Borneo, land of clouds

Garden of Eden The last third of our trip around Malaysia was spent in the Malaysian part of Borneo. The plan was simple – get into the jungle and experience the wonderful nature (without sacrificing too much comfort and getting too many mosquito bites). Unfortunately we knew very little of Borneo and our guide book wasn’t helping enough. Anyhow, we flew from Langkawi to Kuching, main city of the Sarawak region of Borneo, via Kuala Lumpur. We were quite stressed out as we had booked flights without much time in between and AirAsia, our airline, didn’t offer any help, they just told us that we should have taken other flights.

We made it through, but in the process I happened to be a victim of the well known “glass-bottle-in-the-bag-with-smelly-contents-break-in-luggage-handling”. It was not any bottle, it was a bottle of Langkawian herbal oil that doesn’t smell good but smells a lot. My bag could be noticed from several meters away and the check-in lady refused to take it without further sealing – so I got it completely wrapped up in plastics. The damage from this chemical catastrophy was not too bad after all though, but one of my books will forever have a scent of Langkawi as well as brown pages instead of white. ‘Nuff said.Kuching panorama

Anyway, Kuching was not much of a city. We had to look for hours after decent restaurants and although the city claimed to be tourist oriented it seemed to have forgotten us tourists in the middle of January. We lived on a quite fancy hotel, the Harbourview Inn, but where not overly impressed although the standards were good. We ate at an italian restaurant at a nearby luxury hotel and payed as much as any normal Hong Kong restaurant would charge us, which was nice. We didn’t want to waste too much time in Kuching though, so after much decision anxiety we ordered a two-day trip into the jungle, to Lemanak.Iban longhouses

Basically, we were picked up at the hotel by a nice and talkative guide, which first took us to an orangutang center. We saw very few orangutangs – it started raining when they started arrive and we made a pitiful escape without any decent photos to show of the amazing primates (their way of getting through the jungle in the tree tops is just awesome). We then continued to a river and switched to long, narrow river boats to get to our destination, the Iban village of Lemanak.Iban Women

We had expected really primitive conditions, headhunter warriors and similar stuff, but soon enough we understood the truth were a bit different. The village was receiving tourists each day and had a special longhouse for them with decent standards, even showers and kitchen. The main long house was used for selling handicraft, although most of it wasn’t made by the villagers – it was imported and sold for higher prices than in Kuching. They had a phone, and their houses was decorated as any normal home in the area. Even though all this took away some of the feeling it was still special – the villagers were mostly old people with strange tatoos drinking rice wine (and offering us). They showed us traditional dances and ended up partying with us thanks to a couple of bottles of local rice wine. The next morning we were shown a cock fight, we tried blow pipe (surprisingly easy to use!) and made a jungle walk to see all the medicinal plants and traps that the people used. All in all, it was a nice experience with a really nice guide!

After the trip to Lemanak, we started to look over our budget. It was not looking good, so we chose to try and do the rest of the trip on our own with budget alternatives (a decision we later didn’t follow at all). So we took a night bus across Sarawak to the town of Miri, portal to the great Mulu National Park with it’s famous jungle and caves. The bus ride was not just any bus ride, it was a 14 hour bus ride in total darkness and with winter climate inside due to fierce air conditioning. The only light came from the police road blocks that we encountered (and every time a serious police officer entered the bus and looked closely at our pass ports). It was a bit hard to sleep…

After the grueling night we took a Fokker 50 from Miri to Mulu and ended up in a house that, according to the sign, was an airport. You have to understand that Mulu National Park has two hotels, two roads and nothing more. It is apparently not possible to drive to Mulu from anywhere (but I wonder how they got their cars there…). The only way is flying (no, there is another way… read below…). We had heard that Mulu had a great and cheap luxury resort, Royal Mulu, so we jumped on their van from the “airport” and ended up in an amazin resort (of which I have no pictures!). We payed around 10-12 Euros per night and person for 4-star standards. As time went on though, we realized where the resort got their income – expensive food and insultingly expensive arranged tours.Gunung Mulu mountains

Cave halls We decided to skip the hotel tours and walked to the park office, where they offer the same tours as the resort, but for a tenth or less of the cost. So we went. And we saw amazing caves and jungles. I can’t make justice to the park in text, and probably not in the photos either. You should just go there, but I can throw some facts at you: Deer Cave, the biggest cave passage in the world (supposedly big enough to containt St Peters Cathedral in Rome) with 3 million bats that flies out every evening; Clearwater Cave, 108 km long with an underground river all the way; Cave of the Winds with strong winds going through, a fantastic hole right up to the sky and the “King’s Chamber” made of stalagmites.King's Chamber

So, where exactly did this part of the trip get so disappointing? Actually, right here. After going through the caves we had to start thinking about leaving, we had a plan to catch in Singapore (to HK) two days later. Unfortunately we hadn’t booked the flights to get from Mulu to Singapore via Miri. And here the trouble began – the Mulu->Miri flight was cancelled and then fully booked. The earliest flight from Mulu would only connect to one flight from Miri, which was fully booked (due to the Chinese New Year). We just realized we had a quite expensive ticket for a Singapore-HK flight which we wouldn’t get to and suddenly and unwillingly we had to extend our budget. How did we solve it? Listen to this:

South China Sea from the Jumbo Jet We went up at 2 AM in the morning of the 27th January. At 3 AM we left with a chartered longboat down the river in complete darkness (an extremely expensive boat, by the way). At 5 AM we arrived at the first hint of civilisation, the stop for the regular river boat service. We switched boat, waited for a long time and then started our next part of the trip down river. At 10 AM (!) we arrived at the first town, were we switched to the next boat. At 12 AM we finally arrived at the mouth of the river, and we switched to taxi to Miri. Why? To buy an airplane ticket we had called about last night from Brunei to Singapore. Unfortunately the ticket we wanted couldn’t be bought there but they had it at the Brunei Airport for double the price. So, now we called a taxi to go to Brunei, were we arrived after much trouble in the border control at 5 PM. The flight left at 7 PM to Singapore, and at 9 PM we went to “bed” in a chair in Pacific Coffee at the Changi Aiport, Singapore. The flight from Singapore left at 7 AM and finally we arrived in HK at 11 AM. The whole effort, not including the Singapore-HK flight, costed us around 300-350 Euro, probably more than all previous travel costs combined. So children, learn this – book your flights home well in advance when you go traveling!

Back in HK

Lonely Star Ferry Just to let you know, I’m back and up ‘n running in Hong Kong now. I have a back log of blog posts about the travel to publish still here, as well as more photos. I can hint you this though: the end of the trip was the most exciting and also the most disappointing part of the trip. Right now though I will continue the Chinese New Year celebrations with my girlfriend.

I have also updated the blog system to WordPress 2.

Paradise Langkawi

100_1272 Since the 12th of January I and Patrick have spent our time on the northwestern Malaysian island Langkawi. We had chosen the island because it was close, it wasn’t affected by the rainy season (that is all over Southeast Asia right now) and because we wanted some simple sun, rest and nice beaches (and add a bit of jungle and caves on top of that!).Island hopping II

Now, 19th of January, we have booked our flight to Borneo via Kuala Lumpur, leaving tomorrow. The week has been the greatest time so far according to me and an utter failure according to Patrick. I guess I have to explain that…

Patrick simply woke up the first morning in Langkawi sick, with fever. He went to the doctor and got pills. And went more sick. Stomach problems, head ache, fever, you name it, he had it. And that kept him more or less bound to the bed all week. He hasn’t seen anything else of Langkawi than our bungalow and the street outside, basically. Which is very sad and very unfortunate. I know that Patrick right now is looking forward to Borneo though, so let’s hope for the best (and he is more or less healthy by now).Blue-green-green

For me, it was completely different. First day I did nothing but read. But the next day I met up, as planned, with Claes and his friend Jesper, who just had arrived from their ongoing trip in Thailand. It was really nice meeting them and with them I went exploring the island. To make a long story short, we have made an island hopping tour, including monkeys, cat fish, jungle lakes and eagle feeding, we have made scooter trips and seen beaches, hot springs, wonderful waterfalls, a crocodile farm and a bird zoo. I’ve also read a lot of good books during the time here (I strongly recommend 1421 by Gavin Menzies for an unsurpassed historical enlightenment).Waterfall

Although I both have gotten some bad sun burns and a strange swollen eye (which now is gone… the swell I mean) it has been great. Every evening have ended in a beer on the beach, a walk, a nice restaurant and then chatting in some bar. The weather has been as close to perfect as possible. And in the end, most things are incredibly cheap here. A lunch for 1-2 Euros is normal.Night out at the Reagge Bar

I just wish that Patrick and all those of you at home (or around the world) would be able to experience the same. My family especially missed an opportunity of getting a nice holiday on top of their visit to HK (it’s possible to rent an easy rider motorbike for around 8 Euros a day! And the roads and views are great.. too bad I forgot my driver’s license in HK!!).Langkawi sunset

I can only add a small, small subset of the photos I’ve taken so far here, so I urge you to take a further look in my Flickr gallery.

Noteworthy about KL

Petronas Towers KL, that is Kuala Lumpur, is not like any other town. It’s like taking a mixture of all big or notable cities around the world, shake, stir and then spill some on the table while pouring the drink into an old tea mug…Kuala Lumpur from above

Ehm. Anyway, Kuala Lumpur is huge, and I mean huge area wise (it’s huge in many other aspects too, though). There seems to be no limit on the spreading of the city, and there is also an apparent lack of city planning. Skyscrapers designed by architectural geniuses stand shoulder to shoulder (or rather foot to shoulder) with forgotten construction yards, garbage piles, small mosques or just badly maintained concrete condos. The city core is defined by the Petronas Tower and the line from them to the TV tower, but its hard to really distinguish the city center. You can find enormous skyscrapers far out in the suburbs, and you can walk in the city center in the middle of the day and not really meeting anybody…Petronas Towers again

Kuala Lumpur is famous for its horrible traffic. The city is heavily polluted and constantly under attack from millions of vehicles – many of them shining SUV:s. Which takes me to the next point – KL is a city of sharp contrast between the rich and the poor. Or rather, most people seem to be quite well off in KL, but in the same time, the poverty is alwaays visible. The really rich ones are nowhere to be seen… The city is no less then five or six commuter systems with include monorails, normal trains and subway, but they don’t seem to make much difference.

Culturally KL is extremely mixed, almost more than Singapore. Malays, Chinese, Indians, Arabs and European ex-pats are side by side. As the country is muslim the city makes a sharp contrast to other Asian sprawls – many buildings are clearly islamic, there are lots of mosques and traditionally dressed muslim women can be seen everywhere, especially in the governmental offices.100_1158

Anyway, enough about this city. I will leave it soon in favour of Langkawi, a paradise island up north (unfortunately a quite touristic place). And after that, we will head for the Sarawak state in Borneo for some jungle safari!