Sunday, September 5, 2010

Borneo is Wild!! Mt. Kinabalu and Danum Valley

P1030379_sm

 P1030387_sm

Here is our first look at Borneo – beautiful islands off the coast of Kota Kinabalu in Sebah. Kota Kinabalu is an attractive new looking city, quite clean with a lot of new buildings and new construction going on. Below is a new mosque that we drove by. The primary religions in Sebah seems to be a mix of Islam and Catholicism, quite different from Bali and Thailand.

P1030393_smP1030391_sm

We leave the city of Kota Kinabalu (KK) behind and head out to our next destination, Mt. Kinabalu.- the highest mountain in SE Asia and the highest peak between the Himalayas and Papua New Guinea, 4095 m (13435 ft) high. It’s a large granitic pluton, about a 2 hour leisurely drive east of KK.

P1030398_smP1030396_sm

In Borneo, we discover a new fruit – the rambut. It is sweet and has the consistency of a large grape.

P1030402_smP1030404_sm

P1030405_sm

 

   This is our favorite fruit – the Mangosteen.

    White fruit inside and very sweet.

 

 

 

 

P1030416_smP1030415_sm

This is the Aristo Hotel near Mt Kinabalu where we stayed. Had a great view, but as the other couple from Italy staying there said – “Quite Basic”.

P1030451_smP1030429_sm

But the views, awe-inspiring!

P1030428_smP1030418_sm

And nice sunsets, too – but not as good as Saipan sunsets.

P1030456_smP1030430_sm

We got up early morning and started climbing the mountain, not to the peak, just wandering and birdwatching! of course.

P1030440_smP1030433_sm

We saw many beautiful sights along the way.

P1030446_smP1030441_sm

P1030450_smP1030449_sm

These are just a few of the beautiful birds we saw around Mt. Kinabalu:

Indigo Flycatcher

and the Oriental Magpie-Robin.

Borneo Whistling-Thrush

Black-sided Flowerpecker

Black-sided Flowerpecker (2)

After exploring the area around Mt Kinabalu for 2 days, we take off for Lahad Datu, on our way to Danum Valley – areas on the east side of Sabah.

P1030463_smP1030464_sm

Lahad Datu was a nice little town where we waited for a minibus to take us to the Danum Valley field station. Although very quaint, there were many cellphone stores way out here in what seems to be the middle of nowhere.  Everyone, everywhere, seems to have a cell phone.  A family gathered around a laptop computer on the patio of their little restaurant, with the youngest daughter at the keyboard, another example of the mixing of new and old cultures in Borneo.  Not sure what they might have been internet surfing for!

P1030465_smP1030468_sm

 

P1030470_sm

 

Below is the wi-fi spot we used -

the local bakery!

P1030469_sm

This is the central market in Lahad Datu, very colorful with lots of fresh vegies and good food. Open markets are typical and found in every town we visited in SE Asia. Many women dress in Muslim attire with covered heads.  Some of the younger women dress in western clothes, but with the addition of the Muslim head cover.

P1030475_smP1030473_sm

Around 3:00pm we take off for the Danum Valley Field Station with a bus full of Danum Valley workers and their cute kids. The driver has the radio blasting, so we are rocking out down the bumpy dirt roads to the valley.  There are cows roaming in small herds thru the streets and yards as we pass by.

P1030471_smP1030482_sm

As we draw nearer to the field station, we actually get to see our first Borneo Pygmy Asian Elephants. We are so excited to see elephants in the wild. For the next few miles, we notice a lot of the Very Evident Scat left by these pachyderms, indicating their heavy use of the roads.

P1030479_smP1030478_sm

We finally arrive at the Field station.  By the time we get settled and are able to go for a walk it’s quite dark, but we roam around anyway listening to the night time jungle chorus!

P1030485_smP1030488_sm

This is what the field station looked like in the morning. A lush, tropical area with a river running right next to it, and lots of trails to explore.

P1030492_smP1030497_sm

P1030493_sm

Exploring the jungle we ran across some interesting things like this clinging or crawling plant found on the trunks of the trees.

P1030501_smP1030503_sm

 

 

The roots of the large Dipterocarp trees are very impressive, as are the “canopy topper” trees you find sticking high above the general canopy top. Very hard to identify any birds at the top of these trees.

P1030499_smP1030505_sm

Because of the thick native dipterocarp jungle, birding takes effort in Danum Valley – it reminded me of birding in the forests of the east coast where I took my first ornithology class, an effort which creates sore necks! We called it Warbler Neck! So, easier to locate than the treetop birds, we saw wonderful, unique and some endemic ground or near ground foraging species – the Pitta’s.

blue banded pitta2

  The blue-banded Pitta

      and the Black and Crimson Pitta.

Black & Crimson Pitta

Giant Pitta Female1

 

The female Giant Pitta. A good 3 Pitta day for Cheri and I!

 

 

A few other birds we saw were:

The Jambu Fruit Dove

               And the  Red-bearded Bee Eater

 

White-crowned Shama

No comments:

Post a Comment