Eco-friendly houseboat for hire in Togian Islands, Central Sulawesi

Terry MacArsey

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Joined
Aug 11, 2016
Messages
145
Hi,

anyone looking for a short (or long) holiday in an area well known for fantastic snorkelling and diving could do worse than going to the Togian Islands.

As I've just finished building a houseboat there I thought I'd share a video I've made so you can have a quick look to see what it's like.

I'm hoping the website will be active in June 2017.


Low season I'm planning to hire it out for 2 Jt per night but this is the price for the houseboat, not per person.

Price also includes 3 meals per day plus free drinking water from a 19 litre container (to cut down on the number of plastic bottles used).

High season (June, July, August) the price will rise to up to 3 Jt per night.

Enough beds for up to 6 people. 1 double bed + 4 singles.

Western style toilet + Mandi inside. Small kitchen at the back. Solar panel + battery for lighting and charging phones/laptops so no noisy generator.

No need to pack your bags every time you want to move. Just move the room to a different place.

I welcome comments, suggestions, enquiries, questions, in fact any kind of reaction including positive criticism
 
Looks kool but I've got a few questions. I didn't see a motor on the house boat so how do you move it? If it's got a motor how fast does it go and what kind of range? Does it come with a crew for say cooking meals and a capt or guide ? Also diving ? What about tanks do you supply them or Have a contact to rent them? Does the cabin have fans to move the air around and how big is cabin.
 
Looks good, my sister owns a houseboat in Australia and it's great. 2Jt per night sounds very reasonable.
 
Looks kool but I've got a few questions. I didn't see a motor on the house boat so how do you move it? If it's got a motor how fast does it go and what kind of range? Does it come with a crew for say cooking meals and a capt or guide ? Also diving ? What about tanks do you supply them or Have a contact to rent them? Does the cabin have fans to move the air around and how big is cabin.

Hi steveandpenny, thanks for your comments and questions.

Apologies for the rather late reply, I've been a bit busy over the past few days as I've just started work.

We've had a few tests with the houseboat and found that in big waves if we were using a boat pushing the houseboat the boat that was pushing would collide with the houseboat and could easily damage the boat and the houseboat.

We also tried pulling the houseboat but found that in big waves if the boat wanted to turn it was unable to because of the weight of the houseboat.

So then we thought that motors would have to be attached to the back of the houseboat but were worried that vibrations would be too great making things uncomfortable for people on the houseboat and also putting unnecessary stress on the propeller shaft. (I'm not very technical but that was what I was told).

So, eventually we have decided to use a boat to push the houseboat but we have attached two posts (to the back of the houseboat) with a cable between that is used to keep the boat apart from the houseboat, basically the boat pushes the cable. The boat pushing the houseboat has two longtail engines. Forgive me if that's the incorrect term. In the Togians they are called katintings.

I hope that answers the question about how we move it but please let me know if you don't understand because I realise it's probably not a very good explanation, I just can't think what a katinting would be called in English !

Obviously it doesn't move very fast but we prefer it that way anyway. From Wakai to Kadidiri we took about 2 hours (but deliberately going at a gentle pace) whereas a katinting would take about 45 minutes and a speedboat would take about 20 minutes. I'm not sure about the distance but I've tried measuring it a map and I'd guess Wakai to Kadidiri is about 8 Km's.

At a steady pace and visiting different beaches, snorkelling spots, a stingless jellyfish lake (one of only 3 or 4 in the world depending on which article you read) it should take about 5 days to a week to get as far as Malenge which I reckon is about 30-35 Km's.

Because of a few places that would be dangerous to take the houseboat we provide staff that are multi-talented. They have worked with boats for many years so know how to take engines apart (and put them back together again which is even more important) and know the area well which is important to avoid the houseboat being grounded on rocks in shallow areas. They also know the local weather conditions which is also vital because the weather can change very quickly in the Togians. They have worked in the islands at various resorts so can act as guides and are used to cooking for tourists, know how to fish and can help other people interested in fishing. They can also play guitar and at least one of them can speak pretty good English.

We don't have diving equipment mainly because of the cost of the compressor but also because of the weight of all the equipment needed but we can arrange diving with at least two different resorts on different islands (Kadidiri ) and we can possibly arrange diving with a friend who is a Padi instructor who is starting up his own business but this would depend on his whereabouts and availability and cannot be guaranteed.

The room is 3 metres x 5 metres and the raft is 7 metres x 9 metres so there is roughly 2 metres of terrace on each side of the room. There are four single beds and one double bed. One of the single beds can be folded up against the wall if not in use and 2 further single beds arranged as a bunk bed can also be folded up against the wall. The fourth single bed can be opened to allow a couple of rucksacks to be stored out of the way. There are also 6 safety deposit boxes (admittedly wooden, not metal) hidden in the fourth bed so that in the unlikely event that anyone tries to steal anything, passports and money are not in full view.

As far as I'm aware, none of the resorts in the Togians provide safety deposit boxes except for us but I stand to be corrected if any of the resorts have recently introduced them.

There are no fans to move air around but there are plenty of windows that could be opened and actually being on the sea means that there is normally some kind of sea breeze.

I hope this answers your questions but please feel free to ask for clarification, ask further questions or recommend to your friends :)
 
William King and Anglian,

thanks for your comments which give me great encouragement.

Yes, it's great. It's nice to be fishing at night and cook the fish straight from the hook. The lighting attracts the fish as well so it can be good fun.

Also nice to be able to choose where to go, weather permitting of course, but we can easily go near one of the resorts or go to anywhere that tourists don't normally have the chance to go.

I'm obviously hoping to hire the houseboat out but I've been saying for quite a while that I'll be quite happy if nobody hires it so I can use it myself :)
 
I just can't think what a katinting would be called in English !
Probably the same, Terry MacArsey. I don't think there is a specific word for it. :D

Katingting comes from the malay word "ketingting", this one leg jump game kids are used to play in many part of the world (you call it "Hopscotch" in English, we call it "Marelle" in french and "cenge(k)" in bahasa Manado).

You guys in SulTeng use the same Katingting word than us in Manado for these small boats with a long tail engine used by fishermen in many part of East and North Indonesia. It's a Malay word, as many words we use in Melayu Manado and the name has been given to these boats for their agility to "jump" through the wave while keeping balance, remembering the hopscotch game.

Very nice job on the houseboat by the way.
 
Probably the same, Terry MacArsey. I don't think there is a specific word for it. :D

Katingting comes from the malay word "ketingting", this one leg jump game kids are used to play in many part of the world (you call it "Hopscotch" in English, we call it "Marelle" in french and "cenge(k)" in bahasa Manado).

You guys in SulTeng use the same Katingting word than us in Manado for these small boats with a long tail engine used by fishermen in many part of East and North Indonesia. It's a Malay word, as many words we use in Melayu Manado and the name has been given to these boats for their agility to "jump" through the wave while keeping balance, remembering the hopscotch game.

Very nice job on the houseboat by the way.

Very interesting Atlantis. I've never heard that katingting comes from the Malay word for hopscotch. I've always been told that the word katingting comes from the noise that the engine makes but it could quite easily be that my friends don't know where the word comes from so they've just made something up rather than admitting that they don't know.

Thanks also for the compliment on the houseboat. I love it so much more than the beach we used to own because of the freedom to move around although we have to be careful that we are in sheltered places at night to avoid any adverse weather that

I thought the name Bule Boleh Bajo was quite amusing but it also has a meaning to me at least. My thinking is that tourists can be like the Bajo sea gypsies in the sense that they can choose to move from one place to another.

I've always thought it would be quite amusing to visit a Bajo village and then leave the next day, waving goodbye to the Bajo villagers who would be stuck in the village with the tourists deciding which direction they want to travel by sea so that the tourists would be more like sea gypsies than the Bajo villagers even if for just a few days.

I had a few hats made with the words Bule Boleh Bajo and the logo on them but as I'm getting on in years and have a different appearance compared to when I was younger so my helpful 8 year old son suggested that I should add a couple of words to my own hat so my personal hat says Bulat Botak Bule Boleh Bajo !
 
it could quite easily be that my friends don't know where the word comes from so they've just made something up rather than admitting that they don't know
Exactly. Most Manadonese (and to a certain extend, most Indonesian) are unaware of the origins of words they use everyday because it is not something often taught at school.

When your friends told you that they obviously didn t remember that with or without the engine they still call their boat a katingting and that they were called katinting long before this type of small traditional fishermen boat had an engine.

When I explain to my fellows that words such as kadera (chair), testa (head), torturuga (turtle), pastiu (being bored) and many more that we use everyday in Bahasa Manado, come from Portuguese, they are puzzled. Many Manadonese know that the Dutch influence is very strong in their language because it isn't rare to find elder Manadonese being fluent in Dutch, but apart these Dutch influence most are unaware of the other roots of the language.

The Malay influence is also quite strong in our dialect with use of words like "lorong", "bini" or, like in your post, "katingting" which all came with the traders and sailors over the centuries and are more commonly use in Malay than they are normally in Bahasa Indonesia.

Katingting, on top of coming from the Malay, is not specific to our area. These boats are called the same from Kalimantan to Maluku and very certainly in many other part of Indonesia.
 
I always thought katingting was not so much the boat, but the engine pole with the propellor at the end?

Anyway, hopscotch here is officially called sunda manda, from the Dutch zondag maandag. But I never heard anything else used by the kids here but engklek.

Nice boat, Terry. Just wondering a bit if eco tourists will want to spend the funds and can afford it. And those who could easily afford it, could aim for more (hotel) luxury for that price. (Of course I'm not considering the type of party goers on house boats at Lake Havasu.) So I'm not sure about the target group. Just my two rupiah.
 
I always thought katingting was not so much the boat, but the engine pole with the propellor at the end?.
Katingting (or perahu katingting) is the name of the boat (which doesn't preclude the fact that specific engines with long tail prop have been designed for said boat and may be referred as "mesin ketingting").
https://id.wiktionary.org/wiki/ketinting
In Sulut we tend to spell it with a "a" (katingting) while in the Maluku and Kalimantan and other part of Indonesia like Sumatra, they've usually kept the Malay form with a "e" (ketinting)
Ex Maluku: https://tehoru.wordpress.com/2012/04/07/sensasi-naik-ketingting-antara-tuheru-dan-mosso/
Ex Kalimantan: http://www.antarakaltim.com/berita/15082/61-peserta-ikut-lomba-perahu-ketinting
Ex Sumatra: https://www.indonesiakaya.com/jelaj...inting-kiluan-perahu-tangguh-pengarung-lautan

The word "ketinting" to characterize this traditionnal kind of boat arrived in our part of Indonesia long before the Mesin Honda/Yamaha used nowadays to propel it. Perahu Ketinting were propelled with the wind or pengayung before (and they are still propelled this way when there is no money for bensin, which is not a rare occurrence :smile:).
 
Nice boat, Terry. Just wondering a bit if eco tourists will want to spend the funds and can afford it. And those who could easily afford it, could aim for more (hotel) luxury for that price. (Of course I'm not considering the type of party goers on house boats at Lake Havasu.) So I'm not sure about the target group. Just my two rupiah.

Thanks jstar, pleased you like it.

Very valid points that you make. I obviously hope you're wrong at least to a certain extent so that I can hire it out.

Most of the resorts in the Togian Islands are around Rp300,000 per person per night so I don't think our price is excessive if you think that tourists wanting to go jalan2 would normally pay extra for boat hire although II realise that it would be expensive for 2 or 3 people to hire and our costs mean that there would be a limit to how much we could reduce the price for small groups.

As for opting for more luxury, really there isn't a lot of choice anywhere in the islands. For example, there are no air conditioned rooms anywhere because all resorts use their own electricity (normally generators) and it's normally turned on from about 6pm until 10pm, possibly 11pm.

Even in Wakai, which is definitely not a tourist resort, the electricity only runs from 6pm until midday the following day so I don't know of any hotels (in reality, penginapans) that have air conditioned rooms or even normal fridges because the hottest part of the day (midday until 6pm) there is no electricity.

Really I'm looking for people with a bit of sense of adventure, want something different from being on a beach or just like the idea of spending a bit of time on a houseboat. I suppose there could be many reasons why people would want to hire it or not hire it but the main thing for me is that I will be happy to spend time on it.

I'm not a businessman so I didn't really think about who would be my target for marketing the houseboat. It was really something I wanted to build because I just wanted to do something a bit different and something I knew I would enjoy myself as long as the project could be completed
 
Quite an interesting project Terry, how long did it take you, and would you do another
 
Quite an interesting project Terry, how long did it take you, and would you do another

From start to finish it took about 18 months of which I spent 6 months in England so nothing happened for 6 months except that some of the roof got blown off and my wife (now ex-wife) left it to rot in the sun and rain.

Arriving in Indo again and seeing the state of it meant that I spent two months wondering what to do before getting another carpenter to finish it.

Would I do another. Very good question. I find it so frustrating working with Indonesians that I've said a few times that I'll never build anything else again. Then I want something else built. So I suppose I should say "never say never".

When the carpenters were actually working I found it really enjoyable but frustrating when for a week or two nothing happened.

In the end though I'm really pleased with the result if I think that we had no real examples to work from
 
I know what you mean about carpenters, initially our first house windows were hinged at the top, so we got this so called carpenter in, he arrived with his only tool, a huge chisel, assessed the job, went for a coffee at the locol warung, that was that, our second house, they came to measure up the frames for the windows, when the windows arrived they were an inch all round to short, so like you Terry at times not impressed
 

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