalimantan searching for work in the last two decades. The native Dayak people live deeper inland along the river banks throughout the interior of Borneo,each Dayak tribe about 200 Dayak tribes have it’s own dialect and culture, thriving as hunters and gatherers. Other Indonesians call the Dayaks stupid men considering them backward because of headhunting and other animist customs. The truth is that they are scrupulously honest by nature, though exposure to Christianity and modern values has muted this trait. Due airstrips and boat connections the Dayak territory is still some of the most inaccessible on earth.Headhunting officially doesn t exist in Kalimantan anymore, though isolated jungle beheadings are still reported as a symbol par excellence of the procreative power of nature. Common interpretations in anthropology agree that nearly all the Dayaks tribes, are of a larger more common Austronesian migration from Asia, regarded to have settled in the South East Asian Archipelago some 3,000 years ago. The main Dayaks are the Bakumpai and Dayak Bukit of South Kalimantan, The Ngajus, and Baritos of Central Kalimantan, Benuaqs,Kayan and Kenyah of East Kalimantan, and the Ibans of West Kalimantan and Malay Borneo, Other populations are the nomadic Punan, which are live nowadays along the Border between Kalimantan and Sabah / Sarawak.Coastal populations in Borneo are largely Muslim in belief, however these groups (Ilanun, Melanau, Kutai) are generally considered to be Islamized Dayaks, native to Borneo, and governed by the relatively high cultural influences of the Javanese Majapahit Kingdoms and Islamic Malay Sultanates, periodically covering South East Asian history.Traditionally, Dayak agriculture was based on swidden rice cultivation. Agricultural Land in this sense was used and defined primarily in terms of hill rice farming, ladang (garden), and hutan (forest). Dayaks organised their labour in terms of traditionally based land holding groups which determined who owned rights to land and how it was to be used. Nowadays, the Dayaks work in the mining industry, wood industry, and plantations of Borneo.The Dayak indigenous religion is Kaharingan a form of animism which is categorized as a part of Hinduism in Indonesia. The practice of Kaharingan differs from group to group, and for example in some religious customary practices, when a noble (kamang) dies, it is believed that the spirit ascends to a mountain where the spirits of past ancestors of the tribe reside. The most salient feature of Dayak social organisation is the practice of Longhouse domicile. This is a structure supported by hardwood posts that can be hundreds of metres long, usually located along a terraced at the river bank. At one side is a long communal platform, from which the individual households can be reached. Longhouses have a door and apartment for every family living in the longhouse. For example, a Longhouse of 200 doors is equivalent to a settlement of 200 families.Headhunting was an important part of Dayak culture, there used to be a tradition of retaliation for old headhunts, which kept the practise alive. Reports describe Dayak War parties with captured enemy heads. At various times, there have been massive coordinated raids in the interior, and throughout coastal Borneo.Metal-working is elaborately used for making mandaus ( machetes ). The blade is made of a softer iron, to prevent breakage, with a narrow strip of a harder iron wedged into a slot in the cutting edge for sharpness. Under Indonesia's transmigration programme, settlers from densely-populated Java and Madura were encouraged to settle in the Kalimantan provinces, but their presence was, and still is, resented by Dayaks, Banjars and local Malays . The large scale transmigration projects initiated by the Dutch and continued by the current national government, caused widespread breakdown in social and community cohesion during the late 20th Century. The systemic and violent attacks on Indonesian Madurese settlers, including mass executions of whole Madurese transmigrant communities. Kutai National Park is a lowland forest area with a number of principal vegetation types, including coastal/mangrove forest, freshwater swamp forest, kerangas forest, lowland flooding forest, ulin/meranti/kapur forest, and mixed Dipterocarpaceae forest. This Park is also part of the largest relatively pristine ulin forest in Indonesia.Among the plants that grow in this Park are mangrove (Bruguiera sp.), cemara laut (Casuarina equisetifolia), simpur (Dillenia sp.), meranti (Shorea sp.), benuang (Octomeles sumatrana), ulin (Eusideroxylon zwageri), kapur (Dryobalanops sp.), 3 species of rafflesia, and various orchid species.An ulin tree in Sangkimah has a height without branches of 45 m, a diameter of 225 cm or a circle of 706 cm, and a volume of 150 m3. It is the highest and largest plant recorded in Indonesia.As well as a variety of plants, this Park also has a high animal diversity. Primate groups like orangutan (Pongo satyrus), Mueller's Bornean grey gibbon (Hylobates muelleri), proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus), long-tailed macaque (Macaca fascicularis fascicularis), maroon leaf monkey (Presbytis rubicunda rubicunda), white-fronted leaf monkey (P. frontata frontata), pig-tailed macaque (Macaca nemestrina nemestrina), and slow loris (Nycticebus coucang borneanus) can be found in Teluk Kaba, Prevab-Mentoko and Sangkimah. Ungulate groups like banteng (Bos javanicus lowi), sambar deer (Cervus unicolor brokei), barking deer (Muntiacus muntjak pleiharicus), and lesser Malay mouse deer (Tragulus javanicus klossi) can be found throughout the Park area.Carnivore groups such as sun bear (Helarctos malayanus euryspilus) and flat-headed cat (Pardofelis planiceps) can be found in Teluk Kaba, Prevab-Mentoko and along the Bontang-Sangatta road.Teluk Kaba in Kutai National Park is the location of the nation's third orangutan rehabilitation centre.Kaba Bay and Muara Sangkimah: marine tourism and observing animals, especially orangutans, proboscis monkeys, sambar deer, lesser mouse deer, sun bears, and birds.Lombok Bay and Muara Sungai Sangatta: marine tours and observation of original mangrove forest.Prevab-Mentoko: research; watching animals such as sun bears, orangutans, lesser mouse deer , and wild pigs.Kayan Mentarang National Park covers an area of 1,600,000 ha and is located in the far interior of East Kalimantan province. The park comprises the largest remaining block of rainforest in Borneo and as such forms a very important refuge for numerous species, including many species that are endemic to the Bornean mountain bioregion. About half of the reserve consists of species-rich dipterocarp lowland and hill forest while mountain forest ranges up to Kayan Mentarang's highest mountain at 2,000 m. 40 Percent of the park has an elevation above 1,000 m.The park is inhabitated by several thousand Dayak and Punan people who live from shifting cultivation and rice farming. Wildlife is hard to see due to hunting by native Dayaks.WWF has been working on developing eco-tourist projects in cooperation with the local people. It has 5 field-offices in settlements around the park, which are helpful for information. It also has a research station at Long Alango, north of Long Pujungan, which can be visited, and is probably the best place to see wildlife.Access Kayan Mentarang National Park is very remote and only accessible by public flights on the Samarinda-Long Ampung and Tarakan-Long Bawan routes, or by public riverboats following the Tarakan-Tanjung Selor-Long Pujungan route.To access the southern part of the Park, visitors can fly from Samarinda or Malinau to Long Ampung. From Long Ampung head for Data Dian (an approx. 5 hour journey on 13 HP boat engines). Since fuel is extraordinary expensive. However, visitor's with time can get around half the price when asking for a lift with the locals who go to Data Dian.MAF (Mission Aviation Fellowship) has flights, However, both DAS and MAF require advanced booking (minimum 1 month before departing date),and both airlines reserve the authority to prioritize seats for local citizens from around the Park - so outside visitors often find themselves stranded even after numerous seat reconfirmations. It is good to bring luggage less than 10 kg in weight when flying with DAS (DAS limits each persons weight - including luggage - at 80 kg). This makes it more flexible to secure a seat on board on last minute seat availability. MAF puts even more restrictions on luggage weight (up to 10 kg/person) on regular flights unless chartered.Accommodation There's no official accommodation, but it's possible to stay in the many Dayak settlements inside the park.Kersik Luway Nature Reserve nature reserve between Melak and Barong Tongkok, 18 kilometers to the south. The Black Orchid (Coelogyne pandurata) which blossoms between April and December, grow s on shrubs in this 5,000 hectare reserve. Many hundred of other orchid species also grow in this forest. The reserve is located 170 kilometers from Samarinda and can be reached in 32 hours by boat. Other tourist spots in this regions include Jentur Gemuruh waterfall and Kersik Kerbangan, a forest known for is wild orchids. Visitors usually stay at Sekolag Darat village.Pepas Eheng village belongs to the Barong Tongkok district, 209 kilometers from Samarinda . Plait work, rattan furniture and Tunjung Dayak statues are made here. The village can be reached from Melak in one hour by car.Muara Oahu is a district town at the meeting point of the Kedang Pahu and Lawa river, in the Mahakam hinterland. Twenty-eight villages, with a total population a bout 11,000 are found in this area.The cultural heritage of the Dayak people is very much evident at Tolan village. There are two traditional houses and a graveyard which are worth seeing. The people here live from panning for gold, looking for bird's nests and tilling the dry fields.Tanjung Puting & Camp Leakey,Tanjung Puting National Park has several ecosystem types: lowland tropical rain forest, dryland forest, freshwater swamp forest, mangrove forest, coastal forest, and secondary forest.The Park is dominated by lowland forest plants like jelutung (Dyera costulata), ramin (Gonystylus bancanus), meranti (Shorea sp.), keruing (Dipterocarpus sp.), and rattans.Endangered and protected species of animal inhabiting the Park include the orangutan (Pongo satyrus), proboscis monkey (Nasalis larvatus), maroon leaf monkey (Presbytis rubicunda rubida), sun bear (Helarctos malayanus euryspilus), lesser Malay mouse deer (Tragulus javanicus klossii), clouded leopard (Neofelis nebulosa), and leopard cat (Prionailurus bengalensis borneoensis). This Park was the first place in Indonesia to become a rehabilitation centre for orangutans. There are now three orangutan rehabilitation locations, Tanjung Harapan, Pondok Tanggui, and Camp Leakey.The orangutan of Kalimantan has dark reddish fur and no tail. As they get older, the adult males cheeks flesh out, resembling cushions. The older they get, the bigger these cheek flanges grow, giving them a fierce look.Tanjung Harapan: this is the first station in the orangutan rehabilitation process. Situated in the midst of secondary forest and swamp forest, it has a guesthouse, an information centre, and trails.Pondok Tanggui: orangutans that have passed the semi-wild phase are moved to Pondok Tanggui. There, they are closely monitored from a distance, and human contact is avoided.Camp Leakey: founded in 1971 in the middle of primary forest, this is the location for semi-wild and wild orangutans, and for younger orangutans from birth until three years of age.Natai Lengkuas: bekantan research station, and watching other animals along the river.Buluh River and Danau Burung: watching birds, in particular migrant species.How to reach the Park: Jakarta-Semarang-Pangkalan Bun by plane, or from Semarang to Pangkalan Bun by ship.Tangiling Reserve, is an Option to Find good wild life and orangutan.Danau Sentarum National Park (DSNP),is located in a remote area of West Kalimantan, Indonesia, and situated close to the Malaysian border of Sarawak, approximately 700 km. inland from the provincial capital, Pontianak. DSNP is an area of interconnected seasonal lakes and seasonally flooded tropical forests with the water catchment consisting of lowland tropical forest in the hills and flooded forest in the low-lying areas. A patchwork of various forest developmental stages characterizes the former and is a result of commercial logging, swidden cultivation, and smallholdings of rubber and pepper.The Sungai Sedik territory was occasionally hunted by members of at least five other longhouse communities and residents of Lanjak.Gunung Palung National Park Nature Reserve is a 100,000 ha (241,700 acres) park located on the southwestern coast of Borneo. It is rich in rain forest habitats and plant and animal biodiversity. It has coastal mangrove forest and fresh and brackish water swamp forest, lowland peat swamp forest, various types of lowland forest, submontane and montane forest. Until recently its wildlife populations were undisturbed.The orangutan is considered the umbrella species for conservation in the area, and is also an important ecological agent for seed dispersal and seed predation. It is believed that orangutans at Gunung Palung constitute one of the most dense and largest populations on Borneo.Currently, however, their rain forest home is severely threatened.Despite its relatively small size, Gunung Palung and the surrounding areas harbor what is thought to be one of the most dense and viable remaining orangutan populations in Kalimantan, and therefore, the world. funded in part by The Orangutan Conservancy, gives an estimate of 2500 individual orangutans - about 17% of the estimated population in Borneo and close to 10% of the world's population.The Orangutan Conservancy is very optimistic about the work of Cheryl Knott and Tim Laman at the Gunung Palung National Park, located on the western side of Borneo. They are directing the efforts to protect the forest as well as the wild orangutan population. The Orangutan Conservancy considers it a very important effort to support.

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Foreign Embassies In Indonesia

United States Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Amerika Serikat)
Jl. Medan Merdeka Selatan No.5 Jakarta Pusat 10110 Indonesia
Phone : (62-21) 3435 9000, Fax : (62-21) 386 2259
Email : jakconsul@state.gov
Website : www.usembassyjakarta.org

Royal Netherlands Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Belanda )
Address Jl. H.R. Rasuna Said Kav. S-3, Kuningan, Jakarta 12950, Indonesia
Phone : (62-21) 524-8200, Fax (62-21) 570-0734
Email jak@minbuza.nl
Website www.netherlandsembassy.or.id

France Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Prancis)
Jl.M.H. Thamrin No.20 Jakarta 10350 Indonesia
Phone : (62-21) 2355 7600, Fax : (62-21) 2355 7602
Email :ambfrjkt@uninet.net.id
Website : www.ambafrance-id.org

Finlandia Embassy(Kedutaan Besar Finlandia)
Menara Rajawali lt.9 Jl. Mega Kuningan Lot#5.1 Kawasan Mega Kuningan Jakarta 12950 Indonesia
Phone : (62-21) 576 1650, Fax :(62-21) 576 1631
Email :sanomat.jak@formin.fi
Website :www.finembjak.com

Denmark Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Denmark)
Menara Rajawali lt.25 Jl.Mega Kuningan Lot#5.1Jakarta 12950 Indonesia
Phone : (62-21) 576 1478, Fax :(62-21) 576 1535
Email : jktamb@um.dk
Website : www.emb-denmark.or.id

Kuba Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Kuba)
Jl. Opal Blok K-1 Permata Hijau Jakarta 12210 Indonesia
Phone : (62-21) 530 4293, Fax : (62-21) 5367 6906
Email : cubaindo@cbn.net.id
Website : www.cubaembassyindonesia.com

Kroasia Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Kroasia)
Menara Mulia lt.21 Suite 2101 Jl. Jenderal Gatot Subroto Kav. 9-1 Jakarta 12930 Indonesia
Phone : (62-21) 525 7822, 525 7611, Fax : (62-21) 520 4073
Email : croemb@rad.net.id
Website : www.croatemb.or.id

Germany Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Jerman)
Jl.M.H. Thamrin No.1 Jakarta 10310 Indonesia
Phone : (62-21) 3985 5000, Fax : (62-21) 390 1757
Email : germany@rad.net.id
Website : www.deutschebotschaft-jakarta.or.id

Hongaria Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Hongaria)
Jl.H.R. Rasuna Said Kav.X/3 No.1 Kuningan Jakarta 12950 - Indonesia
Phone : (62-21) 520 3459 , 520 3460, Fax : (62-21) 520 3461
Email : huembjk@telkom.net
Website : www.huembjkt.or.id

Turki Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Turki)
Jl.H.R. Rasuna Said Kav.1 Kuningan Jakarta Selatan 12950
Phone : (62-21) 525 6250, Fax : (62-21) 522 6056
Email cakartabe@telkom.net

Singapore Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Singapura)
Jl.H.R. Rasuna Said Blok X/4 Kav. No.2 Kuningan Jakarta 12950 - Indonesia
Phone : (62-21) 5296 1433, 520 1489, Fax : (62-21) 520 1486

Rusia Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Rusia)
Jl.H.R. Rasuna Said Kav. X-7 1-2 Kuningan, Jak Sel Indonesia
Phone :(62-21) 522 2912
Fax : (62-21) 522 2916
Email : rusembjkt@uninet.net.id

Philipine Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Filipina)
Jl. Imam Bonjol No.6-8 Menteng Jakarta 10310 Indonesia
Phone : (62-21) 310 0334 , Fax : (62-21) 315 1167
Email : phjkt@indo.net.id

Malaysia Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Malaysia)
2952, Jl. Bukit Ledang Off Jalan Duta Kuala Lumpur 50480 Malaysia
Phone : (60-3) 2093-7808, 2093-8102, Fax : (60-3) 253 7359

Saudi Arabia Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Arab Saudi)
Jl.M.T. Haryono Kav.27 Cawang Atas, Jakarta 13630 Indonesia
Phone : (62-21) 801 1533 s/d 37, Fax : (62-21) 801 1527, 800 5221

Italy Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Italia)
Jl. Diponegoro No.45 Menteng, Jakarta 10310 Indonesia
Phone : (62-21) 3193-7445, 3192 3490, Fax : (62-21) 3193 7422

Benin Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Benin)
38 Guang Hua Lu Beijing 100600 People's Republic of China
Phone : (86-10) 6532 2741, 6532 2302 , Fax :(86-10) 6532 5103

Belgium Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Belgia)
Deutsche Bank Building 16th Floor Jl. Imam Bonjol No.80 Menteng, Jakarta 10310 Indonesia
Phone : (62-21) 316 2030 , Fax : (62-21) 316 2035
Email : jakarta@diplobel.org

Bangladesh Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Bangladesh)
Jl. Denpasar Raya No 3 Blok A-13, Kav 10 Kuningan,Jakarta Selatan12950, Indonesia
Phone : (62-21) 525-1986, 522-1574, Fax : (62-21) 526-1807
Email : bdootjak@dnet.net.id
Website : www.bangladeshembassyjakarta.or.id

Austrian Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Austria)
Jl. Diponegoro No 44 Menteng, Jakarta Pusat 10027,Indonesia (P.O Box 2746)
Phone : (61-21) 3193-8090, 3193-8101, Fax : (62-21) 390-4927
Email : jakarta-ob@bmaa.gv.at

Australian Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Australia)
Jl. H.R. Rasuna Said, Kav C 15-16 Kuningan Jakarta Selatan Indonesia 12940
Phone : (61-21) 2550-5555, Fax :(62-21) 2550-5467
Email : public-affairs-jakt@dfat.gov.au
Website : www.austembjak.or.id

Armenia Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Armenia)
E-1/20 Vasant Vihar New Delhi 110057, India
Phone :(91-11) 614 7328, 615 3031
Email : armemb@vsnl.com

Argentina Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Argentina)
Menara Mulia Building 19th Floor, Suite 1902 Jl. Jendral Gatot Subroto Kav 9-11 JakartaIndonesia 12390
Phone : (62-21) 526-5661, (62-21) 526-5662, Fax : (62-21) 526-5664

Albania Embassy
2952, Bukit Ledang Jl. Duta Kuala Lumpur 50480 Malaysia
Phone :(60-3) 2093 7808, 2093 8102, Fax : (60-3) 253 7359

Bosnia Herzegovina Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Bosnia Herzegovina)
Menara Imperium Lt.11 Suite D-2 Metropolitan Kuningan Superblock
Kav.1Jl.H.R. Rasuna Said Kuningan Jakarta 12980 - Indonesia
Phone : (62-21) 8370 3022, 8370 3029, Fax : (62-21) 8370 3029

Brazil Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Brazil)
Menara Mulia lt.16 Suite 1602 Jl.Jend. Gatot Subroto Kav. 9-11 Jakarta 12390 - Indonesia P.o.Box. 2482 JKT-1001
Phone : (62-21) 526 5656
Fax : (62-21) 526 5659

China Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Cina)
Jl. Mega Kuningan No.2 Jakarta 12950 - Indonesia
Phone : (62-21) 576 1039, Fax : (62-21) 576 1038
Email :political@chnemb.or.id

Chile Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Cili)
Bina Mulia I Jl.H.R. Rasuna Said Kav.10 Kuningan, Jakarta 12950 Indonesia
Po.Box. 4168 JKT 12041
Phone : (62-21) 520 1131, Fax :(62-21) 520 1955
Email : emchijak@indosat.net.id

Canada Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Canada)
World Trade Centre 6th Floor Jl. Jend Sudirman Kav.29 Po.Box. 8324/JKS.MP Jakarta 12083
Phone :(62-21) 2550 7800, Fax :(62-21) 2550 7811
Email : canadianembassy.jkrta@dfait-maeci.gc.ca
Website : www.dfait-maeci.gc.ca/

Cambodia Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Kamboja)
Jl. Kintamani Raya C-15 No.33 Jakarta Selatan 12950 Indonesia
Phone : (62-21) 520 1373 , 919 2895 , Fax : (62-21) 520 2673
Email : recjkt@indo.net.id

Embassy Bulgaria (Kedutaan Besar Bulgaria)
Jl. Imam Bonjol No.34-36 Menteng, Jakarta 10310 Indonesia
Phone : (62-21) 390 4048 , 391 3121 , 391 3130, Fax :(62-21) 390 4049
Email :bgemb.jkt@centrin.net.id

Brunei Darussalam Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Brunei Darussalam)
Jl. Tanjung Karang No.7 Jakarta 10230 - Indonesia
Phone : (62-21) 3190 6080, Fax : (62-21) 3190 5070
Email : kbjindo@cbn.net.id

Afghanistan Embassy (Kedutaan Besar Afghanistan)
Jl. Dr. Kusuma Atmaja SH No 15 Menteng Jakarta Pusat 10310 Indonesia (PO BOX
1100 JKP 10011).
Phone : (62-21) 314-3169
Fax : (62-21) 3193-5390
Email : Afghanembassy_indo@yahoo.com

Before visiting Indonesia Borneo, you may need to get vaccinations and medications to prevent yourself against diseases, your health-care provider will know what you will need,  visit a health-care provider latest 4–6 weeks before your trip to allow time for your vaccines to take effect....read more

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Hotels & Accommodation

Knowing the Hotels before visiting Indonesian Part of Borneo Island, Find information on their addresses, or contact us for reservations....read more

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How To Get There

The major cities and towns at Kalimantan, have connections with large Indonesian cities such as Jakarta, Makassar, Denpasar, Surabaya, Yogyakarta and Semarang.
Balikpapan, Tarakan and Pontianak have international airports and flights arrive here from Singapore, and Malaysian Part of Borneo cities as Tawau and Kucing. For the latest schedules visit the airline web pages.
A few remote areas  - such as Long Bawan, Apokayan, Bontang, Tanjung Selor, Derawan and Nunukan – have local flights. some of these flights are regularly scheduled or and some infrequent. .....read more

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Arriving travelers with Visa-On-Arrival status have to go first to one of the 'VOA Counters' to pay the appropriate fee and have their passports stamped with the VOA before proceeding to the Immigration Clearance Desk. 
All visitors must possess a passport valid for at least six months after their arrival date in Indonesia....read more

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Kalimantan Events


The Most Spectacular Dayak Events at Kalimantan. Various rituals and ceremonies are held each year, from Erau, Tiwah to more local harvest and rain dances as expressions of gratitude, designed to mark important moments or cultural Dayak traditions of many years......read more

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Dayak Longhouses are various in art, Differant tribes have differant Longhouses, and can be found all over Kalimantan island. From The Mahakam River Area, to the Upper Kapuas River Region.....read more

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Kalimantan Reserves

Kalimantan National Parks are various, The Adventures Jungle of Kayan Mentarang, to the soft Kersik Luway Orchid Reserve. Orangutans
can be found at Tanjung Puting, Wehea, and Kutai National Park. Derawan Maritime National Park with it's Manta's and coral reefs
....read more

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The Dayaks tribes came to Kalimantan as a migration from other parts in Asia about 3000 years ago.
Dayak are defined in more then 200 different tribes, the main tribes are the Bakumpai and Dayak Bukit of South Kalimantan; the Ngajus and Baritos of Central Kalimantan; the Benuaqs, Kayan, Kenyah, and the nomadic Punan
 .... read more

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The cultural and artistic traditions of the indigenous Dayak population are still preserved in the hinterland of East Kalimantan.Sailing up the streams to the Malaysian border, one can still meet Traditional Dayak settlements than seem to have been little touched by the modernity
 .... read more

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This region known as the Land of a Thousand Rivers, Big and small rivers, wide swamps and lowlands are characteristic of this southern province. Some of those rivers, such as the Barito, Martapura and Negara mark the boundary.Loksado is an attractive place for nature tourism on a plateau in the Meratus mountains. The forest offer available trails,and Dayak Culture....read more

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The indigenous inhabitants are the Dayaks, comprising the sub-tribes Ngaju, Ot Danum, Ma'anyan Ot Siang, Lawangan, Katingan and others. Their livelihood is hunting, moving from one region to another. They adhere to the old Kaharingan religion. Tanjung Puting and Tangkiling National Park.  .....read more

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Boat and overland journeys provide a rare opportunity to see the interior of one of the world's largest and richest island West Kalimantan is an important and very attractive province. It is rich in history, culture and places of interest for the tourist.
 
The most important rivers are the Kapuas River, Sambas River, Sekayam River, Landak River, Melawi River and Pawan River....read more

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Camp Leakey

Orangutan Rehabilitation Centre was founded in 1971 as the first place in Indonesia to become a rehabilitation centre for orangutans. There are now three orangutan rehabilitation locations, Tanjung Harapan, Pondok Tanggui, and Camp Leakey. Camp Leakey at Tanjung Puting National Park at Central Kalimantan Indonesia Borneo Island is the location for semi-wild and wild orangutans in the middle of the prime Rain Forest. Tours for watching orangutans, Long Nose monkeys and other animals along the river can be done...read more

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Orangutans are large apes which can be found at the islands Borneo and Sumatra. These large apes swing from tree to tree by using their arms (
brachiating). Orangutan in Malay language means "human of the forest". The Orangutan 's population is decreasing and is in grave danger of extinction. The Expected population is less then 40.000 in the world.
Early 2009 a rare subspecies of the orangutan is found in the area of Karst East Kalimantan, this subspecies of Orangutan has black fur as a gorilla. .....read more

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Indonesian Embassies

Our online directory of information of addresses of Indonesian Embassies in the world. Information of differant kinds can be obtained at the Indonesian Embassies overseas, as for Tourism and Visa to Enter the Country of Indonesia ......read more