| |
|
Bali's Golden Harvest
The
eternal cycles of planting, cultivating and harvesting follow a different
rotation all over the island, resulting in a verdant tapestry of colour
that changes from day to day. Prior to planting, the highly manicured
fields are pools of sky-reflecting water. As the pale green seedling grow
into a lush carpet their colour deepens into a vivid emerald. Heads of
ripening rice appear, green gives way to a sea of gold, then suddenly
harvest strips the fields bare leaving a dry stubble and a haze of billowing
smoke as the straw is burnt. Rice
is the most singularly important crop in Bali, the staple food of life.
An entire village infrastructure is involved in organizing and supervising
growing and irrigation. The art of rice cultivation, evolved since the
dawn of time, is Dewi
Sri, as with all things in the universe, is both male and female. She
is represented in a simple image of two figures made out of rice stalks,
fifty-four for the female figure and fifty-eight for the male. Tied together
in a bunch, the heads of the rice form a skirt and the stalks are decorated
with bits of coconut leaf and bamboo as the head. This double-cone shape
is called a Tjili, and its shape is repeated in the offerings,
decorations, even in the paintings and woodcarvings, a symbol of fertility. Only
fifteen years ago Bali was having to import 10,000 tons of rice a year
due to the increase in population and losses caused by failure of crops,
pestilence and disease. Intensive research by the International Rice Research
Institute in Los Banos, the Philippines, resulted in a new hybrid strain
of highly resistant dwarf rice that provided a heavy harvest as many as
three times a year. After further research by the Indonesian Department
of Agriculture at Bogor, Java, this seed was distributed by the government
throughout Indonesia. Now nearly ninety percent of the rice grown in Bali
is this new "miracle" strain, and the island is exporting tens
of thousands of tons of rice each year. Padi
Bali, the traditionally grown variety of rice, has become almost a
luxury that few people can afford to grow, let alone eat. This is a pity
in a way, as the plant is comparatively much more beautiful, the grain
more tasty. Padi Bali grows to a height of 140 cm and has a full-fruited,
graceful arching head. It is cut in the fields and tied into bushy-headed
bales, which are dried and then carried home to be stored in the family
jineng, rice barn. The newer strains of rice are short and stumpy, only
growing to a height of about 65 cm. The grains axe easily knocked from
the head, so this rice cannot be tied up and carried home, instead it
is thrashed in the field and taken home in sacks. However its advantages
fax overwhelm such minor fallbacks. Not only is it more disease and insect-resistant,
it produces a far greater tonnage per hectare, and only takes 120 days
to reach maturity as compared to 150 days for the Padi Bali. Subak
Organization Bali
has approximately 1200 subaks, each with an average of 200 members, and
an average field area of 50 hectares. Membership is compulsory for every
farmer owning land within each area. Needless to say, survival would be
impossible alone. There is no place for individualism in this system,
which is based on sharing and mutual support. Periodically a leader known
as a Kepala Subak or Pekasih, is elected . He serves his
group unpaid, but is sometimes rewarded extra water or land priviledges.
His assistants are the Pengliman, in charge of work and maintenance
projects, and the Kelian Munduk, a supervisor of water distribution. "Choose
the owner of the lowest rice fields as Kelian Munduk," they
say in a popular joke. "He’ll make sure the water gets to his fields,
and everyone will get their share in between!" Regular
subak meetings are held; attendance is compulsory. Those who fall to show
up at meetings are fined. Group decisions are thus made on the important
issues such as propitious dates for planting and harvesting, ceremonies
and offerings that must be carried out, the times for fertilizing and
use of insecticides, the type of seed to be used, as well as the control,
cleaning and maintenance of the irrigation dams and canals. Each subak
has its own rice fleld temple where principal rice ceremonies are held.
The smaller shrines in rice fields and near water supply sources are usually
the individual responsibilities of the farmers or groups of farmers in
the vicinity. The
highly sophisticated subak system provides optimum communication. and
organization, an infrastructure with which the Ministry of Agriculture
can work closely to implement effective improvements on a large scale.
An official liason officer known as the Sedahan Agung is appointed
within each of the eight Kabupaten, He is directly responsible
to the Department of Agriculture in Denpasar. There are in turn several
Sedahan Yeh, the overseers of irrigation, plus a number of field
staff and extensi6n agents, some of who organize the purchase of rice
at guaranteed floor prices, transportation, milling, storage and export
of surplus, assistance in the control of pestilence and natural disaster. Cycles
of Rice Cultivation The
seedbed or pemulihan takes first priority. A few square meters
in the corner of the field are enclosed, and the germinated seeds that
have soaked two days in advance are broadcasted by hand into the flooded
soil, or in the case of Padi After
20 to 25 days in the nursery the seedlings are ready for transplantation.
Fertilization is carried out in the preceding days, then on a favorable
day according to the calendar the men gather together to begin the nyajaan,
or transplantation of seedlings, carefully uprooting them from their bed
and tying them in bunches on round trays made from split bamboo. The First
ceremonial planting is known as ngewiwit. Prayer and offerings
are made in one corner of the field, then nine seeding are Planted, one
in each of the cardinal directions, one in the center and one on the intermediary
directions, completing a pattern known as the nawa sangga, the
symbol of cosmic orientations prevalent in many ceremonies. The barefoot
men then step into the soft mud, forming a row. Two to five seedlings
are thrust into finger holes in the mud, spaced one handbreadth apart
in neatly a4med rows, as the team of men advance through the mud, their
trays of seeding sliding back and forth in between. Ceremonial
requirements during the first 35 days sasih or lunar month of growth,
vary from village to village. The major prerequisite is an offering made
on the 35th day of nasi warna, cooked rice coloured symbolically
in the four Hindu colours of red, yellow, white and black. Further urea
fertilizations are recommended at 35 to 40 days and 55 to 60 days. Another
small ceremony takes place at 70 days known as sayut nagasari,
a small offering of cooked rice, flowers, rice wine and holy water. As
the grains begin to form. on the heads and the ears swell, the rice is
said to be "beling" or pregnant, a condition which requires
special loving care and attention. The fields are transformed into gay
scenes festooned with long strings of banners made from discard6d clothing,
plastic, cans and whizzing bamboo propellers. Scarecrows appear and little
thatched huts are erected at strategic places. The men, women and children
all take turn in guarding the precious crop, rattling their bird-scarers
and shouting themselves hoarse to protect their harvest from the winged
marauders. As the ripening padi colours golden, irrigation stops and harvest
rituals begin.
Polished
white rice is preferred by all Balinese, even though the husk and embryo
contain valuable vitamin B 1 and protein. Traditionally the Padi Bali
is threshed on mats spread on the hardened earth by pounding it with long
wooden poles that have weighted ends. Two or three women will stand around
the pile of rice stalks, their poles rhythmically pounding, moving alternately
from one band to the other with a grace that belies the effort and concentration
involved. Dehusking is sometimes accomplished by pounding it in a large
wooden trough or lesung. The motions create a rhythmic cadence
of sound as the padi is transformed into beras, a coarser
grain, flecked with pieces of husk, which has more nutrients than the
milled grain. The flaky pieces of husk are winnowed out of the pounded
rice on a large bamboo tray. As it is tossed in the air and shaken in
a circular motion the chaff is carried off in the breeze. Just
after harvest, or in some villages just before, a large rice ceremony
is held in the subak temple, known as Ngusaba Nini, in thanksgiving
to Dewi Sri for the gift of herself. The temple is beautifully decorated
and filled with offerings of exquisite palm-leaf weavings, brightly coloured
rice cakes, cooked rice of several colours, fruits, fragrant flowers,
roast ducks, chickens and suckling pigs, even rice wine. These are dedicated
to pleasing the deities, giving them an enjoyable visit, just in the same
way that honoured guests would be entertained. After the essence, or Sari,
of the food has been offered in prayer the food itself is shared amongst
everyone. This
food of life, much blessed on its journey from the fields to the kitchen,
is simply prepared each day by steaming or boiling. Sometimes it is cooked
in little woven palm-leaf containers called Ketipat, which form
a solid glutinous lump of pressed rice that can be easily carried to the
field or temple and cut into edible sections. Every
day, after the morning rice is cooked, a tray of little banana leaf squares
are prepared, each with a pinch of the cooked rice, or nasi, and
casually placed on the ground around the family compound to keep the evil
spirits at bay. Like people, they can become angry and mischievous if
they are hungry or neglected.
This
perpetual giving thanks for the benifence of the Gods in providing joy,
sustenance and protection from evil is the very basis of the Balinese
way of life, which is an everyday celebration of religion. The majority
of the population are rice farmers, and all depend on rice as a staple
diet. The cycles of rice farming, regular phases of busy communal activity
interspersed with periods of leisure time, have contributed to a lifestyle
with ample room for intense creativity. Bali
is a tropical island of plenty. The rich volcanic soil of the island is
watered by an endless supply of rivers and streams that originate from
bottomless crater lakes which miraculously filter out into a myriad of
streams and springs and are diverted by centuries old expertise into a
maze of irrigation channels that feed the entire island. Nature provides
abundantly. Bananas, coconuts, mangoes and paw-paw grow wild, not to mention
an entire range of medicinal plants and roots which offer herbal remedies
to every ailment known to man. Ducks feed in the rice fields, cleaning
them of insects and pests. The On
the mountainous slopes grow cloves and coffee, and vanilla vines fill
every patch of uncultivated land. Indeed it seems that this island is
the Gods' favoured earthly abode, and such is the Balinese premise of
the universe. Point of origin is the great Mt. Agung which lords over
the entire island, a towering reminder that we are only human, extremely
vulnerable to the powers of the supernatural and subterranean. |
| ABL MEMBERSHIP Already a Member Be a Member Why Member? Link Exchange |
|
Copyright © 2013. Bali Plus. All Rights Reserved. |