| Payakumbuh
is known for its gelamai, a kind of sweetmeat,
and for its traditional horse races. The area
is also boasts a large number of grand traditional
houses, one of them said to be more than 200 years
old. They can be found especially at Koto nan
Ampek, Koto nan Gadang and Taram. Further on the
road, near Suliki is the renowned Harau Valley,
located at the distance of 14 kilometers from
Payakumbuh. This is a green valley enclosed by
perpendicular granite walls of many colors, 100
to 200 meters high. Three waterfalls - Sarasah
Bunta, Sarasah Murai, and Sarasah Aka Barayun
- disgorge their water down the cliffs onto the
valley. The Harau Valley is part of a nature and
wildlife reserve, in which many forms of plant
and animal life can be found, including tigers,
wild boat, forest goats, deer and tapir. There
is space for camping, and the cliffs are excellent
for climbing.
Suliki and Koto Tinggi derive their renown from
the role which they played during Indonesia’s
war independence in 1948, when Dutch troops occupied
the Republican war capital Yogyakarta on the island
of Java, and Kota Tinggi was made the seat of
the Emergency Government of the Republic of Indonesia.
Near Payakumbuh, at Padang Mangatas, is a horse
breeding farm. Evidence of the existence of a
civilized human community in the Limapuluh-Koto
area in prehistoric times is found in the presence
there of about 2,000 menhirs - upright stone monuments
- scattered across a wide area in the subdistricts
Guguk, Suliki, and Gunung Emas. A small museum,
attached to the site, is found at Guguk. Ngalau
Indah is a small cave with a lookout post in the
limestone hills outside Payakumbuh. The site offers
an impressive view of the paddies and coconut
groves in the lush surrounding countryside. At
a distance of 4 kilometers from the center of
town is Batang Tabik, a swimming pool filled with
clear, cool water. A restaurant there specialized
in fresh broiled fish dishes.
Andaleh is village about five kilometers from
Payakumbuh, which is known for its rattan bags,
hats, lamp shades, food covers and other articles.
Not far from the main road, in the direction of
Lintau, on the slope of the Sago Mountain 21 kilometers
from Payakumbuh, is the Halaban, a formerly Dutch-owned
tea plantation. Besides tea, area is also known
for its pineapples. As one travels in the direction
of Pekanbaru, in Riau province, the road winds
up the mountains, passes a stretch with nine hairpin
turn known as Kelok Sembilan, then Pintu Angin
and Ulu Air, and finally reaches a point called
Panorama Selat Malaka (Malacca Strait Panorama).
The view from this vantage point is breath-taking.
Towards the west and south, the hills and mountains
of the Bukit Barisan range loom against the sky,
their distant peaks blurred in the haze. Towards
the east, the lowland plains of Riau are clearly
visible. On clear days, the vista stretches as
far as the blue waters and the dots of islands
in the Malacca Strait beyond.
How to get there :
Take a Bus or taxi from Bukittinggi direction
Pekanbaru. Payakumbuh is about 30km from Bukittinggi.
What to see / interesting places:
- Koto nan Ampek
- Koto nan Gadang
- Taram
- Suliki
- Harau Valley
- Sarasah Bunta, Sarasah Murai, Sarasah Aka
Barayun (Waterfalls)
- Koto Tinggi
- Guguk
- Panorama Selat Malaka
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