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    Home/Indonesia/East Nusa Tenggara/Sumba Barat Daya/Kodi/Ana Engge

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    Kodi, Sumba Barat Daya, East Nusa Tenggara

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    About Ana Engge

    Ana Engge – small settlement in the Kodi district, on Sumba island

    Ana Engge is located in eastern Indonesia, in Nusa Tenggara Timur (East Nusa Tenggara) province, and administratively belongs to the Kodi kecamatan (district) and Sumba Barat Daya regency. The settlement is situated on Sumba island within the Lesser Sunda Islands macroregion, with coordinates marking its location at -9.41° south latitude and 119.24° east longitude. Sumba Barat Daya is itself one of the youngest regencies in Nusa Tenggara Timur province, and comprises the southwestern part of the island. Since available source material contains verifiable data only at the provincial level, Ana Engge can be presented informatively based on broader provincial and regional contexts.

    General overview

    Ana Engge is a smaller, poorly documented village that belongs to the administrative unit of Kodi kecamatan in Sumba Barat Daya. The settlement does not appear in widely available tourism or scientific sources, suggesting it is primarily a community pursuing agricultural and traditional livelihoods rather than a known tourist destination. The Kodi district stretches across the southwestern part of Sumba island, and the region – like the rest of Sumba – possesses strong local culture and traditions. Nusa Tenggara Timur province as a whole is characterized by diverse tribal culture, a multitude of local languages, and the continuation of ancient traditions. According to verified sources at the provincial level, Sumba is particularly known for its tradition of ikat weaving and the Pasola ceremony, which is a traditional equestrian spear-throwing ritual. These cultural elements define the villages of the Kodi district, including the broader surroundings of Ana Engge, although specific data regarding the settlement itself is not available.

    Real estate and investment

    Settlement-level real estate market data is not available for Ana Engge from verifiable sources. Considering the broader context, Nusa Tenggara Timur is one of Indonesia's least developed provinces, where the real estate market – particularly in rural areas – is extremely limited and underdeveloped compared to other Indonesian regions such as Bali or Java. In Sumba Barat Daya regency, land use is predominantly agricultural and communal in character, with minimal commercial property development. For foreign nationals, the general frameworks of Indonesian property ownership regulations apply: under Indonesian law, foreigners cannot acquire direct land ownership (Hak Milik), but can only maintain property interests on limited titles – such as Hak Pakai, or usage rights. This rule applies throughout the country, including in Nusa Tenggara Timur. In Ana Engge and similar small villages of the Kodi district, the real estate market currently shows no signs that would make the region an active investment target for the broader investor community.

    Safety and security

    Specific, verifiable data on public safety in Ana Engge is not available. Generally speaking, in the rural countryside of Nusa Tenggara Timur province – including smaller villages on Sumba island – public safety typically follows patterns associated with small-community lifestyles: the presence of organized crime is at a low level, and the internal normative systems of local communities are strong. However, in certain areas of the province, the shortcomings of state services and infrastructure, as well as occasional tribal or community conflicts, can influence local conditions. When planning travel, it is advisable to gather information on-site and to take into account the advice of local authorities or reliable local partners, as the current situation regarding specific villages is difficult to access from external sources.

    Tourist attractions

    No named tourist attraction in Ana Engge can be identified from verifiable sources. The broader region, Nusa Tenggara Timur province, nevertheless possesses numerous recognized natural and cultural attractions. The province is home to the world-renowned Komodo National Park and Labuan Bajo, which are linked to Flores island. Sumba island – to which Ana Engge and the Kodi district belong – is known for the Pasola ceremony and the local tradition of ikat weaving according to provincial-level sources. Sumba's natural environment, coastline, and savanna landscape may also represent points of interest, although specific attractions and their distances from Ana Engge are not documented in available sources. The settlements of Kodi district, including Ana Engge, are located on the southwestern edge of the island, where local culture and authentic rural lifestyle are the primary areas of interest for those who travel there.

    Summary

    Ana Engge is a small settlement in Indonesia, relatively unknown to the broader public, which belongs to the Kodi kecamatan and Sumba Barat Daya regency in Nusa Tenggara Timur province. Its location on Sumba island, in the southeastern part of the Lesser Sunda Islands, represents a culturally rich yet economically and infrastructurally less developed area. Specific data about the settlement – population, named attractions, property prices – is not available from verifiable sources, therefore the characterization of the place can rely solely on provincial and regency-level contexts. The cultural heritage verified at the level of Nusa Tenggara Timur province, including ikat weaving and the Pasola tradition, places Ana Engge and the Kodi district countryside in a broader context.


    More about Kodi

    Kodi – Sumba Barat Daya's Ancient Marapu Heartland and Coastal Cultural District Kodi is the primary cultural district of Sumba Barat Daya (Southwest Sumba) Regency and arguably…

    Kodi – Sumba Barat Daya's Ancient Marapu Heartland and Coastal Cultural District

    Kodi is the primary cultural district of Sumba Barat Daya (Southwest Sumba) Regency and arguably the area of Sumba island with the most extraordinary concentration of traditional Marapu cultural sites. The Kodi area of southwestern Sumba is considered by many ethnographers and cultural tourism specialists to have the most intact and visually spectacular traditional village landscape in the entire island – the hilltop clan villages with their massive curved-roof uma mbatangu houses and the enormous megalithic kubur batu tomb complexes represent the Marapu traditional world at its most dramatic and best-preserved. The Kodi landscape – rolling savanna with spectacular coastal scenery where the southwestern Sumba cliffs plunge to the Indian Ocean – creates a visual environment of extraordinary power. The Kodi ikat textiles are among the most technically complex and symbolically dense in all of Sumba, with the western Sumba hinggi (men's cloth) of the Kodi tradition containing elaborate narrative panels depicting ancestral figures, mythological animals, and ceremonial events in natural-dye patterns of remarkable detail. The Kodi Marapu community maintains active ceremonial life – funerary ceremonies with buffalo sacrifice, clan spirit consultations, and the agricultural ceremonial cycle – in the southwest Sumba savanna environment that has shaped this culture for millennia.

    Tourism & Attractions

    The Kodi traditional village landscape is one of Indonesia's most compelling cultural tourism experiences. Traditional clan villages in the Kodi area – including the impressive Ratenggaro village on the coastal cliff above the Indian Ocean – have rooflines and tomb complexes of exceptional scale and beauty. Ratenggaro, with its coastal position and the sweep of the Indian Ocean below, is perhaps the single most dramatically sited traditional village in Sumba and one of the most photogenic village settings in eastern Indonesia. Kodi ikat textiles are available directly from village weaving households in the finest quality and most authentic natural-dye tradition. The southwest Sumba coast in the Kodi area has Indian Ocean beaches accessible by walking from the coastal villages.

    Real Estate Market

    The Kodi area has been subject to increasing tourism investment interest given its extraordinary cultural heritage and the global success of the Nihi Sumba luxury resort model in the adjacent Loura district. Coastal land in the Kodi area with traditional village proximity and ocean frontage has significant informal investment interest. Formal SHM titling is complicated by the deep customary land tenure of the Kodi Marapu community. Careful legal due diligence is essential; investment that engages the community appropriately will have better long-term outcomes than acquisitive approaches.

    Rental & Investment Outlook

    Kodi represents one of the most compelling cultural tourism investment locations in NTT – a destination where world-class cultural heritage, spectacular coastal scenery, and the proven premium tourism model of the adjacent south Sumba coast combine to create a property market with genuine long-term upside. A quality boutique lodge in the Kodi traditional village area – designed with cultural sensitivity, community partnership, and direct connection to the Kodi ikat textile tradition, Marapu village visits, and southwest Sumba coastal experiences – would serve the ultra-premium cultural tourism market that the Nihi Sumba model has validated in the same geographic zone.

    Practical Tips

    Kodi is approximately 2–3 hours from Tambolaka Airport by road. Waikabubak or Tambolaka are the logistics bases. Ratenggaro village is the most visited Kodi traditional village; respect the community's visitor protocols and pay the nominal entrance contribution. Kodi ikat textiles from village weavers represent the most authentic traditional textile purchasing available on the island. The southwest Sumba coast is exposed to Indian Ocean swell; swimming and marine activities require local safety assessment. Any land interest in the Kodi area requires deep community consultation with the Marapu clan leadership before any formal process begins.

    More about Sumba Barat Daya

    Southwest Sumba – Weekuri Lagoon and Ratenggaro VillageSumba Barat Daya (Southwest Sumba) Regency lies on the southwestern corner of Sumba Island. Its capital is Tambolaka. The…

    Southwest Sumba – Weekuri Lagoon and Ratenggaro Village

    Sumba Barat Daya (Southwest Sumba) Regency lies on the southwestern corner of Sumba Island. Its capital is Tambolaka. The region is the most untouched, wildest part of Sumba, with rocky coastlines, turquoise lagoons and traditional Marapu villages. Tambolaka Airport is located here, the western gateway to Sumba.

    Attractions and Activities

    Weekuri Lagoon, a natural turquoise tidal pool among rocks. Mandorak Beach with white sand and crystal-clear water. Ratenggaro traditional village with high-roofed houses and megalithic tombstones by the sea. Watu Maladong Beach with dramatic rock formations.

    Culture and Cuisine

    Marapu culture is strongly present. Ratenggaro village is a UNESCO World Heritage nominee. Cuisine: se’i babi, jagung bose, and fresh sea fish.

    Public Safety

    Southwest Sumba is safe. Medical care: puskesmas in Tambolaka; Waikabubak (approx. 40 minutes) has a hospital.

    Practical Information

    Tambolaka Airport directly in the regency. Best time April to October. Accommodation: a few resorts and simple guesthouses.

    More about East Nusa Tenggara

    East Nusa Tenggara (Nusa Tenggara Timur) is one of Indonesia's most diverse provinces: the world-famous Komodo Islands dragons, Flores' volcanic lakes, and traditional Flores…

    East Nusa Tenggara (Nusa Tenggara Timur) is one of Indonesia's most diverse provinces: the world-famous Komodo Islands dragons, Flores' volcanic lakes, and traditional Flores culture create a unique combination. Labuan Bajo is the gateway to Komodo National Park, and Flores is home to Kelimutu's colored lakes and rice terraces.

    Where is East Nusa Tenggara?

    The province is located in the eastern Lesser Sunda Islands, with the islands of Timor and Flores. Kupang is the capital, on Timor. Labuan Bajo at the western end of Flores is the departure point for the Komodo Islands, reachable by air from Bali and Jakarta.

    What to See?

    1. Komodo National Park – Komodo Dragons

    Komodo National Park is the only place in the world where the Komodo dragon lives. On Rinca and Komodo islands, tours let you see the dragons up close. The park is also famous for diving and snorkeling – Manta Point and Pink Beach are highlights.

    2. Kelimutu – Colored Volcanic Lakes

    Kelimutu's three crater lakes in central Flores are unique: the lakes' colors change over time (green, blue, black). Sunrise is the most dramatic. Located near Ende.

    3. Labuan Bajo and Surroundings

    Labuan Bajo is the gateway to the Komodo Islands, a lively port town. Padar Island's viewpoint is iconic; Kanawa and Sebayur islands offer crystal-clear waters. Sunset over the islands is unforgettable.

    4. Flores Rice Terraces and Culture

    Inland Flores has rice terraces, traditional villages, and ngada culture. Bajawa and surrounding villages (Bena, Wogo) showcase ancient traditions.

    5. Timor and Kupang

    Kupang is the capital of East Nusa Tenggara, on Timor. Christ King Cathedral and local markets offer insight. The region is less touristy and offers an authentic experience.

    When to Visit?

    April–October is the dry season, ideal for Komodo tours and diving. Komodo dragons can be seen year-round. July–August is peak season.

    How Long to Stay?

    5–8 days recommended:

    • 2–3 days: Komodo NP, Rinca, Padar, snorkeling
    • 2 days: Flores, Kelimutu, Ende
    • 1–2 days: Labuan Bajo and islands

    Renting or Investing in East Nusa Tenggara?

    If you're considering renting or investing in property in East Nusa Tenggara, these resources on our site can help you make informed decisions:

    • Indonesian Property FAQ – answers to the most common questions about renting and buying
    • Land Zoning Guide – understanding Indonesian land use regulations
    • Indonesian Real Estate Terminology – key terms explained
    • Property Guide – comprehensive guide to Indonesian real estate
    • Living in Indonesia – essential guide for expats
    • East Flores Guide – local insights and practical tips

    Official Resources

    For further information about East Nusa Tenggara, these official sources may be helpful:

    • Indonesia Travel – official tourism portal
    • East Nusa Tenggara Provincial Government – regional government information
    • Bank Indonesia – currency and exchange rate data
    • BMKG – weather and climate information
    • Directorate General of Immigration – visa regulations for foreign visitors

    Summary

    East Nusa Tenggara is the region of Komodo dragons and Flores' natural wonders. The world-famous park and Kelimutu lakes together provide an unforgettable experience.

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