South-East Asia 2016

juni - december 2016
Een 181-daags avontuur van Joel Meer informatie
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  • 181dagen
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  • Dag 40

    Day 40: Orang-utan hunting

    25 juli 2016, Maleisië ⋅ ⛅ 25 °C

    We'd been really looking forward to today, as we'd planned a visit to Semengok Wildlife Sanctuary on the outskirts of town, where a tribe of around 30 orang-utans roamed freely. They're native to Borneo although not this particular area, and are heavily threatened with extinction due to habitat destruction (mostly chopping down jungle for palm oil plantations).

    It's located just on the southern outskirts of the city and you basically have two options for getting there - either a private tour with a hotel pickup and entry for about 75 RMY each, or the DIY approach involving a public bus and some walking. We decided to skimp for a change and go the public bus option.

    Feeding time at 9am meant that we had to catch the 7:15am bus, and that was leaving from a bus station nearly 30 minutes walk away. So we were up at 6am and walking by 6:20, stopping briefly to grab some baked goods for breakfast. The bus was easy enough to find and we paid our 4 RMY each for the ticket and waited. It left on time and trundled through the suburbs, until we reached the end of the line at the sanctuary 45 minutes later. Nice and early for the feeding time, but the bus drops you off at the front gate which is still 20 minutes walk from the orang-utan centre.

    We bought our tickets and started walking, along the way we struck up a conversation with a young English guy from Cornwall holidaying around Asia on his gap year. Good company for the 20 minutes! We arrived at about 8:20 to a fairly empty area, but it gradually filled up with people until by 9am it was fairly crowded.

    The guides escorted to the feeding area, and here we waited. They called the orang-utans, loudly, softly, yelling, but nothing happened. We ended up waiting a whole hour and didn't see anything - understandably very disappointed! But they're semi-wild animals and not kept in cages, so sightings can't be guaranteed of course. The park closed at 10am and wouldn't re-open until the afternoon feeding session at 3pm, so we canvassed our options. Eventually we decided that if they hadn't eaten in the morning, they would hopefully come in numbers in the afternoon.

    So we walked back out of the park, boarded the public bus and paid our 4 RMY tickets back to Kuching. By the time we arrived back it was nearly midday and definitely lunchtime given how early we'd been up, so we wandered briefly before settling on an Indian/Muslim restaurant. Shandos had a buffet plate of curried chicken & rice while I had a beef & vegetable martabak.

    Back onto the bus for the third time at 1pm, and again we trundled out through the suburbs to the sanctuary. We walked the path again, this time with a Swiss/South Korean couple who we'd seen in the morning. They were on an 8 week summer holiday from their home in Europe. When we arrived at the feeding area - we were in luck! The grandma was sitting in the middle of the road, and a young female was in the trees nearby. Both at about 10m distance from us.

    The keepers shuffled them down the road with food and into one of the feeding areas, where a crowd formed and we all gawped. They're just such amazing creatures - although they're bipedal they really have four arms. It's incredible how they just flick back and forth between holding say a coconut in their hands vs their feet vs holding on to branches and ropes.

    After about 15 minutes the keepers' radios all crackled, and the jungle in another direction started rustling. A mother and her daughter both turned up for food! They went down into the feeding area as well and helped themselves, while the original pair hung around up in the trees. And then a grand entrance - the second-largest male on site came around a corner a hundred or so metres away. A brief moment of panic since the keepers weren't sure if it was the alpha male, who apparently likes to dominate the shelter where we were, well, sheltering!

    Thankfully it wasn't, but this guy was still huge! Very long hair, 2 metres tall and several hundred kilograms in weight. Him and the alpha male are apparently so big that they don't like climbing trees anymore, they mostly just stick to walking around on the ground! We watched him feeding for probably 30 minutes, including one part where he bashed open a coconut on a tree and drank the milk!

    After all the excitement we'd forgotten that "feeding time" wasn't actually until 3pm, and it was only just approaching 3pm. When the time came the keepers took us back to the original feeding spot we'd been to in the morning, where there was just the one orang-utan - a younger female. She had her bananas and coconuts, but mostly sat high up in canopy munching so we couldn't get a great view. Another young female turned up about 20 minutes later, so we watched that one as well.

    Somehow time got away from us, and we suddenly realised with a shock that it was 3:50, the last bus for the day left at 4pm and we were 25+ minutes walk from the gate! I asked one of the employees if there was another bus and he said no, and a few minutes later the manager came running up and offered to drive us to the gate to make the bus, which we gratefully accepted! Made it just in time.

    Not much to report for the rest of the day, it was nearly 6pm by the time we got back to the hotel. We intended to freshen up and have another night on the town, but in the end after our showers we just zonked out and only made it as far as the Chinese noodle cart downstairs!

    Moving on tomorrow - we're heading a couple of hours eastwards to a beach place called Damai where we'll spend a couple of days chilling out by the pool. Tough life!
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  • Dag 41

    Day 41: North to the beach

    26 juli 2016, Maleisië ⋅ ⛅ 26 °C

    After so many busy days in a row, we'd decided that it was time for a mini beach break! Surprisingly, we hadn't been to the beach since Bali and had only swum briefly a couple of times at the pool in Jakarta. So it was high time for one. The night before we'd found a hotel, booked two nights, and found a cheap bus that would take us there.

    So we packed up, breakfasted at an Indian restaurant around the corner (we had roti canai, not curry!) and walked off to find the shuttle bus leaving the Pullman Hotel at 10:15am. Arrived at 10am to be informed that it doesn't leave from there anymore, maybe try the Hilton? So we walked quickly to the Hilton, and they told us it left from the Grand Margherita Hotel. So we walked over there, and thankfully the shuttle bus was actually there! By now it was 10:15, so we jumped on board and off we went.

    The bus ride (well it was actually just a crappy old Toyota Hiace van) took about 45 minutes heading north. We were heading to a small place called Damai Beach, on a peninsula jutting out into the sea north of Kuching. The ride itself was fairly uneventful, although the gloomy skies turned to rain not long after we hit the road.

    We arrived at the hotel at about 11:30 during a heavy downpour and checked in. Check in time here isn't until 3pm (!!) so we decided to have an early lunch while we waited for our room. The hotel/resort itself is huge, probably around 250 rooms, but appeared to be very empty. We had lunch in the cavernous restaurant (with 3 occupied tables), neither of our first choices available from the menu. The food was okay, but expensive for what it was - I guess staying at a resort means you're stuck paying their prices!

    The rain eased off to a light sprinkle by 12:30 when we finished, and our room was thankfully ready by now! So we wandered in. The reviews of the hotel online specifically mentioned that the rooms weren't that great and they were right - probably 10 years old, shoddily constructed and without a lick of maintenance done since. Things like light sockets hanging out of the ceiling, a mouldy water trail coming out of the air con vent, very poor finishing on the paintwork, lights not working. Oh well, it was cheap, and we weren't planning on spending much time in the room anyway.

    Sat on the balcony for a little while before heading down to the pool in the drizzle. Had good swim and sat under a beach umbrella for a while before wandering around and exploring the resort. From what I can see, there's three main wings to the building and two of them are completely unoccupied. And the wing that is occupied is maybe 1/2 full. There's 4 restaurants/bars here but only one of them actually opens at the moment.

    Checked out the beach which was quite nice, and had a chat to the lady running the dive shop. Prices quite high even by Australian standards so we decided to skip. Late afternoon we walked into "town" which is basically a small shopping village with a restaurant, a bar, some handicraft type shops, a 7-11 and a hawker style food court. Drinks at the bar were pretty expensive (18RMY / $6 AUD for a can of Tiger beer), so we had one each and then headed for the food court where we indulged in burgers and a plate of fries. This was more like it - total cost was 14 RMY / $4.75 ish AUD for the lot.

    Thought we'd defeat the high alcohol prices at the bar and the resort by getting drinks from 7-11 and smuggling it back into the hotel (there are signs everywhere saying OUTSIDE FOOD & DRINK PROHIBITED, CORKAGE WILL BE CHARGED), but it was apparently the only 7-11 in Malaysia that didn't sell alcohol! Maybe they've got an "understanding" with the local resorts, or maybe they're a Muslim business and don't want to sell it.

    Defeated, we wandered back to the hotel and chilled out on our balcony until bed. I'd started reading LA Confidential again after giving up partway through it last year, so I made some good progress on that. We don't have wifi in our room which is both a blessing and a curse. Hoping for good weather tomorrow!
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  • Dag 42

    Day 42: Beach time in Damai

    27 juli 2016, Maleisië ⋅ ⛅ 30 °C

    We left the our curtains wide open overnight and woke up early-ish with the sun. A good sign! Barely any clouds in the sky, and our patience from yesterday was being rewarded. Down to the hotel restaurant for breakfast around 8am (banana pancakes very good), then straight off to the pool.

    The main pool here is absolutely enormous - much longer than any pool I've been in before, I'd say it's close to 80 metres end-to-end and about 30 metres across, with infinity edges towards the ocean. I spent the morning alternating between reading, lazing on the sun lounger and swimming. More people around today than yesterday, I guess yesterday everyone was hiding in their room due to the rain.

    Back to the hotel restaurant for lunch where we both had the fish & chips that was unavailable yesterday - again very good! Maybe the better chef was on duty today. Had a swim at the beach in the afternoon, the water is probably the cleanest we've seen since leaving Australia, though the visibility isn't that good. Probably about 1.5m I'd guess - I could see my knees while standing up in shoulder-deep water.

    Again spent the afternoon alternating between the pool, the sun lounger and reading my book. Around 6pm we decided to head back to the bar from yesterday. Had a drink while watching the sun set, and decided to lash out and eat there. My first choice of spicy chicken pizza wasn't available, and my second choice of beef burger wasn't available either! Went with a third choice of chicken burger which turned out to be a chicken parmigiana burger - schnitzel with spicy tomato sauce and melted cheese. Pretty decent, and Shandos's pineapple fried rice was good too. Though the bill was 99 RMY for four drinks and two meals - about $33 AUD which is very overpriced for Asia! Quite a shock coming from Kuching where we'd spending about $5 AUD combined per meal.

    Back to the hotel satisfied, and with the weather forecast for tomorrow looking good we decided to spend another day here. One more day, then we'll check out and head back to Kuching, spend the day after that at Bako National Park to see proboscis monkeys, then the following couple of days at a highland jungle longhouse!
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  • Dag 43

    Day 43: An extra beach day

    28 juli 2016, Maleisië ⋅ ⛅ 31 °C

    Another day for doing absolutely nothing! We decided yesterday that although we were supposed to check out today, we'd stay another night and just relax on the beach and at the pool. A little bit of confusion with the front desk trying to explain to people with limited English that we weren't checking out, but had already paid for an extra night via Expedia. But we got through eventually!

    Breakfast again at the hotel restaurant (again completely empty aside from one other table). For whatever reason the tide seems much later today - I know it only shifts by an hour a day, but it seems to be a lot higher than it was 23 hours ago. There were also a few small waves coming in, obviously the current offshore was quite different and not getting as much protection from the reef or something.

    Spent some time swimming in the water which although clean still isn't very clear. There are saltwater crocodiles on Borneo although supposedly not around here, but it's still hard to put them out of your mind! Especially with our trip to the Top End so recently in our minds. Back to the pool for a while where I finished LA Confidential and swam around for a bit.

    Went into the town for a bite of lunch as we didn't feel like re-visiting the hotel restaurant. We shared a chicken & cheese martabak and a egg & onion roti canai, along with a pair of watermelon & mango juices. Much better value, only about 23 ringgit all up! For dessert we had an ice cream in a bun, which is exactly what you think it is. A scoop of ice cream, served in a bread roll. Interesting combo, but tasty!

    Back to the hotel where we spent a little bit of time in the lobby using the internet (there's no in-room wifi, and I can only get a 2G mobile data connection while Shandos can't get data at all). It's oddly disconcerting having only very limited access, but it's definitely a good thing to tune out for a while. Internet urges sated, it was back to the beach and pool for the afternoon!

    Didn't stay at the beach for long as it was low tide by now, and the beach isn't as nice at low tide. I found an enormous shard of glass in the sand (the size of an iPhone), and then after I'd put that in the rubbish bin I nearly stepped on a gigantic jellyfish. This thing was at least the size of a basketball, if not larger! No idea whether it was still alive or not, I don't know enough about jellyfish to even tell? You could also see right out at the water's edge a lot of little shoots coming up through the sand, which to me was a telltale sign that the beach was originally a mangrove swamp and had been cleared out for the hotel. The sand that far out felt quite muddy, the water was murky, and after my two unwanted discoveries we headed for the safety of the pool.

    Stayed in the pool for quite a while until around sunset (nearly 7pm)! Overall the hotel wasn't as busy as the previous day, though a large tour group of Chinese showed up in the late afternoon and started spitting and yelling everywhere as Chinese are wont to do (I later found out they were from Taiwan, whoops). Went back to the shopping area for dinner and realised that underneath Escobar where we'd been the last two nights was another place called Reggae Beach Bar with exactly the same menu, only the prices were 20% cheaper. Go figure!

    Had a beer here and then went to the food court for dinner - I had mi hoon (a fried noodle dish with spaghetti-like noodles), while Shandos had a char kway teoh. Back to the hotel around 8:30pm as a storm was brewing, happy with our nice little break and looking forward to continuing our journey.
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  • Dag 44

    Day 44: Back to Kuching

    29 juli 2016, Maleisië ⋅ ⛅ 24 °C

    Another day of clear skies and gorgeous weather, but alas we couldn't really enjoy it as we had to leave Damai. Knowing that we had nothing else planned for the day and the shuttle bus from our hotel back to Kuching arrived every 2 hours, we decided that in the morning we'd visit the nearby Sarawak Cultural Village. It's hard to describe exactly what this place is - it's a village with a bunch of huts and longhouses, each constructed by a different ethnic group from Sarawak in their traditional style, showcasing their traditional way of life and a unique aspect of their culture.

    So it's sort of a cultural theme park I guess.

    After our hotel breakfast we had a wander around the park (60 RMY entrance fee is a bit steep, but we were there for a few hours so it balances out I guess). It was quite interesting seeing all the different cultures and their traditions, though you'd probably have to be an anthropologist to really pick the differences between the Iban vs the Orang Ulu vs the Bidayuh and so on. Not to say that they all look the same or anything, but, well .. they all share an awful lot of similarities to the untrained eye.

    Had a quick lunch at the food court before heading back to the hotel and waiting for the shuttle. It arrived eventually at about 1:45 running 30 minutes late, and there were four couples waiting so when we all piled in it was completely chockers. The van pulled up at the cultural village nearby as well but unfortunately the people waiting couldn't get in as there were no seats (and even the floor was taken up with luggage).

    About 10 minutes down the road the German man next to me asked where the shuttle was going and I replied Kuching, which sent him and his wife into a tizzy! Apparently they only wanted to go to the Damai Beach Resort which was maybe 500 metres from the hotel, but had waited 2 hours for a taxi to take them there and then hopped on the shuttle bus without asking where it was going! And they both looked like they'd brought their entire wardrobe with them - two large suitcases each plus hand luggage, pretty unbelievable really.

    So we turned around and drove them back to the Damai Beach Resort, then back out onto the road again! By now it was pushing 2pm and we were about 45 minutes behind schedule, but it's not like we were in a hurry.

    We'd booked into a new hotel for our next couple of nights, this time on the waterfront at a place called the Waterfront Inn & Hostel. It's in an old building but was renovated maybe 10 years ago, so it's at least reasonably modern inside. The common areas are lovely in a rustic way. Spent the afternoon doing chores - Shandos writing and blogging, me doing laundry and sending a postcard back to GALKAL.

    In the shuttle we'd struck up a conversation an Australian man and his German wife in their fifties; we'd seen them around the hotel of course but hadn't really spoken to them. As it turned out, they'd booked into the Waterfront Inn as well! So we had a chat while checking in and decided to have dinner together.

    At 7pm we headed out with them to a Vietnamese restaurant around the corner - the food was great, very authentic tasting and cheap too. They are quite well travelled having been to India maybe 10 times, and with lots of great stories. Definitely the longest and best conversation we've had with anyone since leaving Sydney - although we spent a lot of time with Carol in Malacca there was still a bit of a language barrier at times, whereas here there was none.

    On the way back to the hotel after dinner we agreed that we'd all head to Bako National Park tomorrow as a group - part of getting there involves a boat ride which gets cheaper per head the larger your group, so having a group of 4 saves a good chunk of cash. So we'll meet them downstairs tomorrow after breakfast!
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  • Dag 45

    Day 45: Bako National Park

    30 juli 2016, Maleisië ⋅ ⛅ 28 °C

    Today we'd decided to visit the locally-famous Bako National Park for a chance to see the rare proboscis monkey. Unsurprisingly, they're so named as they have long, large distinctive noses, and only exist on Borneo. Our new friends Keith and Maria were keen to join, so we all breakfasted and caught the 9am bus just near the hotel. After an hour's bus ride we arrived at the boat terminus where we had to catch a boat downriver to the national park proper.

    The boats are just medium-sized speedboats with space for around 12-15 people, so most of the people from the bus piled in and off we went. Fairly short trip of maybe 20 minutes, with mangrove-banked muddy river soon giving way to limestone cliffs, heaped jungle foilage and bright blue water. It wasn't a great day as it was fairly overcast, but at least it wasn't raining.

    Once we alighted from the boat in the national park, we made our way to the visitor centre to check out the information. There were two trails Shandos and I wanted to hike along; one of which was an hour each way and the other was 90 minutes each way. But we'd been given heavily conflicting information about the boats and buses back home - depending on who you asked, the latest departure was anywhere between 2:30pm and 4pm!

    By the time we'd stocked up on water and snacks, registered in the park book, slathered on sunscreen and insect repellent it was after 11am, and our hopes of doing both trails were fading quickly. We decided to go for the shorter one first and see how we were progressing at the end - this trail had more chances of spotting the monkeys, while the other trail was to a spectacular limestone pinnacle that stuck out of the sea. We chose the monkeys, so off we went into the jungle.

    The trail was pretty slow going as it was mostly over tree roots - enormous root systems where you have to be careful about your footing or you'll slip and bust an ankle. And once we'd plunged into the dense foliage the temperature went up hugely and pretty soon we were all sweating. I've done a lot of sweating on this trip so far but nothing like this. It was running down my arms, my back, my neck, dripping into my eyes, running down my bum crack, the works. Every time I moved my hands droplets of "water" would go flying like you've just washed your hands and don't have anything to dry them on. It was gross.

    No sign of any monkeys either - having done a fair bit of hiking in Australia I think we're both fairly good at spotting wildlife, but we were coming up very short. It probably didn't help that the trail was a bit crowded - we were stuck for quite a while behind a group of 10 English tourists (looked like a double-family group), where the teenage girls were constantly moaning about how uncomfortable they were and how much it sucked and why they wanted to turn back and so on.

    After about 45 minutes we finished the trail and popped out onto a large beautiful beach. Definitely not isolated as everyone who'd done the trail was there, but it was a nice environment and we got some good photos out of it. Lots of very large hermit crabs around, probably the size of golf balls or so! Although privately I thought the best part was having a cool sea breeze drying me off after the stuffiness and humidity of the jungle.

    After a rest and a munch on some supplies we headed back down the trail. We realised pretty quickly that most of the people we'd accompanied on the way to the beach were on a one-way guided walk and were getting little speedboats back to the visitor centre, so once we left the beach we were suddenly on our own. A couple of minutes along the trail Keith heard a rustle in the foliage and we all paused, spotting a family group of long-tail macaque monkeys about 5-10 metres away in the trees. These are the sort of monkeys you get at places like Ubud; fairly small, used to humans and sometimes quite aggressive towards food like Darling Harbour seagulls. The male wandered over briefly, gave us a sniff from the treeline and wandered away.

    We kept walking and I'd basically given up hope that we'd see any proboscis monkeys. But about 2/3rds of the way back along the trail I heard a movement in the trees to our right and froze. We were standing on the side of a cliff edge with a good vantage point over the trees for maybe 30-50 metres to the shoreline, and I could see one of the trees was shaking and not with the wind. I quietly called to the others to stop, and suddenly saw a flash of brown fur about 25 metres away - a monkey! Macaques don't have brown fur - it's a proboscis monkey! Jackpot!

    He sat in the top of the palm tree chewing on fronds for maybe five minutes - we couldn't see him that well but it was definitely a confirmed sighting! After a little while he leaped through a few trees off to our left and moved on, but another one was by now rustling around to our right. This one moved across as well and we got a better view since he was closer in. And again, he just sat there chewing his palm fronds.

    Although I said earlier we were on the edge of a cliff, and we were, we were actually about halfway up the cliff with an enormous boulder overhanging us. Over the next 20 minutes that we watched the monkeys, three more proboscis monkeys came over the top of the boulder and leaped into the trees over our heads. Again, not that close to take good iPhone photos, but still fairly close! A couple of other groups had turned up by this point so I stopped them and pointed out the monkeys. Thankfully not the large whinging English group from earlier, I would've let them walk past!

    Eventually we had our fill of the monkeys and pressed on down the path, arriving back at the trailhead by 1pm. At this point there was basically no chance we could do the longer path in time to make the last boat, even if it was at 4pm like some people said. But we'd seen the main thing we wanted to see, so not too disappointing. We headed to the visitors centre and cafe where we ate the last of our snacks and drank a beer to celebrate our large monkey sighting - apparently seeing one or two is common but a large family group is rare. Substantially less rare was the enormous hog that was hanging around near the cafe, waiting for scraps to get thrown off the balcony.

    Beers finished, we started walking the few hundred metres from the cafe back to the boat dock. The other three pressed on ahead but I decided I'd walk along the parallel beach (there was a dense but narrow strip of jungle between the boardwalk and the beach). About halfway along the walk I heard another rustle in the trees and stopped - this time a proboscis monkey was right there in front of me, maybe 10 metres away! This was a large male with an enormous nose, and another monkey nearby that I could heard but not see. Moved in closer to take a few photos which of course were mostly obscured by leaves, and eventually it got spooked and ran away. Still, pretty happy with my effort!

    Rejoined the others at the boat dock where a boat thankfully turned up fairly soon. It wasn't the last boat but since we weren't staying overnight and didn't have time for any more walks, we boarded and headed for the terminal. There was a bus waiting which left maybe 15 minutes later - again who knows if it was the last bus, hopefully not, but anything's possible. The journey back to Kuching took about 45 minutes and we collapsed into the hotel room tired and very smelly.

    Had a great shower and relaxed for a couple of hours before meeting Keith & Maria again downstairs for dinner. We went back to the James Brooke Cafe where we'd eaten on our first night in Kuching last Saturday - hard to believe we've been here a full week! Not a big night as we were all tired from the day, so headed back around 9pm and basically straight to bed. Though since we've got the front room overlooking the street and the waterfront, it was difficult to sleep as it was a Saturday night and very noisy outside.
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  • Dag 46

    Day 46: Last day in Kuching

    31 juli 2016, Maleisië ⋅ ⛅ 33 °C

    As per the title, today was our last day in Kuching. We've been in the area for 8 days now, far longer than we ever expected I think! We celebrated with a sleep-in, which saw me struggling downstairs for "breakfast" at 10:30am. Bumped into Keith and Maria while I was down there and organised to do dinner again tonight.

    After breakfast we headed out briefly in the morning with no real plans; we had a coffee and cake in a nice looking cafe at the colonial-era courthouse building which we'd seen earlier in the week and meant to come back to. And of course Keith and Maria were there finishing their coffee! This town ain't big enough for the four of us.

    Almost immediately afterwards we decided it was lunchtime (it was midday at this point), so we found a cheap Chinese food court where we loaded up on bowls of noodles again for a ridiculously cheap price (two bowls of noodles, a soup and two drinks was about $5 AUD). Shandos convinced me to re-visit H&M in the nearby mall where she looked at hats, but nothing particularly took her fancy.

    Wandered back to the hotel where we spent the rest of the afternoon in the common areas on laptops, browsing the internet, doing various things and spending some time on Skype with parents. Headed out around 6pm for a sundowner beverage at a nearby pub and had a couple of beers before rushing back to the hotel to meet Keith & Maria for dinner.

    Tonight's venue was TopSpot Food Court - a huge outdoor food court on top of a parking garage (!!) which is basically a fish market. You pick your seafood, tell them how you want it cooked and they bring it over. Malaysian prices of course, and since we'd so far had a very cheap day we splurged on a lobster (grilled in black pepper sauce), half a kilo of king prawns grilled in garlic butter, a plate of stir fried Bornean ferns in chilli sauce and two serves of steamed rice. All up - 125 ringgits which is about $40 AUD. I don't think you'd get half a kilo of king prawns for that price in Australia, let alone cooked and with a fresh lobster and sides! I just can't get over the price differences.

    Not much to report after this, we left the food court and stocked up on cash for our next leg, Gunung Mulu National Park.
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  • Dag 47

    Day 47: Into the Wild

    1 augustus 2016, Maleisië ⋅ ☀️ 15 °C

    Today we were finally taking leave of Kuching, and heading north into the interior of Borneo to Mulu National Park, home to some of the largest caves and underground rivers in the world. I'd never heard of it before this trip, when I was doing some research a couple of weeks ago. One of my vague quests is to visit as many UNESCO World Heritage Sites as possible - there's over a thousand of them and more are added every year so it's going to be challenging, but something to think about long-term I guess.

    Anyway we had a midday flight out of Kuching, so we slept in a little before visiting a nearby Indian place for breakfast of roti canai. Again the food was comically cheap, we paid I think about 10 RMY or $3.33 AUD for 4 roti pancakes (decent size), a coffee and a tea. Checked out of the hotel without seeing Keith or Maria, but I've got Keith's business card so I'll find him on Facebook at a later date.

    Arrived at Kuching Airport in plenty of time and breezed through check in etc; a very easy task when you don't take ridiculous amounts of luggage! This was our first flight in quite a while that wasn't with AirAsia, instead we were flying with MASWings which is the rural subsidiary of Malaysian Airlines. The plane was a relatively small turboprop plane with about 70 seats and was entirely full of European tourists. We were surrounded by a large group of Dutch people yammering away. The plane left on time and I could mercifully insert my noise-cancelling earphones and not listen to discussion of tulips or whatever they were talking about.

    Arrived in Mulu several hundred kilometres inland at probably the smallest airport we've ever seen. The terminal was basically a shack, and you could pretty much walk from the plane straight out on the road in about 3 minutes. The national park is right next door, though due to the midday heat we opted for a local's clapped-out Land Cruiser for 10 RMY. Still good value for a 2 minute drive.

    Entrance to the national park is via a long narrow rope bridge over a swifty-flowing jungle river, which gave us a real feeling of going into the wild. But the park facilities were pretty modern, including a cafe, visitor's centre and offices etc. It was only gazetted as a national park in 2008, so this part was fairly new. Our accommodation in the park was a bit older, traditional-style wooden longhouses on stilts. Unfortunately the only place they could fit us was in the dormitory, so I was about to get my first taste of dorm accommodation since band tours 20 years ago.

    Thankfully there were only a couple of other occupants in the 20-person dorm. It was a large-ish building with a couple of sub-rooms (though no internal doors), so we picked a small 3-bed room towards the back and moved in. Quick bite to eat in the cafe before our first cave tour - first up we were doing the Deer Cave and Lang Cave double.

    As it was a guided tour we were in a group of about 20 people, again mostly Europeans (Germans, Dutch and French). The first part of the walk was along a boardwalk through the rainforest/jungle over towards the towering limestone cliffs. Quite a nice 30 minute walk, though there wasn't much wildlife to see beyond a couple of lizards and a gigantic huntsman spider (even to an Australian it looked large!).

    Deer Cave is named because the locals used to hunt deer here. The streams that trickle out of the cave are very high in salt because they're about 50% bat poo, and of course the deer liked to lick the salt left behind on the rocks. We climbed a set of stairs up into the cave and our breath was absolutely taken away - the initial chamber was absolutely gigantic. At least a hundred metres high, probably a hundred metres wide and several hundred metres long. The ceiling was just enormous splotches of black colouring which we learned quickly were bats!

    We followed the cave passage further and further back and although it got narrower and started twisting and turning, it was still unfathomably large. Eventually we reached the other end of the passage where a huge rockfall hundreds of years ago had created an entirely new valley called the Garden of Eden. It's unreachable from this side sadly, and is a full day hike to reach going around the other way. Still reeling from the scale, we left Deer Cave and did the short walk around to Lang Cave.

    Lang Cave is much much smaller than Deer Cave, but still very impressive. Different geology in this cave, lots more stalagtites and stalagmites, bringing back memories of a very young trip to Abercrombie Caves. This cave also had huge formations of "jellyfish" which were large bulbous rippled rock formations that actually looked an awful lot like jellyfish!

    We left this cave (after encountering a small but very angry looking snake) at 5pm, just in time for the Bat Exodus. If you're wondering what that it, it's exactly what it says on the can. The black blotches on the ceiling of Deer Cave turned out to be approximately 4 MILLION bats; close to 40 different species in just this cave system, including 25 or so that are unique to the area. Mostly insect-eating and herbivore bats, so much smaller than the flying foxes and fruit bats we get in Australia.

    What makes the exodus so interesting though is that as they leave the cave, the bat swarms fly in a huge constantly shifting corkscrew, hoping to avoid being picked off by the bat hawk birds that hang around near the cave entrance. The exodus went on for probably 45-50 minutes, just swarm after swarm of bats. Crazy.

    Walked back along the boardwalk to the visitor centre pretty much in the dark, though again not much wildlife on show. The spider was still there, some mating millipedes, a barking frog, and a scorpion in a fallen log was about all we found. Quick beer at the cheap bar outside the park, back across the swing bridge to the cafe for a tired dinner, then off to the dormitory and bed. No mobile reception, no wifi means it was time to read another book, so I cracked open Around the World in 80 Days. I'm starting to identify a lot with Passepartout!
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  • Dag 48

    Day 48: More Caving

    2 augustus 2016, Maleisië ⋅ ☀️ 15 °C

    Slept reasonably well in the dorm. I'm still paranoid about my snoring in an environment like that, though I don't think I would've disturbed anyone last night - of the 20 beds in the dorm only 4 were occupied! One guy was way over in the other partition, and although another was only a few beds away he came in very late and was snoring loudly when I woke up due to a rainstorm around 2am, so stuff him.

    Breakfast of pancakes at the park cafe before joining our next group for this morning's cave tour: Clearwater Cave and Cave of the Winds. These caves are a bit more of an adventure, since they're accessed only by small motorised canoes. So we clambered into our boats and set off up the river, stopping along the way at a traditional longhouse community with a handicraft market. The stuff looked nice but travelling the way we do means that we just can't buy objects.

    Back to the boats we got to our first stop at Cave of the Winds. This was the tightest cave we'd been in so far - a couple of almost-squeezes, ups and downs and a few patches of almost total darkness. Though for some reason, the handrails and ambient lighting made me think almost of a Disneyland queue, like you were in an unreal environment. It's called the Cave of the Winds because the narrow passages mean the wind entering at far ends becomes quite strong in places. Interesting stuff.

    Further up the river we went, until we got to the final stop: Clearwater Cave. This one is named fairly obviously because it has a very strong, deep river running through it. Despite the immensity of the Deer Cave yesterday, Clearwater Cave is actually much much larger because it has a much longer run, and far more in the way of side-chambers. In fact, Clearwater Cave is believed to be the largest cave system in the world by volume (over 30 million cubic metres), and the 8th longest cave in the world at 215 kilometres (!!!).

    Obviously we didn't walk the entire length, we just had a poke around the first several hundred metres! Again lots of amazing geology in here, deep pools and a couple of ceiling cave-ins where you're looking up at rainforest several hundred metres above you. It's hard to actually put in to words sometimes. It's a bit embarrassing, but in these totally alien environments with their timber boardwalks, ladders, twinkling ambient lights, constant dripping and carefully organised spotlights, often times the only reference point I could latch on to was video game environments like World of Warcraft or Skyrim. Some of the sets and environments in those games seem pretty inspired by caves like this, maybe that's why it felt a little familiar?

    Outside of Clearwater Cave we had a free hour or so before getting the boat back to the park headquarters which we passed by swimming in the river as it flows out of the cave. It's not stagnant, very clean, and (obviously) very clear water! Though it felt positively icy at about 18 degrees - easily the coldest water we've been in for a long time! A couple of other folk from the tour swam with us and we chatted to them. As it turned out, one of them was an admin assistant for student doctors at Concord Hospital in Sydney, and knew my brother Sean reasonably well! What a small world. Also present was another guy from the dorm (not the snorer), who was a student doctor from Italy about to do a six month placement in Kalimantan (the Indonesian part of Borneo). He wasn't coming back to the park HQ with us though, from here he was doing an overnight hike to see the Pinnacles with a group of other people. We'd considered it, but it looked a bit too intense for the level of gear/fitness we currently have!

    Back at the park headquarters we had lunch with our new friends (this lady plus a very well travelled 50-something English lady here on her own). No organised tours for the afternoon so we decided to hike out to a waterfall about 3km distant for another swim, since the weather seemed to be holding up nicely. The first half of the hike was on the boardwalk from yesterday and was very easy going, but the second half was in a rainforest/jungle trail which was extremely muddy in places. Thongs maybe weren't the right choice!

    Made it out to the waterfall but it wasn't quite as impressive as we'd hoped, particularly after the ones we'd seen in the Northern Territory. Again the water was clear and cold, but we didn't stay in the water that long as the bottom was quite soft and muddy, plus the fish kept nipping at my feet! Sneaky buggers. Back to the park HQ we tramped and headed straight outside the gates to the cheap bar and had a couple of well-earned beers. It had been a pretty intense day of walking and climbing stairs in particular.

    Back to the dorm after dinner which had filled up a bit - the snorer from last night and the Italian student doctor had both left, and been replaced by a pair of German girls and a quartet of Japanese guys who looked like they'd just come back from an overnight hike. We're booked on a 7am canopy walk tomorrow and our flight's at 10am, so our alarm was on for 6:20am as we needed to pack up before the walk. Annoyingly, the Japanese guys who'd been sleeping all afternoon suddenly decided at 10pm that it was the perfect time to organise all their bags, have showers and get ready for bed. After everyone else is asleep of course. Jerks! I'll get my own back at 6am.
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  • Dag 49

    Day 49: Travelling to Sabah

    3 augustus 2016, Maleisië ⋅ ⛅ 25 °C

    Last morning in Mulu National Park. I'd woken up in the middle of the night to a massive tropical rainstorm, but rolled over and resumed sleeping with the assumption that it would finish by morning. Alas I was wrong - although it wasn't throwing it down, it was very overcast and constantly raining. Sometimes drizzle, sometimes more intense, but fairly constant.

    We packed up quickly (and noisily near the Japanese) and met our group for the canopy walk at the park HQ at 7am. The guide warned us that with the rain we likely wouldn't see any animals, and there was also a chance that we'd arrive at the canopy stairs only to find that it was too windy and we couldn't proceed for safety reasons. They'd offer a refund if it was cancelled for wind, but not for rain! Two of the 8-person group decided to bail anyway due to the intermittent rain, but the rest of us decided to press on.

    We departed down the now well-trodden boardwalk, where the canopy tree-top walk stood about 20 minutes away (actually just near where we'd turned off on the waterfall trail the previous day). Walking along under the rainforest canopy wasn't too bad since most of the rain doesn't reach the floor, but when we arrived at the canopy ladders it was bucketing down again. We waited 15 minutes for things to clear and although the rain didn't lift much, the wind seemed to die off a fair bit.

    The reason the guide was worried about wind was because the canopy walk is entirely constructed from wood, bamboo poles and some steel cable ropes attached to trees. It's a series of suspension bridges, 480 metres long and mostly about 20 metres above the forest floor. In times of wind, the trees obviously sway and the bridges sway dangerously along with them. There's also a higher risk of branches snapping off trees higher up and falling on the bridges.

    But we put all that out of our heads, and just after 8am started out on to the bridges. It was a pretty exhilerating experience, but as promised we didn't really see any animals. Very interesting to see the forest from a very different angle though! And we were very glad we did it, despite getting very wet in the process - but that's what rain jackets are for I guess.

    We walked back along the boardwalk for the final time very quickly, since our flight was at 10am and we were getting picked up at the park entrance at 9. After some serious striding we made it back to the park HQ by 8:45 meaning we just had time for a super-quick breakfast - pancakes again! Out the front just after 9 and the car is there but no sign of the woman we'd arranged to meet. After a few discussions with a nearby local, we sit and wait nearby. Soon the car goes past with a different driver, but I flag it down anyway and we hop in! Go figure.

    Arrived at the airport by 9:20 and it's no problem at all as nobody else is around. Check in and wait as the plane arrives and gets turned around. It's another twin-engine turboprop that seats 72, but only 14 passengers on board! Flight to Miri was very uneventful - only 30 minutes so it didn't have time to be!

    Here in Miri we had a 4 hour layover as our flight to Kota Kinabalu wasn't until 3pm. We picked a choice spot with wifi, power points and beverages and set about catching up on the internet. Eventually it was time to board our flight so we did; back to AirAsia after our last two MASWings outings. Again a very short flight of only 45 minutes.

    Taxi to the hotel near waterfront in Kota Kinabalu, and settle in to our room on the 6th floor which is newly renovated and a huge relief after some dodgy rooms over the past week or two. Probably the nicest place we've stayed since nomaps flashpackers in Malacca. We headed out to explore a bit and found the jetty where speedboats for the nearby diving paradise islands depart - maybe we'll check that out tomorrow. There were a bunch of guys playing an indoor soccer competition in the old dock warehouses which seems like a great use for them!

    Had a couple of sundowner beers at a nearby bar then set off in search of dinner at a local market. Decided to just sample local delicacies so we had some chicken wings on sticks (done on a BBQ in a chilli glaze), then picked out some vegetable martabak, fried bananas (6 pieces for 1 RMY!), a couple of buns and a pair of mango drinks. Very much local prices, so we ate well and very very cheaply. Back to the hotel around 9pm as Shandos was struggling - she had tripped on an uneven paver while looking sideways to cross the road and had taken some skin off her knee, poor thing. Showers and bed time at 10pm after a long day.
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