Saturday, November 6, 2010

Miri & Mulu

Another Air-Asia flight got me to Miri where I relaxed for a couple of night, ate entirely seafood and organized the rest of my trip before flying to Mulu National Park. 

The only world heritage listed National Park in Borneo, Mulu is completely surrounded by jungle although a short runway carved into the trees saved me a multi-day boat trip. The park is famous for limestone caves, spectacular rock formations and is the worlds number one destination if you're looking to wade neck deep in Guano (Aka batshit).

 The park management was magnificently incompetent. First they 'unbooked' my planned 3-day Pinnacles trek and then the accomodation bookings of several people mysteriously disappeared just in time to make room for a large organised tour group. This turned out to be a blessing in disguise because there was cheaper accomodation just outside the park and more than enough activities to keep me busy for five days.

Many kilometers of wooden boardwalk provided access to the worlds longest canopy Walk and several impressive caves, the largest of which is home to about ten million bats. The bats hibernate during the day and then fly out together in huge waves around sunset. The atmosphere inside the cave was straight out of Jurassic Park - just don't look up!

A variety of adventure caving trips were also on offer and although my trip was only rated 'intermediate', 2.5 hours of rope-assisted scrambling and squeezing through a pitch black cave full of scorpions, snakes and spiders as big as your head was enough for me. For serious spelunkers, one of the expert level caves takes 12 hours and even involves several hours swimming along an underground river.




However the highlight of my visit was heading out to experience the jungle at night - I've never been in a place that was so alive. Athough our small torches barely pierced the blackness every small patch of light revealed countless bugs, beetles, spiders, lizards and more stick insects than you could poke a stick at. 


The atmosphere got even more impressive when we switched off our torches. At first the thick overhead canopy left us in total darkness but after a couple of minutes of pupil dilation the ground in every direction started to glow an eerie green as fields of luminescent fungus became visible. And then there was the sound - bizarre noises at a deafening volume from every direction.


My trip to Mulu ended with a few beers, some Beer Can Jenga and more farewells to the cool people that I had only just met. Such is the fun and frustration of travelling alone.

Monday, November 1, 2010

Kuching


While in transit from Kathmandu to Kuching my stomach finally lost the war against Nepali cuisine. I stayed in transit for another two days (between my bedroom and the toilet) but recovered in time for an overnight trip to the jungle at Bako National Park. 


The park is only accessible by boat and comprises a several hundred square kilometers of thick jungle dissected by hiking trails. The stifling heat and 100% humidity made trekking hard work but the views across limestone plateaus and over secluded coves were worth it.




The park's other drawcard is the monkeys. Three different species can be found within a few minutes walk of the HQ including an army of tiny macaques which encircled the cafe and terrorized diners. At one point I was sitting in the cafe with three friends and made the mistake of putting an unopened packet of Oreo down in front of me. It took no more than three seconds before a monkey had darted into the crowded restaurant, circled around behind me, made a running jumped onto our table, scooped up the whole packet and made good his escape. Grand Theft Oreo.


Back to Kuching I headed out an orangutan conservation centre. Although I have never been a serious animal lover, being able to watch a whole family of primates interacting in a semi-wild environment was pretty special. At one point a juvenile male grabbed a coconut and banged it against a tree 7 or 8 times to open it. This attracted the attention of the Alpha Male who, in a very deliberate gesture, grabbed his own coconut, swaggered over to a tree and smashed it open with one thundering blow. The whole excursion, including a 45 minute bus trip and park entry, cost less than A$3. Unfortunately without a zoom lens I couldn't really get any great photos. 


Fortunately I made friends with a really cool dutch couple who did! I pinched this next shot from their blog.