Borneo is the world's third largest island, and is shared between Brunei, Malaysia and Indonesia. It is home to many exciting things including orangutans and monkeys, the filming location of Survivor 1, and headhunter tribes.
I stayed at a really nice jungle lodge with good cocktails and food, and a TV where I could watch the Olympics with people from all over the world which was really fun. On the night I was there, the U.S. lost to Nigeria in soccer, and the announcer triumphantly exclaimed, "The Americans are laying on the ground and crying! The Americans are going home!" (I suspect coverage at home may be slightly different?) That night I also got to make an attempt at using the blow-gun. Holding and shooting it was like playing a trombone, so obviously given my fine trombone-ing skills, I scored. (No animals, just balloons.)
On the last day in the National Park, I took a cruise down the river, where bats, butterflies and dragonflies flew overhead. The trees created a nice canopy, and there were so many vines hanging down into the river, that I was sort of expecting Tarzan to swing down out of a tree. A few days later in Kota Kinabalu, I overheard an American accent and it turned out to be someone better than Tarzan: a real life U.S. government agent like Jack Bauer (though he laughed and insisted "not really" at my suggestion and they never seem to show Jack Bauer writing lots of reports. Whatever, he was cute.)
I headed back into the jungle for a wildlife expedition, where I got more wildlife than I bargained for. In addition to spotting lots of monkeys and tropical birds, I ventured into a cave with thousands of cockroaches - so many that I couldn't touch the railing or wall because then I'd be touching cockroaches. Later I did a trek that involved leech socks and long-sleeved shirts, since leeches wiggle up through the mud and drop off tree branches onto unsuspecting humans. The evening concluded with some Aussies telling me some Scuba dive horror stories and one woman telling me how she got robbed in Italy with 2-weeks left of her 4-month trip. (Yup.) All led to some interesting or perhaps paranoid dreams, especially when you add in the psychedelic side-effects of my malaria pills, and monkeys jumping around right outside my cabin.
Finally I headed to one of the world's top 10 dive sites - Sipadan Island. Sipidan is a small island close to the Philippines that drops 600 meters straight down into abyss. I stayed on Mabul island at a very chill guesthouse on stilts, with all the makings of a good time: a crazy Brit, a guitar player, a nice cat, a mean cat, instant coffee and cocoa, plenty of rum, and the world's happiest, friendliest kids. Unfortunately the island was also home to a rare breed of rooster who clearly smokes 10 packs of cigarettes a day, judging by its horrific, raspy Cock-a-doodle-doo, which begins at 5 a.m. and lasts for 3 hours, slightly dampening the aforementioned "good time" of the previous evening.
The three days at Mabul/Sipadan were really laid back and enjoyable. I met tons of people, saw about twenty white-tipped reef sharks and turtles larger than me, and generally just enjoyed the island community and dives.
1 comment:
Wow, Bridget, I didn't know you had the same kinds of thoughts I do about issues like this...cool! (And similar sources, too, bookwise.) -Katie from Mpls L.H.
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