Bukit Mondoleko
About Bukit Mondoleko
Key Features
- Pine-forest viewpoint with bamboo viewing platforms
- Panoramic sunrise views with multiple volcano silhouettes on the horizon
- Overlooks rice paddies and misty valleys
- Easy, family-friendly trails and photo spots (treehouses, swings, bamboo decks)
- Close to Banyuwangi town and other eastern Java attractions
More Details
Updated April 15, 2024
BUKIT MONDOLEKO, WISATA BARU DI BANYUWANGI COCOK BUAT YANG HOBI FOTO …
## Bukit Mondoleko: Banyuwangi’s Pine-Forest Viewpoint With Five Volcanoes on the Horizon
Bukit Mondoleko is a low hill viewpoint in Sragi village, Songgon district, western Banyuwangi, East Java. From its bamboo viewing decks you look out over pine forest, rice fields and a line of volcanoes including Raung, Suket, Kendil, Meranti and Merapi – the chain that forms a natural wall between Banyuwangi and the neighboring regencies of Jember, Bondowoso and Situbondo. Nobi
It started as a simple community project: local residents built bamboo platforms and a bridge above the trees so visitors could enjoy the panorama and take photos. Over time it’s become one of Banyuwangi’s better-known “bukit” viewpoints, often mentioned alongside spots like Hutan Pinus Songgon and the Ijen area in domestic travel media. Indonesia
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## Where Bukit Mondoleko Is (and Why the Address Looks Confusing)
Most recent local sources agree that Bukit Mondoleko sits in:
– Dusun Krajan, Desa Sragi, Kecamatan Songgon, Kabupaten Banyuwangi, East Java
Your provided dataset lists Area Pesawahan, Sragi, Songgon, Banyuwangi Regency, East Java 68463, which aligns with those local descriptions: you walk in through rice fields (“persawahan”) before the trail heads into pine forest. Banyuwangi
Some tourism sites list an address in Temuguruh, Sempu rather than Sragi, Songgon. That’s likely an administrative or mailing quirk rather than a different attraction; route descriptions and on-the-ground photos still match the same hill and bamboo platforms.
If you navigate by map app, searching “Bukit Mondoleko Songgon” or “Mondoleko Hill Viewpoint” reliably brings up the same hill just southwest of Sragi village.
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## What Makes Bukit Mondoleko Special
### 1. Panorama of Five Volcanoes
From the highest viewing deck you see a broad sweep of forest and farmland with a backdrop of volcanoes. Local hiking writers describe a five-peak panorama from Bukit Mondoleko’s summit: Raung, Suket, Kendil, Meranti and Merapi. Nobi
You can’t see Kawah Ijen directly from this viewpoint – it sits behind the ridgeline between Meranti and Merapi – but you still get that classic East Java skyline of layered peaks in clear weather.
### 2. Pine Forest + Rice Fields in One Frame
Mondoleko’s slopes are covered in pine forest (hutan pinus), while the lower approach runs through rice paddies. From the decks the trees read like a dense green carpet, with lines of terraced fields and village patches breaking up the view.
For Banyuwangi, which is often marketed mainly for coastlines and Ijen, Mondoleko gives you a different angle on the region: more rural East Java than volcanic moonscape.
### 3. Bamboo Viewpoints and Treehouse Platforms
Community groups built a series of bamboo decks, a narrow bridge and a treehouse-style platform (often called a “rumah pohon” or Kapok House because it’s built around a kapok/randu tree).
– The main deck juts out slightly over the slope – a classic Indonesian hill “dermaga” (jetty-style) viewpoint.
– A bamboo bridge connects some of the higher platforms.
– Simple shelters, benches made from tree trunks and a few swings add places to sit and linger at the top.
These structures were built by local residents and, according to several reports, not all of them are in perfect shape today (more on that in the “current condition” section below).
### 4. Cooler Air Without a Long Trek
Mondoleko sits high enough to be noticeably cooler than the lowland coast, but the approach hike is short. From the parking area you’re looking at around 10 minutes of uphill walking through fields, a small river crossing and the pine forest before reaching the first decks. Nobi
It’s more “walk with views” than serious hike, which makes it manageable for most reasonably mobile visitors.
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## Getting to Bukit Mondoleko From Banyuwangi Town
Most route descriptions start from Banyuwangi city and send you west towards Rogojampi and Songgon: Nobi
1. Banyuwangi → Rogojampi
– Follow the main road from Banyuwangi toward Rogojampi.
2. Rogojampi → Songgon
– At the main intersection near the Rogojampi post office, turn toward Songgon and keep following the road until you pass Songgon market.
3. Songgon → Sragi
– After the market you’ll see signs for Sragi. Follow these into the village.
4. Sragi landmark
– Look for the Sragi football field with a cell-tower near SMP Kosgoro Sragi; this is the usual reference point in local descriptions. Nobi
5. Trailhead & parking
– From the field, small signs or local directions point you up a minor road to the Mondoleko parking area near the rice fields. From there the trail is on foot.
Because signage can be basic and some blogs are several years old, it’s worth checking a recent map pin and downloading offline navigation before you go.
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## Trail Experience: What the Short Hike Actually Feels Like
Local hiking accounts are fairly consistent about the sequence: Nobi
– Rice paddies – You start by walking through villagers’ fields. In the rainy season, paths can be muddy and narrow between the paddies.
– Small river crossing – There’s a short river/stream crossing; depending on recent rain, you may cross via a simple bridge or stepping stones.
– Pine forest climb – The path then climbs into hutan pinus, usually described as a pleasant, not-too-steep walk in cool morning air.
– Intermediate treehouse & cave junction – Midway up, you pass a treehouse platform on a kapok tree and a signposted junction to a cave (gua). The cave is fenced off; local caretakers say it’s an old wartime or Japanese-era tunnel and keep visitors out for safety.
– Summit decks & shelters – At the top you reach the main bamboo deck, small pendopo/shelter, swings and informal snack stall area managed by local groups.
Because the attractions are simple and built from bamboo, always treat railings and platforms with caution, especially after heavy rain or long dry spells.
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## Entrance Fee, Opening Hours and Facilities (With Recency Notes)
Different sources quote slightly different details, and they span several years:
– A Scribd trip note mentions an entrance ticket of about Rp2,500 per person, including parking, when it was written.
– A 2023–2024 Indonesian travel article lists Rp5,000 as a typical ticket price and a 06:00–18:00 opening window.
– Another tourism listing states 05:00–17:00 daily opening hours, which fits with sunrise visits and late-afternoon closures. Aleph
Putting that together, the safest way to describe it is:
> As of 2023–2024, online Indonesian sources generally report low entry fees in the Rp2,500–5,000 range per person and daylight opening hours from roughly 05:00 to late afternoon. Prices and hours are set locally and may change with demand or maintenance needs, so check a recent local source or ask your accommodation before you go.
Facilities you can reasonably expect, based on recent local reporting:
– Informal parking area near the trailhead
– Simple warung / snack stall at or near the summit on busier days
– Shelter and seating made from timber
– Basic prayer space and simple rest area along the path
Toilets are occasionally mentioned but not consistently; don’t rely on modern restroom standards here.
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## Current Condition: Well-Known View, Mixed Infrastructure
A few points are worth flagging honestly:
– Several recent articles still promote Bukit Mondoleko as a fresh, green hill viewpoint with active bamboo decks and selfie spots. Banyuwangi
– At the same time, some coverage and at least one YouTube report frame it as a partly neglected or “faded” attraction, highlighting weathered structures and reduced visitor numbers compared with its early “viral” years.
Neither side is necessarily wrong; it likely depends on season, maintenance bursts by local groups and how much recent social-media attention the hill is getting. The reliable constant is the landscape itself – the pine forest, rice fields and volcano line are natural features, not installations.
Because your article needs to stay factual:
– You can confidently say the hill exists, offers wide views over forest, fields and several volcanoes, and has community-built bamboo viewing structures.
– You should avoid promising perfectly maintained or brand-new selfie platforms; they may or may not match older promotional photos.
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## Best Time to Visit Bukit Mondoleko
Most guides and experience round-ups for Mondoleko and similar Banyuwangi hill viewpoints highlight sunrise as the prime time:
– Early morning (sunrise to mid-morning)
– Clearer air and better odds of seeing the full volcano chain before clouds build.
– Cooler temperatures for the short climb.
– Late afternoon / golden hour
– Softer light over the forest and paddies; good for photography.
– You do need to leave in time to get down before dark, especially if paths are uneven.
In the rainy season, trails can be muddy and bamboo can be slippery; in the dry season, mid-day heat and haze make early or late visits more comfortable and photogenic.
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## Nearby Places You Can Combine With Mondoleko
Mondoleko sits in a pocket of western Banyuwangi that has developed several small-scale nature attractions. Indonesian sources frequently mention: Nobi
– Hutan Pinus Songgon – a pine-forest recreation area on roughly the same road system.
– Waterfalls like Temcor and Telunjuk Raung – short hikes deeper into the hills.
– Lider waterfall and other Songgon-area cascades – a bit further but often combined in local itineraries.
– Kawah Ijen – not adjacent, but many travelers base in Banyuwangi and combine west-side hill viewpoints like Mondoleko with an Ijen crater hike on a different day.
As long as you don’t over-promise exact distances or timetables beyond what current operators publish, you can safely frame Mondoleko as part of a broader “cool-air western Banyuwangi” loop.
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Table of Contents
Key Highlights
- Pine-forest viewpoint with bamboo viewing platforms
- Panoramic sunrise views with multiple volcano silhouettes on the horizon
- Overlooks rice paddies and misty valleys
- Easy, family-friendly trails and photo spots (treehouses, swings, bamboo decks)
- Close to Banyuwangi town and other eastern Java attractions
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