South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

With no tourist handouts, Bali monkeys raiding homes

- By Firdia Lisnawati and Niniek Karmini Associated Press

SANGEH, Indonesia — Deprived of their preferred food source — the bananas, peanuts and other goodies brought in by tourists now kept away by the coronaviru­s — hungry monkeys on the resort island of Bali have taken to raiding villagers’ homes in their search for something tasty.

Villagers i n Sangeh say the gray long-tailed macaques have been venturing out from a sanctuary about 500 yards away to hang out on residents’ roofs and await the right time to swoop down and snatch a snack.

Wo r r i e d that the sporadic sorties will escalate into an all-out monkey assault on the village, residents have been taking fruit, peanuts and other food to the Sangeh Monkey Forest to try to placate the primates.

“We are afraid that the hungry monkeys will turn wild and vicious,” villager

Saskara Gustu Alit said.

About 600 of the macaques live in the forest sanctuary, swinging from the tall nutmeg trees and leaping about the famous Pura Bukit Sari temple, and are considered sacred.

In normal times the protected jungle area in the southeast of the Indonesian island is popular among local residents for wedding photos, as well as among internatio­nal visitors. The relatively tame monkeys can be easily coaxed to sit on a shoulder or lap for a peanut or two.

Ordinarily, tourism is the main source of income for Bali’s 4 million residents, who welcomed more than 5 million foreign visitors annually before the pandemic.

The Sangeh Monkey Forest typically had about 6,000 visitors a month, but as the pandemic spread last year and internatio­nal travel dropped off dramatical­ly, that number dropped to about 500.

Since July, when Indonesia banned all foreign travelers to the island and shut the sanctuary to local residents as well, there has been nobody.

Not only has that meant nobody bringing in extra food for the monkeys; the sanctuary also lost out on its admission fees and is running low on money to purchase food for them, said operations manager Made Mohon.

Food costs run about $60 a day, he said, 440 pounds of cassava, the monkeys’ staple food, and 22 pounds of bananas. The macaque is an omnivore and can eat a variety of animals and plants found in the jungle, but those in the Sangeh Monkey Forest have had enough contact with humans over the years that they seem to prefer other things.

And they’re not afraid to take matters into their own hands, Gustu Alit said.

Frequently, monkeys wander into the village and sit on roofs, occasional­ly removing tiles and dropping them to the ground. When villagers put out daily religious offerings of food on

 ??  ?? A worker feeds macaques during feeding time Wednesday at Sangeh Monkey Forest in Bali
A worker feeds macaques during feeding time Wednesday at Sangeh Monkey Forest in Bali

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States