Nestling
just east of Singapore and Malaysia, south-west of the Philippines, a
little north-west of the Indonesian archipelago (island of Java)
and on the edge of Pacific Ocean surrounded by the South China,
Java and Sulu Seas lies this year's destination. At over 743,000 sq.
km, Borneo is the third-largest island in the world (fourth-largest
if you count Australia) and the largest in Asia.
Bisected
by the equator, the island is politically divided into three
countries; the northern region comprises Malaysian Borneo (about 1/4,
states of Sabah and Sarawak) with the Sultanate of Brunei smack in
the middle and the southern region is Indonesian Borneo (about 3/4,
province of Kalimantan). Our destination: Sabah, a relatively small
chunk of this island but teeming with wildlife. Its highest point and
also the highest mountain in south-east Asia is Mount Kinabalu
(@ 4,095m / 13,435 ft. almost 4 times the height of Snowdon),
Malaysia's 1st UNESCO World Heritage Site and designated a Centre of
Plant Diversity; a point I will come back to later in the trip.
It
sounds like a cliché, but Borneo (like many other places we have
visited) is one of the incredibly biologically diverse places on
the planet. Sadly, however, it is also one of the most critically
endangered. If managed to maintain a renewable resource rather
than the resource depletion that is currently happening,
its ancient forests could provide valuable natural
capital indefinitely http://www.sustainabilitystore.com/sustainable/.
These vast areas along with the mountain habitats house an
astonishingly impressive array of life ranging from
mega fauna, such as the famous 'Wild Man of Borneo' orangutan,
to bizarre bugs, such as a 57cm-long stick insect. It also has about
15,000 species of flowering plant (by comparison all of North America
from the Arctic to Panama only has about 20,000 apparently).
Diametrically opposite to the Amazon Rain forest, the Borneo Rain
forest is estimated to be around 140 million years old, one of the
oldest in the world.
The
problem is that Borneo's forests are being destroyed and twice as
fast as the rest of the world's rain forests; the two greatest
threats to Borneo's biodiversity comes from logging and the
ever-expanding palm oil plantations. Palm oil is in almost everything
(sometimes, I am led to believe, under a pseudonym such as
vegetable oil, palmate, sodium lauryl sulphate, vegetable fat and
stearic acid): take a look next time you shop!
But
why should we protect it? Aside from mitigating the effects of
climate change and protecting the livelihoods of locals etc., there
are two good reasons. Firstly, since the Heart of Borneo Declaration
was signed in 2007 by Malaysia, Indonesia and Brunei (protects 220000
sq. km of forest) over 600 new species have been discovered including
the aforementioned stick insect, the world’s longest. Secondly, the
number of species is something like 220 mammal (including a dozen
primates), 420 birds, 166 snakes, 100 amphibians, 3000 arthropod
and 1000 ant, so the diversity of life is astounding. This
diversity includes Orangutan, Proboscis Monkey, Bornean Gibbon,
Long-tailed and Short-tailed Macaques, three kinds of Leaf Monkey,
Western Tarsier, Slow Loris, Pygmy Elephant (subspecies of Asian
Elephant), Sumatran Rhino (elusive, critically endangered and
possibly already extinct in Borneo), Bearded Pig, Wild Boar, Mouse
Deer, Civet Cats, Clouded Leopard, Flat-headed Cat, Sun Bears
(world's smallest bear), 8 kinds of Hornbill, Kingfishers, Hawks,
Buffyfish Owls and White Swiftlets (bird's-nest sup is made from
dried Swiftlet spit; a kg of White Swiftlet spit can bring in over
US$4K! I wouldn't mind spitting for that sort of money!).
But
before we even get to the wildlife, there's also the cultural
diversity. Kota Kinabalu, known as KK to the locals, was the hot and
humid start to our trip. A city is a city is a city and KK was no
exception. After a quick nap (we had been up for over 24 hours at
this point), we had a wander round town to absorb the atmosphere and
settle in. We visited the local fish market where you could either
purchase fish to take home or sit in the restaurant and have a meal.
Surrounding
the market hall were tanks and tanks of live fish and shellfish such
as prawns, huge horseshoe crabs, ordinary crabs, lobsters, fish etc.
to pick your own.
We walked to the
Atkinson Clock Tower, constructed 1903-1905 and named after the first
District Officer of the town, F.G. Atkinson, who died aged 28 from
Borneo Fever (Malaria). The 15.7m high wooden tower was one of only
two structures to survive the allied bombing of Jesselton (what KK
was formerly known as) in 1945. Signal Hill Observatory Tower, up on
Signal Hill behind the clock tower, is a great vantage point to see
the town. Unfortunately we could not stop until sunset although I
imagine that it would have been fantastic from that vantage point.
Our next port of call
was back at the hotel for a trip welcome meeting and to do
introductions with the rest of the group. Good old Blighty is flying
the frontrunner flag with 8 Brits (us 2 + Mark & Lisa, Amanda &
Kat, Natasha, Julie), 4 Americans (Matt & Amy, Erin & Mary),
2 Aussies (Alex & Corinne) and 1 Fin (Heli), plus our local guide
from one of the tribes of Sabah. The ladies (including the guide)
outnumbered the men 3:1. We had dinner together at a restaurant along
the Waterfront, quite plush and modern compared to some of the more
rundown places we’d seen while wandering round the city. I had a
beef noodle soup (with ginger and veg) whilst Andy had butter
chicken.
Sabah is Malaysia’s
most diverse state with a population of 3 million made up of 30 races
and many spoken dialects. Each of these different ethnic communities
still maintain their own distinct cultures and have lived
harmoniously side by side for generations.
Malays and Chinese add to this huge melting pot of culinary
traditions, languages and civilizations that have been mixing
for thousands of years. Modern day Borneo indigenous people are
working to integrate traditional lifestyles of mutual responsibility
and sustainability with the opportunities and demands of modern
life
We visited the
Tambatuon Homestay, a riverside village along the edge of the jungle
and river where our money directly supported the village. We first
had an early lunch composed of traditional foods – beef curry,
rice, long bean, spinach and wild veg. Dessert was honey pineapple, a
very sweet variety of pineapple that only grows in that area.
Then the afternoon
first comprised of a 2-hour jungle trek where we saw Jackfruit (a
type of round spiky fruit), some medicinal herbs and rubber trees
(they capture and sell the sap to make extra income; rubber sap is
currently very expensive at 17 MYR per kg (that’s about £3.50 in
English money just to put it into perspective)), plus a viewpoint
over the village to get an orientation on where we were. On the last
leg of the walk, the heavens opened and we got a free jungle shower.
In Borneo it is perpetually wet, either sweating from the humidity or
drenched by the jungle showers. Given that we were already wet, a few
of us decided to have a dip in the river. This, however, was
short-lived as the rain turned into a thunderstorm. With thunder
literally banging above our heads and sheet lightening illuminating
the sky, we decided the best bet was to use the homestay rainwater
shower and stay undercover.
Then it was a cooking
demonstration to make “busou”, a concoction of banana stem and
fig with a type of yeast that is matured for a week and then cooked
up with ginger stem, root ginger, garlic, onions, spring onions and
chilli. The dessert dish was a mashed pumpkin cake that was wrapped
in banana leaves and steamed. By this point the sun had returned and
we were baking ourselves, never mind the food! The humidity had
dropped though so it was more pleasant.
As the village is on
both sides of the river, they harvest fish from the river. The fish
do get fed and you can stand in the water with fish food to find lots
of wild fish are swimming around and over your feet; a very bizarre
but rather nice sensation.
Dinner was more
traditional food. Fried chicken pieces, battered fish pieces, chicken
cooked in a curry sauce, eggplant, wild veg, Pak choi, busou and
rice. Having already eaten the pumpkin cake earlier, dessert was a
couple of fruit options.
Breakfast this morning
was fries, noodles, eggs, baked beans, and honey pineapple. Then a
long drive over to a river lodge in Bilit on the Sungai Kinabatangan,
at 560km, Sabah’s longest river. Along the way we saw areas that
had been cleared for the palm oil plantations and there were lots of
palm oil plantations where the jungle used to be. Palm Oil is one of
Malaysia’s main exports so the question is how can they continue to
bring in revenue without destroying the forest? One option but not
the only one, is the tourist dollar, but tourism itself will need to
be sustainable so that it doesn’t cause more rainforest to be
destroyed or create worse problems.
The next instalment
will be the wildlife adventure of the trip.