Hope everyone is having a great Christmas, I know we are - caught the sun today !!
To document our trip of discovery that has been greatly motivated by the diversity of food available and to sample a totally different culture to the one we are used to. This has been made entirely possible thanks to GOV.UK sending me State Pension payments :-). Also the countless hours Hazel has spent on the web researching destinations and booking flights, accommodation and tours
Monday, 25 December 2017
Update update and merry Christmas
Because I used the new camera in the rainforest, the photos are too large to add more than one to the posts. I’m working on reducing the size of files so I can update the blob with the rest of the story so far.
Hope everyone is having a great Christmas, I know we are - caught the sun today !!
Hope everyone is having a great Christmas, I know we are - caught the sun today !!
Wednesday, 20 December 2017
Gomantong Caves
The last day of our Rainforest trip was not in the Rainforest but a drive to the Gomantong caves. These limestone are home to thousands of bats and several species of swiftlets which build their nests high up on the cave walls and ceiling. These are collected twice a year to produce Bird’s Nest Soup. This area is allegedly the best managed birf’s Nest collection are in the world. They are collected by erecting flimsy rattan ladders which are manoeuvred by ropes tied to the ladders and pulled and guided by people on the cave floor. Scary work but hats off to David Attenborough who insisted on going to the top when he filmed here - not on the ladders but on a special hoist - to film the bats. The amount of guano in the caves meant the stench was overpowering - or it would have been to those who can smell - lucky me eh?
Please click here for PHOTOS
Please click here for PHOTOS
Tuesday, 19 December 2017
Rainforest Day 2
So, up and out for a quick breakfast at 06:30 and then a boat trip to the oxbow lake. I remember oxbow lakes from O’level Geography. Silt is deposited on the banks of a river where it makes a tight meander. Over time the silt almost cuts of the main river and the lake is formed. The lake was covered in wild hyacinth (photos) and grows so thick it can become almost impassable. The photo of the 2 hornbills before we set off, shows part of the relationship ritual between Horbills. The male offes a seed or nut to the female. If she accepts, they remain together for life - sweet.
Back to camp for real breakfast a rest then lunch. After lunch, the afternoon boat trip. We were treated today by a herd of elephants on the riverbank and the last remaining of the Big 5 - wild Orang Utan - very special as they are not often seen. With regards to the elephants, a man living in the region for the las 15 years had made 7 visits into the Rainforest and this was the first time he had seen elephants !!! And we had seen them 2 days running. Just lucky I guess.
Please click here for PHOTOS
Back to camp for real breakfast a rest then lunch. After lunch, the afternoon boat trip. We were treated today by a herd of elephants on the riverbank and the last remaining of the Big 5 - wild Orang Utan - very special as they are not often seen. With regards to the elephants, a man living in the region for the las 15 years had made 7 visits into the Rainforest and this was the first time he had seen elephants !!! And we had seen them 2 days running. Just lucky I guess.
Please click here for PHOTOS
Monday, 18 December 2017
Rainforest - Day 1
The tour continued after the sun bears (btw, they are the smallest bear species) - a 2 hour minibus ride followed by a 2 minute boat ride downstream and across the other side of the Kinabatangan river. Help your self lunch a couple of hours rest then a 4pm river cruise, wildlife spotting. It was supposed to be either a trek or a river cruise. The trek was cancelled as they said there were elephants about and an encounter may have been a bit hairy
The guides on all the boats were phone app connected and as soon as anything was spotted by one boat, the rest arrived shortly after
We were treated to 2 elephants trampling around a disused house, long tailed macaques, proboscis monkeys, hornbills and a small croc. Only thing missing from the Sabah Big 5 was Orang Utan. What a great day. The evening cruise was cut short due to rain but only after a close-up of 2 Kingfishers asleep on a branch at the river’s edge.
The lodge accommodation was pretty basic - no hot water and because it was off season and not many people there - no evening activities, so very quiet. - 06:30 start tomorrow !!!!
Please click here for PHOTOS
The guides on all the boats were phone app connected and as soon as anything was spotted by one boat, the rest arrived shortly after
We were treated to 2 elephants trampling around a disused house, long tailed macaques, proboscis monkeys, hornbills and a small croc. Only thing missing from the Sabah Big 5 was Orang Utan. What a great day. The evening cruise was cut short due to rain but only after a close-up of 2 Kingfishers asleep on a branch at the river’s edge.
The lodge accommodation was pretty basic - no hot water and because it was off season and not many people there - no evening activities, so very quiet. - 06:30 start tomorrow !!!!
Please click here for PHOTOS
Sepilok - Sun Bears
Across the road from the Orang Utang sanctuary was one for the Sun Bears (also known as honey bears). These are a protected endangered species as their natural habitat was severely destroyed by deforestation caused by logging in the second half of the 20th century
During feeding, the sun bear can extend the exceptionally long tongue 20–25 cm (7.9–9.8 in) to extract insects and honey.
During feeding, the sun bear can extend the exceptionally long tongue 20–25 cm (7.9–9.8 in) to extract insects and honey.
Sepilok - Orang Utang Sanctuary
We stopped the following day around the pool at the hotel in Sandakan as a day’s relax after the time spent in the big city. Monday morning we were picked up @ 8am to take us to the rain forest. First stop was the Orang Utang sanctuary at Sepilok where orphaned orang utangs are taught the rudiments of life to prepare them for return to the wild. Normally they are with their mothers for 6 / 7 years and then they separate for ever. This one, Rosa, cam out of the forest and walked along the side rail and guided us to the day centre where we were treated to such antics as this, proving their skills
Sunday, 17 December 2017
End of part one
Today saw us move on from the throbbing Metropolis that is Kuala Lumpur to Sandakan in Sabah on the island of Borneo,
I have been impressed by KL in particular and Malaysia as a whole. Everyone we have met has been so kind and welcoming. When we have be in the street or at a train station seeming lost or confused (it’s an age thing) someone normally someone young has approached us and given help with a smile. Yesterday we were at an Expo in the centre of the city in the area of Masjid Jemak the purpose of which was to tell everyone the plans the Government had for Malaysia and how everyone can play a part. How one should focus on what they can do `not what they can’t. By 2020, the aim is to have the whole of Malaysia connected by public transport. Trains will travel between KL and Singapore in 90 mins. New towns are being built everywhere with houses/apartments for all. Malaysia has a future.
Then we arrive here in Borneo. The contrast is so stark, yes there are new developments springing up but there is an awful of squalor. I suppose progress has to start somewhere. The vision is there and the poor will have help to move on. Let’s see what tomorrow brings
I have been impressed by KL in particular and Malaysia as a whole. Everyone we have met has been so kind and welcoming. When we have be in the street or at a train station seeming lost or confused (it’s an age thing) someone normally someone young has approached us and given help with a smile. Yesterday we were at an Expo in the centre of the city in the area of Masjid Jemak the purpose of which was to tell everyone the plans the Government had for Malaysia and how everyone can play a part. How one should focus on what they can do `not what they can’t. By 2020, the aim is to have the whole of Malaysia connected by public transport. Trains will travel between KL and Singapore in 90 mins. New towns are being built everywhere with houses/apartments for all. Malaysia has a future.
Then we arrive here in Borneo. The contrast is so stark, yes there are new developments springing up but there is an awful of squalor. I suppose progress has to start somewhere. The vision is there and the poor will have help to move on. Let’s see what tomorrow brings
Tuesday, 12 December 2017
The Bird Park
Standing in 21acres (8.5 Hectares)
the birdpark is a ‘free flight’ aviary at times 30m high and containing over 300 birds, We easily ‘lost’ half a day in there, travelling by ‘GrabCar’ for the first time. To a non-City dweller, this mode of transport is so convenient and cheap and easy to use (as long as you have a WiFi connection. So many peacocks, many blocking the walkways standing proud. Standing so until people approached, then they turned like a revolving door to let them pass.
the birdpark is a ‘free flight’ aviary at times 30m high and containing over 300 birds, We easily ‘lost’ half a day in there, travelling by ‘GrabCar’ for the first time. To a non-City dweller, this mode of transport is so convenient and cheap and easy to use (as long as you have a WiFi connection. So many peacocks, many blocking the walkways standing proud. Standing so until people approached, then they turned like a revolving door to let them pass.
Sunday, 10 December 2017
Batu Caves
.
At one point all torch lights were extinguished to experience TOTAL blackness.
Even after allowing eyes to adjust, there was nothing. Everything living in there was blind as there was nothing to see, so they weren’t disturbed by the flashlights
Not to be missed is a cave off to the left when you leave the station. At 5RM per person, it’s a great spectacle.
Saturday, 9 December 2017
Petronas Towers
They remain the largest twin towers in/ the world. The tour took us to the viewing gallery on the 37th floor. This a split level walkway between the two towers, the lower gallery for the tourists and the upper gallery for staff
The tour continued much further up, with the lift moving @ 6m per sec
View on the park from 37th floor
View of the park from 87th floor
Shopping Malls
KL is not a place to walk the streets. People travel by train, Uber or similar and seem to be for ever in the malls, which are many and at times mind blowing to someone not used to the big City. They all have large food areas with sellers of every food taste imaginable (including the Chizza - a pizza topped with thick melted cheese) round the outside and eating area in the middle.
They may have left France but they are still in KL
| The largest indoor theme park in Malaysia, inside one of the malls, complete with Big Dipper and other rides |
| My feelings entirely! |
| The taxi driver said they don’t celebrate Christmas in Malaysia |
| Look at the size of those prawns Not very brown, should be a Greenie perhaps :-) |
Thursday, 7 December 2017
KLCC Park
Wednesday, 6 December 2017
Tuesday, 5 December 2017
Blimey, never expected that!
Bizarre, ‘Hark the Herald....’ playing over the tannoy at Abu Dhabi arport
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)