Archive for May, 2005

Relaxing at the tea house

After all the excitement of the last few days and roughing it on desert islands, it was very nice to relax over lunchtime in the beautiful English Tea House above Sandakan. It’s Isabelle’s birthday so fish and chips and roast beef were on the menu.
Teahouse
It’s quite amazing (in a geeky sort of way) that we can sit here in a colonial tea house in a town sandwiched between the south china sea and the borneo jungle and get complete free WiFi access.
Now we’ve got to pack up and go and fly off to Kuching where were planning to do a jungle walk and go and see the biggest pile of bat poo in the world.

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Sepilok

After we got up really early in the morning, we came back to the land from Turtle Island on a fast speedboat and went to Sepilok Orang Utan center. We saw the orang-utans being fed bananas by their rangers. They come to Sepilok because they have lost their mums and the rangers bring them up and teach them to be orang-utans before they let them go back into the jungle. There was a great visitor center and a really good video show. The jungle is really really hot. There are alos lots of really cute monkeys who hang around the feeding platform and try to steal bananas from the Orangutans. Here is a picture of one.
Monkey

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Turtle Island

We went to Turtle Island yesterday.
Last we were allowed to watch a Green Turtle mother laying eggs. She was new to the island and so the rangers gave her a tag in each flipper. She was number 28851 and she was the 797th turtle to come to the island in 2005. She laid 100 eggs (exactly!) which the ranger collected and put in a bucket. We were allowed to hold an egg before the ranger buried them in Hatchery number 2. They told us that if a Turtle is in a nest with the sun on it for most of the day then the majority of the babies are likely to be female. If they are in the shade then the majority is likely to be male. That night, 1596 eggs were laid by 19 turtles which came to lay eggs. Most of them were Green Turtles but some were Hawksbill Turtles.
After the ranger buried the eggs we were allowed to hold a baby turtle which had just hatched before we released them into the sea. Hannah’s called hers Seashore, Dad called his Turto, Mum called her’s Emily Rose and I called mine Bibo. They were about the size of a sugar packet and very cute and sweet.
Turtle Island gives meaning to the word “Desert Island”. It is very remote (almost 1 hour into the South China sea from Sandakan). There is no drinking water and shower water is pumped directly from the sea. In the afternoon before the Turtles arrived, I went snorkelling and saw several jellyfish and some really interesting fish.
Turtle Island is very protective of it’s wildlife. If you remove coral you get a fine of 100,000 RM (which is about 20 thousand pounds) and three years in jail. The conservation effort seems to be working as they had over 12 thousand turtle visitors in 2004 and more than 500,000 hatchlings were released that year.

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Night Safari in Singapore

Hey everyone!
We’re setting off for Borneo today, and last night, while you were having last period and going home, we went to the night safari! Like Mrs Saeb-Parsy said, it is AMAZING! We saw loads of animals that i’d never seen in their natural habitats, even a rare Malayan Tiger, bats nesting about 30cm above our heads, staring at us, the beautiful giraffes coming for a closer look and the leopard pacing inches from the glass. I even made friends with a very rare albino rock python.
Isabelle with Python
It wasn’t as scary as it looks and the python wasn’t slimy at all. They are also very keen on conservation at the Singapore Zoo and they talked about the “4 Rs” a lot. Reduce, Reuse, Recycle and Replant. They even had three otters that could sort rubbish into plastic, cans and paper ALL BY THEMSELVES!

It’s very hot, and even at 11.00 pm it’s hot and humid.

I am already missing you all.

Lots of love, Izzy

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We are in Singapore

We’re in singapore. The flight was very long but ok. Singapore is really hot and humid but still amazing with fantastic tall buildings. They look so exotic when they are lit up at night!

Hannah and Isabelle x x x

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Ready to go.

Well, it is all finally packed and this is the (much smaller) pile of bags. Four bags and one guitar isn’t bad for 80 days.

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