
Photo: Olivier Grunewald

Photo: Thorsten Boeckel
The miners at Kawah Ijen work in pretty bad conditions – with little or no safety equipment. They monitor the molten sulfur as it flows out of pipes (from inside the volcano). Then they gather the coagulated sulfur, load it up and transport it to the side of the crater. The crystals are sold at about 680 rupiahs per kilogram (that’s about 5 US cents). The miners haul up about 80 to 100 kilograms per load, two loads every 24 hours. The sulfur mined at Kawah Ijen is among the purest in Indonesia, and used in the food and chemical industry.
Photo: Martin Rietze
I think the crater is amazing, but its beauty is a little bit marred by the treacherous working conditions of the miners. Many of them are grossly underpaid. They end up losing their health, and sometimes even their lives in the process of getting out the sulfur from the suffocating mines.
Photo: Olivier Grunewald
If you’re interested in visiting Kawah Ijen, you must know that the mine isn’t such an easy place to be in. One tourist wrote on her blog: “From an active vent in the volcano, gases billow out. And when the wind blows, these dense fumes head straight to your lungs, leaving you coughing and anxious to find cover.”Photographer Olivier Grunewald tried to capture these otherworldly blue flames in 2008, and lost two lenses and a camera in his quest for the perfect photos. He wore gas masks for the shoot and had to discard his clothing afterward. If you still want to go, make sure you don’t step into the lake – it’s pure acid. Sources: Yahoo News, A Cruising Couple