Sunday, July 26, 2009
Home from Borneo
Borneo: the last days!
7/20 – Work Day in KK
Back to work. Lecture in the morning from Cam on Biodiversity Informatics. Also, poor Kristina – she has giardia. It’s a parasite that you get from drinking bad water. She’s been throwing up for the past three days and has dropped at least 20 pounds and has NO energy. I think she got it from the water she drank at Maliau. She was using iodine to purify her water, and according to Wikipedia, “most chemical treatment methods, including common point-of-use treatments such as iodine and chlorine dioxide, are considered unreliable in inactivating Giardi.” THANK YOU, MOM, FOR SPENDING THAT EXTRA MONEY ON AN ULTRAVIOLET WATER PURIFIER!!!!!!!
Anyway. After Cam’s lecture, I headed across the street to Borneo Books to do some research on gibbons and phasmids. It was so nice. I sat in that bookstore for 3 hours, loving their high-speed internet connection, looking through their books, getting work done, texting… it was awesome. After that I walked around the mall in search of some sort of lunch food and ended up with a delicious frozen yogurt – mango and vanilla twist. It was amazing. I came back to the hotel to finish up my phasmids project. Got a lot of work done, went and worked out in the room, took a shower, and then we all went out for some delicious Indian food! Vegetable spring rolls, vegetable korma, and naan. Mmmmmm, delicious.
Then I came back, watched a little TV, and fell asleep. Nice day!
7/21 – Last work Day!
I’m getting a little nervous about presenting to the University of Malaysia all by myself! This morning I woke up, ate some breakfast of granola in the room, then went up to the Nepenthes room to work on projects. Took a break to get some lunch with Ross. It was awesome. Went to the mall, ended up getting some cheap DVDs, frozen yogurt, and those delicious waffle sandwiches with peanut butter and chocolate. Mmmmm. Came back, worked some more. Took a break to fill out the course evaluation and watch some planet earth. Then a lecture from Marc’s cool friend Benoit on his studies of the Bornean pygmy elephant. Then we all went out to a delicious caprese, pizza, and garlic bread dinner, followed by a trip to an ice cream shop! Came back to the hotel, worked worked worked, then off to bed. Presentations tomorrow!! As Andrew would say – MEEP!!!
7/22 – AAAAAH!!! Last day!!!!!
Oh my goooossh! I can’t believe it’s over! L L L It’s so sad! I’ve come to love every single person here, I can’t believe that I’m going to be leaving half of them to go back halfway across the world L
The day started with breakfast and last-minute touchups on the class website and on our presentations. Then we left for the University of Malaysia. We had a few students and some faculty watching us present (eek!). But everyone did a GREAT job. First went pitfall team, then dragonfly team, then rotting fruit team, then drip-tip team. Then we had a nice coffee/tea/snack break, and then it was stream team, bird team, and me! I was SO nervous, but I had SO much fun going up there and talking all about my gibbons. It was great. J I got lots of applause – before and after! I think that, even though everyone was too chicken to work with me, they all give me a lot of credit, lol, they were rooting for me all along – and I even had a bunch of the students come up to me and ask me questions afterward. One lady even said she was impressed with the enthusiasm I talked with and said I was destined to be a primatologist (?). I’m really proud of how everything played out!!!! J J J
Then we all took pictures near the cliff and climbed into the bus. We went to the BEST dining place EVER for our end-of-the-course party. It was called “@mosphere,” and the whole place was orange with funky furniture, and the floor SPUN (the building was round!). We spent an hour and a half sitting in the comfy chairs sipping drinks and talking, then had dinner, then spent another hour getting certificates, talking some more, and then – surprise – dancing it out to some Michael Jackson with strobe lights! It was so much fun, it was the best ending I could have imagined.
Then we got back on the bus, came back to the hotel, and did lots of hugging and tearing up. L Some people I will see in the morning, and the Americans I’ll be travelling back with, but this was pretty much goodbye to the Southeast Asian students. It was really sad. Dita, Agri, Nuwan, Ridwan, Sreekar, Fae, Le, Bekti, MS – all these people turned out to be AMAZING, and I love and will miss them all!!!
Now it’s off to bed. Leaving on a plane to KL with the Americans tomorrow morning. Can’t wait to explore the capital of Malaysia. Home the next night!
7/23 – Fly to KL
What a fun day. We woke up, went for one last round of shopping in KK, picked up our laundry, packed, and then headed for the airport. We boarded a plane from KK to KL that left around 12:30 and got us in around 3:30. But we had to take a bus from the airport to “KL Sentral” (downtown, I’m guessing), and then we had to figure out where we were sleeping that night! We found some nice cab drivers who recommended a place called the “Star Town Inn” (our cab driver was really funny… he talked a lot and said “Aaaaah,” at the end of each sentence – like the first part of “Ah-HA!” but just the “Ah”). It was 300 ringitt for one room for two nights, which meant 75 ringitt per person, which meant around $25 a person. For two nights in a hotel right downtown in the capital of Malaysia, we thought that was pretty good!
By the time all that was taken care of, it was dinner time, and Molly was craving Indian food, so we found a good restaurant where Molly flirted with the Pakistani waiter who called Douwe “handsome boy”. It was a good time. After that we walked around the city. Wow. KL is SO DIFFERENT from KK. It’s pretty much completely Westernized. Full of malls and shops – the only thing reminding us that we were in Malaysia were the many women in burkas, and that one guy who had those poor poor captive macaques that he was letting people hold for 10 ringitt each.
Anyway. We had a nice time exploring the city and then headed to bed.
7/24 -- Explore KL & DEPART
This morning we had a nice, lazy start. We rolled out of bed around 9 and went to a delicious little cafĂ© with free wireless for breakfast. Then Molly and I shopped around a bit while Douwe wrote postcards. Shopping is so much fun here because clothes are so CUTE and SO cheap, but the male venders in the market are CREEPY!! “My sweetheart, my sweetheart, I give you 10 ringitt, please don’t leave!” You gotta watch out, they’ll grab you by the wrist and legit not let go until you buy something (which is how I ended up with the ugliest 20 ringgit purse I’ve ever seen). I was really glad the two of us were sticking together. Sheesh.
When we got back, we split up. Douwe and Molly continued shopping, and Andrew and I headed to the National Mosque to be cultural. It was SOOOOOO interesting. When we first got there, it was during one of the 5 prayer times of the day, and the place was PACKED. There were shoes all OVER the place surrounding the mosque, and people washing their feet, and you could hear the prayer songs from outside. There was a big sign that said “CLOSED to non-Muslim tourists,” so we asked around and found at we could come back at 3PM. In the meantime, we went to the National Museum of Islamic Culture (or something like that), which was FASCINATING. It was SO great to learn about this religion – which was surprisingly similar to my own – and the interesting culture that comes with it.
When we could actually get into the mosque, we had to take our shoes off, and I had to wear this big purple cloak thing with a log skirt, long sleeves, and a hood to cover my hair. We went in and explored the beautiful architecture, saw some people praying, saw some homeless people taking refuge, and talked to a woman who was chatting with all the tourists as part of an Islamic Outreach thing. It was really, really interesting. I’m really glad I went.
We all met back at the hotel, took showers, then headed out to our last dinner. (McDonalds – lame, we know, but we wanted to come full circle. McDonalds was the first meal we ate in Malaysia when we first landed at the airport, so we decided to make it our last, too.) Then we walked to the Petronus towers – the third-tallest buildings in the world, after some building in Thailand and the Empire State Building.
Then we came back, finished packing up, and left for the airport! Homeward bound!
Sunday, July 19, 2009
Amazing Rest Day in KK
7/19 – Rest Day in KK
What an amazing day! Woke up, went to the Western Supermarket with Molly. AMAZING. Had a muffin and we shared a scoop of ice cream. Bought some delicious granola. Mmmmm, western food.
Then we went to the market and walked around, took pictures, and bought lots of souvenirs.
Then we came back, rested a bit, and then got ready to go work out at the pool with Douwe. That was awesome. We did push-ups, abs, butt exercises, calves, and shoulder burn. Then I swan 500m. Then I jumped off some HIIIIIIGH high dives. First I went of the 1m, then the 3m, then the 5m, then the 7m, then – gasp – the 10m. It was AMAZING. Even Douwe was impressed! It was SOOOO high! I could hear the air whooshing faster and faster past my ears as I went down, and I hit the water HARD because I had been so high up! It was funny, there were some Malaysian guys watching who clapped for me, lol. Good stuff.
On the way back we stopped at the Western Market again and got Bri cheese and crackers. Mmmmmmmm. We hadn’t eaten dairy in FOREVER!
Came back, took a shower, then had the best trip to the mall EVER. As it turns out, spa-ish activities are SUPER cheap here. I got a shoulder/neck/head/hand massage that lasted an hour for 15 ringitt, or $5!!!! Then Molly and I got pedicures. Aaaaah. For the first time in FOREVER I feel like I’m on vacation! I also got lots of DVDs for cheap, including Planet Earth. Yay! J
Then we went to the market and got another one of those awesome fresh fish. Then stopped at the Western Market one more time. Then came back, watched the movie 23 in Douwe and Andrew’s room with the two of them, Molly, and Alex. Then had some nice girl-talk with Molly and fell asleep. Aaaah, what a great day!
GIBBON PROJECT IN MALIAU BASIN!!
7/12 – Rest Day at the Studies Center
Couldn’t sleep last night because I napped so well! Got up, went to breakfast, went birdwatching with Sreekar and Le. Came back, lunch, and loved internet access for a few hours. Lecture from Rhett on figs, lecture from Charles on more paleontology. Dinner. Interesting discussion on evolution and religion and this course. Nice talk with Molly. Bed.
7/13 – Project Day at Studies Center
Got up and went gibbon watching! It was amazing because for once the gibbons were NOT singing. You can ALWAYS hear them singing when you get up in the morning, but not today, because it was all foggy out. But I went out with our guide Harbin anyway. We were walking around for a half hour or so, and I was convinced we wouldn’t see any because there was no sound for us to follow. But we did see some! A huge male with a female! I got some good observations and came up with a project idea. Yay!
Breakfast, project proposals, then wasted time on the internet, half-researching and half-instant-messaging friends until lunch. Lunch. Wasted a whole lot of more time on the internet. Hopefully \the rest of the day will be working out, dinner, project revision presentations, and bed. More gibbon watching early early early tomorrow morning!
7/14 – Project Day at Studies Center
Another morning of gibbon hunting with Harbin. We were out in the jungle by 5:30. We found a really interesting group and watched it for about half an hour! It was awesome. Came back, ate breakfast, during which I got some criticism of my hypothesis from my professor, so I spent the next few hours researching. Then nap. Then went out searching for gibbons some more. We didn’t find any, but we did see a WHOLE bunch of long-tailed macaques! And a giant squirrel! Awesome. A lecture from Gary on his phD about dipterocarpacae species distribution based on soil nutrients. Dinner. Work on proposals. Bed. J
7/15 – Project Day at Studies Center
Today was the most amazing day of observations EVER!!! Check this out:
AMAZING THINGS SEEN ON THE MORNING OF 7/15
· So many gibbons! We were following one pair and ended up right in the middle of 4-5 different groups’ territorial songs and displays! Apes screaming and jumping and swinging all over the place! They even came down pretty close to us and looked at us for a while! It was unbelievable.
· A flock of juvenile macaques!
· A flock of Samba deer!
· Giant mystery cucumber fruit! (bua akar) (bua = fruit, akar = liana)
· Cool centipede!
· Squirrels – regular, pygmy, and giant!
· Cool bird! Big grey with some yellow on throat, rounded beak, picking up twigs and moving them around. Pooped.
What an awesome morning.
Followed by breakfast, some research, and a nap. Then lunch, and learning about how to construct phylogenies for our focal taxa – yay, stick insects! Then a lecture from Ross on cordyceps.
7/16 – Project Day at Studies Center
A nice day. Unfortunately, no gibbons. It rained last night, so they were not calling this morning. But I still got some good information and nice experience from walking through the woods looking at them. Saw a really adorable baby long-tailed macaque. Also saw a frog and heard a flock of Samba deer. When we went out in the afternoon, we saw a barking deer! It was crazy! Made a sound like the roar of a dinosaur! Then Harbin picked up a leaf and blew and imitated the sound of its baby, so it came really close to us! It was huge! Very intimidating, it looked so powerful and muscular.
At 5 we had a lecture from Gary on the High Conservation Value approach to industry. Very interesting stuff. Dinner. Then a FABULOUS discussion on “Why care about biodiversity?” We talked about whether or not there is an intrinsic value to biodiversity, independent on whether or not it is beneficial to humans in the long term, and whether or not that matters. We talked about how religion motivates people to want to save biodiversity and if that’s a valid argument. We talked about whether or not it’s hypocritical to want to save the environment and also want to have kids, because the best thing we can do for biodiversity now is control population growth. Even if we want to save biodiversity simply because we get a feeling when we see how beautiful it is, that may be a selfish impulse to satisfy the human desire for beauty, but it doesn’t really matter, because that feeling is what we act on. I think I decided that, whether or not saving biodiversity will be practically beneficial to humans (evidence suggests not), it helps me learn compassion. If I can learn to have compassion for a fungus, or for a family of trees, and be willing to make sacrifices to save these things, and admit that my wants are not necessarily more important than their existence, I will for sure have no trouble admitting that my wants are no more important than other people’s needs. I think learning to appreciate and be willing to sacrifice for biodiversity is a lesson in compassion, toward nature and even toward other people. But anyway. That was a really great discussion, because this whole time we’ve been learning about biodiversity and conservation and just assuming that it’s a good thing; now we really pushed ourselves to figure out why it’s a good thing. It was great.
Bed! J
7/17 – Project Day at Studies Center
Our last full day in the Bornean rainforest! L L L
Started out pretty awesome – a successful gibbon morning! J
Ended with a last nature walk, swim in the river, watching some sports (badminton and volleyball), dinner, a night-walk, and bed.
7/18 – Drive Back to KK
Last gibbon morning. AMAZING. First found a pair. Then found an adult with a juvenile, which was a miracle, because they weren’t calling. Then an even BIGGER miracle – we thought we were done and we were walking back not even paying attention, and a HUGE lone male swung RIGHT by us near the river’s edge! CRAZY!!! Ah. So lucky. So sad to leave the forest. L
Drove back. Settled into the room with Molly. Slept all afternoon and night. Niiiiiice.
Monday, July 13, 2009
Up the Mountain, Palm Oil Plantations, Deramakot, Maliau Basin
6/30 – Wake up, breakfast, drive to mountain, receive nametag, hiked the 6 steep km up Mt. Kinabalu to Laban Rata/Giton Lagadan. Pretty sure that was the hardest thing I've ever done. It was fun at first and then it was just hard. We did see frogs and giant purple earthworms, but we also got rained on and were in extreme amounts of pain. When we got back, we got some amazing help from everyone who hiked faster than us; as soon as we got in, they gave us dry clothes, tea, soup, and first dibs on the hot showers. It was a good thing, because one of the girls, Dita, got pretty severely hypothermic. It's a good thing Cam's wife Kinari is a doctor. She knew exactly what to do, and Dita got better with a lot of hot water bottles and some TLC. We all passed out in bed super early
7/1 – Wake up after a rough night of traveller's sickness. This mountain is doing a number on me. Don’t go to breakfast, do make it to the montane ecology lecture and walk around. Take a huge nap during the day and wake up feeling better. Bekti’s lecture on rhododendrons at 4, dinner, bed early.
7/2 – Wake up at 2am. Hike 2.7 km to the summit of Mt. Kinabalu w/ white rope. AMAZING. Beautiful dense starry sky. Can see lightening in the distance. Can see cities below us and even peninsular KL across the ocean. Saw the sunrise from the top. Unbelievable. Hiked 2.7 km down to pack and eat breakfast at Laban Rata. Then hiked 6 km down to the bottom of the mountain. Hung out in the hostel, had a dance party, watched the rainfall. Took a shower. Relaxed. ☺
7/3 – Palm Oil Plantation, Drive to Deramakot
Today was nice but depressing. We woke up and got to sit on a bus for 6 hours. That was awesome. Kristina and I rocked out to Disney music and conducted together, lol. Then we went to the oil palm plantation. It’s sad, the excuses that these people come up with. And it’s even sadder how MUCH forest they’ve taken. The figures are ridiculous, something like 70% of the forests on the island in the past 20 years. Cam says with full confidence that within a few decades there will be no primary forests and no large mammals left on this island if this continues. The problem is on SUCH a huge scale, it seems unconquerable. It’s hard to keep reminding ourselves that the little things we do actually DO make a difference – it’s just that EVERYONE on the planet REALLY needs to take a BUNCH of small steps, and some big steps too. Otherwise ALL of this will be gone. It feels real now… I’m looking at this forest right now, and I’m looking at all the miles and miles and miles of oil palm trees that USED to be forest, and I’m thinking of how hard it is to find a wild orangutan, and how easy it was 50 years ago – we are LOSING this forest NOW. It will be GONE within our lifetime if things don’t change. It’s so scary.
Anyway. We left the oil plantation and came to this sustainable logging place. Sustainable logging is great. It’s almost even GOOD for the forest – there are more orangutans here in this sustainably logged area than almost anywhere else on the island. And it’s even a sort of carbon offset, because the early successional forests that grow after you cut down a tree and leave the area alone absorb more carbon than mature primary forests. If you really want to help the environment: BUY SUSTAINABLY LOGGED TIMBER. And get a job at Planned Parenthood, Ross says – there are just too many people on this planet.
Sigh. A sad reality. But hopefully we’re off to fixing it tomorrow!
7/4 – Deramakot
Happy Fourth of July! All the Americans started off the day with a whole bunch of singing patriotic songs ☺. First things first – we woke up at 5:30 to go look for orangutans! Walked in the woods a bit and didn’t find any, but got a TON of leeches, so we turned back. Then we did breakfast, then got a lecture from one of the guys who works here. Then we went on a walk on the educational trail (saw some orangutan nests!!!), then went on a walk on the ecology trail while eating lunch. Sat for an hour looking for orangutans, didn’t find any, but had fun writing a story with Shana and watching Fae tie leeches into knots. Came back, took a nap, then went to a lecture from Rhett about sustainable forest management. Then had a debate about palm oil vs. sustainable forest management! That was fun. Then a fun dinner, some learning Malay, and bed. Yay. ☺
7/5 – Deramakot
Today was a fun day. Woke up after a great night’s sleep, got some breakfast, and then had an unexpected free hour, during which I did some taxon stuff. (Yay, stick insects! I’m up to 15!) Then it was off to an adventure through the world of sustainable logging! And it was definitely an adventure. First we got our hard-hats and piled into the 4-by-4s. We drove for a little bit, went on a trail, saw a water-hump that they use to prevent soil erosion, saw a tree stump, and then piled into the back of some pickup trucks. Because it rained all afternoon and all night yesterday, it was SO muddy! We all felt like Indiana Jones trekking through the mud! The pickup trucks took us further into the forest, where we watched the fellers sustainably log two trees. It was crazy, seeing those humongous trees fall almost in slow motion down to the ground, land with a huge crash, bounce once, then settle down. We examined the stumps for xylem and phloem and resin and other factors, then headed back to basecamp for lunch.
After that I went for a walk in the forest to find some orangutans. I went by myself because I wanted to be super slow and super quiet, and I wanted to look for more stick insects. I walked SO slowly and looked ALL over the place, for almost two hours, but I didn’t find any stick insects or orangutans. But it was okay, because it was SO nice spending some time by myself in the rainforest. It has a certain rhythm that you don’t really sense when you’re with a big crowd of people. I saw some beautiful butterflies, some very interesting birds, and had some run-ins with many a fly, bee, and mosquito, and I felt like I was really completely immersed in the atmosphere. I listened extra carefully to every sound and tried to trace it back to the bird or squirrel that made it… this sounds really tacky, but I really was trying to be “one with the forest” or whatever… you know, so that I wouldn’t stick out like a sore thumb and scare away the orangutans. Even though it didn’t work, I really enjoyed myself and noticed more than I’ve noticed on any other walk.
Anyway. Then had a lecture on paleontology (SO COOL! Remember to take Charles’s OEB class and look into HEB or the bio track of anthro…), and another one on the peoples of Borneo (I love anthropology… once we were finally talking about people and cultures instead of scientific systems, I suddenly found it so easy to concentrate! I’m loving exploring a new field, but this whole trip has definitely confirmed my passion for the humanities above the sciences).
Then a quick walk with Kristina (beautiful sunset!) and a yummy dinner. Then a night drive! Cam called it a safari, but it was way to uneventful to call it that. All we saw was a frog. I heard another group saw a forest cat and a hornbill… oh well. We weren’t so lucky.
Apparently this forest is the forest with the most wildlife out of all the ones we’re going to, so I’m kind of disappointed that I haven’t seen ANY mammals yet. Tomorrow morning is my last chance! I’m going out at 5:30AM with Kristina to find those orangutans. It’s now or never!
7/6 – Leave Deramakot, drive to Maliau
No orangutans ☹ We had a lovely morning just sitting in the forest taking in the sounds, from 5:30AM to 7, but sadly, no orangutans. All we saw was a hornbill. (It was pretty sweet, but not as cool as orangutans.) Sigh. That’s the rainforest for you, I guess. There are only 11,000 left in this whole big forest, so I guess it’s no surprise that one didn’t happen to swing past me. Oh well.
Then we had a LOOOOOONG and rough drive in the 4-by-4s from Maliau to Deramakot. We left at 9am and got there at 6:30pm. I bonded with Ross and Douwe and Jess in the car. Other people like Molly did stuff like plan out the next 10 years of their life, but I just tried to sleep and translate some of Douwe’s Spanish rock-and-roll. It was good times.
Now we’re at the research center in Maliau Basin. It’s GORGEOUS here. Tomorrow’s a day off, and the next day we leave on our amazing 4-day hike through the basin! Can’t wait! ☺
7/7 – Rest Day in Maliau
Today was a fun day! Woke up, ate breakfast, played some Scrabble, then went on a short nature hike with Cam and some of the crew. We got a little intro to the forest here, and we got to walk on the canopy walkway! It was so cool. Saw an awesome black Bornean squirrel, and a REALLY cool hornbill (it wasn’t a rhinocerous, I think it was a helmeted… yellow on top, SO COOL!), and some amazing butterflies and dragonflies (pink, velvet red, blue – awesome!). Good stuff. Then ate lunch and wasted some time, went on computers, played Scrabble, etc… then went on a 20 minute run with Shana. Then got two lectures, one from Swee Peck on ants and Macarangas, and one from Charles on paleontology. Then ate dinner and headed off to bed. Hike tomorrow! ☺
7/8 – Hike from Agathis to Camel Trophy
Wow. Intense but amazing. But intense. Up, up, uphill. Then kind of flat. Carangas forests are cool. Yup. Camel Trophy was so cool. Sat around, learned card games (Egyptian Rat Screw, Thai Tea (Big 2!), Bridge, Texas Hold’em, and more fun), saw a civet (cute little wild cat!), set up mosquito net for the first time, went to bed. ☺
7/9 – Hike from Camel Trophy to Ginseng
So this is the day that I wrote my journal entry on a soggy scrap of paper. Here it is, reincarnated in the computer:
Today was amazing! Woke up, played cards and chatted, ate some delicious donut/pancake-type food, then headed out on an amazing hike. Saw heath forests, lower mixed dipterocarp forests, and – gasp – Bornean Gibbons in the wild! Swing from tree to tree, jumping across trees. Amazing. Our guide heard them calling pretty close, so he started imitating their calls by blowing a whistle through his hands, and it was amazing – they came closer and closer! (Insert little sketches of gibbons swinging and jumping here, because they were too fast for me to snap a picture.) Hiked on crazy downhill slopes (real conversation: “Jeez, this is nuts! Where am I?!” “In the rainforests in Borneo!” “How did that happen??” “Um, you go to Harvard! Opportunities are just handed to you there!” So true.), and crossed breath-taking waterfalls. Saw some crazy nepenthes (huge, different color/size/shape/fuzziness of pitchers!), blood-red-tannin-water. Wow.
Random fact about Malaysia that I keep forgetting to mention: There are SO MANY unnecessary STEPS here! I mean, like, steps from a staircase. They’re EVERYWHERE. Between rooms, up to the toilet, up to the sink, out of the hallway – it’s ridiculous! We Americans keep tripping all over ourselves because we are not used to having steps in all these weird places!
7/10 – Hike from Ginseng to Serya
• Long black and white striped earthworm with this crazy beautiful blue luminescence if you poke it, and it spat nasty green sticky stuff at Mindy when she tried to pick it up.
• Ate a mangostene off a tree in the middle of the jungle – mmmmm! So good! Tasted like a cross between an orange and a lemon and a banana. (Real conversation between me and Cam: “Ew, a seed.” “Swallow it!” “No!” “What do you mean no? This is a rights and responsibility thing! You have the right to eat the mangostene, but you are responsible for swallowing the seed, pooping it out, and dispersing the species!” “Um, it’s big. If I start choking and fall down the hill you have to come get me.” “Eh. Carcasses make good nutrients for the soil here.”)
• We walked through forests that had recently seen a landslide todfay. That was SO hard. That’s when the guides had to break out the machetes (though they’re called “parongs” here). Walked through crazy spiky rattan tunnels, etc. Nuts.
• Maliau falls – AAAAAH!!! See pictures. Nuff said. Too bad we couldn’t swim in it – it rained all night last night, so they were SO rough!
• Took a tiger leech to the armpit today. That was pretty awful.
• That crazy sandstone rock ledge that we climbed down from and then under! Jeez! Totally almost died there, as we got rained on from the dripping water and shimmied around the slippery ledges.
• Aranid – crazy horned spider! Get pics from someone.
• Then got caught in the rain. At that point we had all had enough fun for one day. Douwe: “That’s it! I’ve made my decision. This place can be logged.” “Yeah, give me some Oreos! I want my oil palm NOW!”
• Interesting religious discussion. Yup.
7/11 – Hike from Serya to Studies Center
• Me and Shana were sick. Me still with traveller's sickness, her with some kind of horrible stomach virus. So Cam let us go really slow in the back, and the three of us had some amazing conversations. Cam used to be captain of the Oxfored Undergraduate Competitive Plowing Team. Hahaha.
• Got 2 leeches. In my pants. Luckily, they only bit my thigh. Some people are getting bitten in way worse places. These things are getting on all of our nerves. Douwe's taken to slicing then in half with his penknife, Aywaen's taking to burning them with his lighter, Fae's taken to tying them in knots. Sheesh.
• Saw that huge, gorgeous, black orange and white butterfly! Wow! Even Cam was impressed!
• Right after Shana and I declared ourselves “Team Ill,” we saw a pig-tailed macacque cross the road right in front of us. AWESOME. Never saw one of those before! Walks like a lion. Then a hornbill flew RIGHT overhead. Wow. That’s our payback for being sick in the woods.
• Showers are amazing. Cold ones. Right after a nasty 4-day hike. Amazing.
• Nap time! Planet Earth marathon tonight! I love Cam! Thanks for entertaining my film love!
Sunday, June 28, 2009
Last full rest day in KK
Saturday, June 27, 2009
GAYA ISLAND (of PARADISE, as we named it!)
6/22 – Day 1 in Gaya Island
This morning Serena and I woke up at 7:30 in KK and rushed to be on the bus by 8AM. We made it! The bus took us to the University of Malaysia Sabah, where we got three lectures: one about the Borneo Marine Research Institute, one about carbon footprints in aquaculture, and one about Harmful Algal Bloom. None of us really approved of any of the lecturers… they didn’t seem to know what they were talking about very much. Universities here are so different from universities in the states.
Then we went to the university aquarium, which was pretty cool. I got to hold a horseshoe crab! It was huge and heavy with a tail like a stick of metal. And slimy. But its underside was SO cool.
Then we had to stop at immigration so that the Southeast Asian students could get their visas extended. I listened to Serena’s ipod with Molly and took a nap. Mmmm. J
Then we stopped for lunch. We found a bakery! Had a real sandwich, and mini-donut and mini-brownie. Yummm, recognizable food. We also found a grocery store and got some dried fruit and Oreos. It was a nice afternoon, because we’ve got a week of Malaysian food ahead of us.
Then it was off to the dock to leave for the island!!!! The dock itself was gorgeous, and we could already see the beautiful turquoise color of the water in the bay and a bunch of sergeant general fish swimming around (5 stripes -- that’s how you know it’s a sergeant general!). Then we boarded these two super fun fast boats that took us the 15 minute, 8km ride out to the island. It is GORGEOS here. The boat pulled up to a big boardwalk like the one that goes into the ocean in Greece in the Meryl Streep version of Mama Mia. (Yeah, we’re listening to Abba right now, so that’s the first comparison I thought of, lol.) There’s a little building here that has toilets and a place to eat, and the rest of the island is beach and jungle, so we’re sleeping in tents on the beach! J It is AMAZING. SO beautiful. The sunset today was GORGEOUS, AND there was a huge rainbow that got pinker and pinker as the sun went down.
But before the sun set, we did tons of cool stuff! As soon as we were settled in our tents, we changed into our swimsuits and got in the water! The snorkeling here is INSANE. And Dad, that underwater camera was SOOOO not a waste of money! I can’t wait to show you the pictures I have! Here’s a list of the amazing things I’ve seen so far: sea star (turquoise! I held it!), sea cucumber (I held that too! So soft, yet slimy, with these tiny little suction cups that suck onto your hand – SO cool!), clownfish swimming around in their anemones (I got some AMAZING pictures of these guys – they’re territorial, so they don’t run away when you get close enough to take a picture – they stand their ground and sometimes even come closer! Cam says they bite so I should watch out, but I was having an awesome time! J), sea urchins (HUGE BIG BLACK SPIKEY THINGS! And you can hear this faint crunching sound as you swim, and apparently that’s the sea urchins chewing on pieces of coral!), razor fish (they swim vertical! It’s so cool!), a spawning sea cucumber SPAWNING (yeah, I didn’t touch this one, because it was stuck straight up from the bottom of the reef squirting sperm all over the place! Nuts!), cone snails (they’re poisonous! Watch out!), lionfish (SO pretty, but they sting, so I couldn’t get too close), a million different kinds of coral, a bunch of schools of fish, a fish that looked like a mini-swordfish, and a ton more. It was an amazing day. I could stay in that water all day long, and sometimes I’ll go 5 or 10 minutes without picking my head up out of the water – I don’t want to miss anything! J I love snorkeling… I love how there are a million things going on visually, and yet it’s so quiet except for the sound of your own breathing. And you can hear yourself talk. Yeah, I found myself talking to myself as I snorkeled. “Oh, look at that! Hey, that’s so cool! Look over there! This is so amazing!” And nobody can hear me but myself! I don’t know, I mentioned this to Jess and she laughed at me, but I think it’s really cool. If you’re ever going to talk to yourself and give yourself little pep talks and words of inspiration, the ocean with a snorkel is the best place to do it!
Anyway, after we snorkeled, we changed and ate dinner. (The food here is SO much better than it was at Lambir! They had HAMBURGERS! And amazing papaya – I love papaya, I’ve decided. And mango. But only the really fresh mango from the market. Mmmm.)
Then we had a lecture from an employee of Sabah Parks (the agency runs the facilities were staying in). He was also a sea turtle expert, so we learned a lot of cool things. Then we watched some more Ten Commandments, and now I’m blogging, and soon it’s off to bed. J
Some random things about Malaysia that I’ve noticed and have been meaning to mention:
Here, there are no knives. The utensils are a fork and a spoon, and it’s considered barbaric to stab things with your fork – the fork is only for pushing things over ONTO the spoon. So you have your fork in your left hand and your spoon in your right hand, and you eat that way. EVERYTHING. Even chicken off the bone. It’s super hard.
This is DEFINITELY not an egalitarian country. I noticed it as soon as I stepped onto the Malaysia airlines plane. All the stewardesses had the exact same hairdo and insane amounts of makeup on. And then I realized that ALL employed women look like that. Secretaries, waitresses, pretty much any desk job – it’s all women, and they are all dressed up and have their hair and makeup done like china dolls. They’re definitely dehumanized and objectified. It’s really sad.
Being an American here is like being a pop star sometimes; the rest of the time, it’s like being the nerdy kid in class that everyone teases. No joke. Whenever we go into a store in a shopping mall – especially clothing stores – the clerks start snickering immediately. They talk to each other in Malay, and occasionally we hear the word “American,” and there’s lots of laughter. But then other times – like when you go into an empty dance club on a Saturday night – you’re totally the belle of the ball. Or when you go for a run in the city. Yeah, I guess not many girls go running in the city in shorts and sneakers, but the ones that do – the American ones, at least – get the Malaysian version of cat calls a million times over. The guys don’t speak English and don’t know what they’re saying, so they say things like, “Hallo! I love you!” and “Hallo! I see you before!” It’s kind of creepy but kind of hilarious.
There are cats EVERYWHERE. The people who ran Lambir Hills National Park had like 7 of them, and they were always running around, even coming into our classroom. And they’re SO friendly, not like American cats! They come up to you purring and then roll onto their backs like dogs looking for a belly rub! The people here have them, too. Cats, cats, cats – they’re everywhere. And their owners pick them up by the skin on their necks. It puts them into this weird creepy trance. Apparently it’s comforting, because that’s how wild cats’ mothers pick them up. But it’s super weird to watch.
What else… I don’t know. But I’m loving people-watching here. Everything is different. The way they treat their beggars is different (at the market, if someone gave money to a homeless lady, they bent down, looked her in the eye, and put the money straight into her hands – much different than tossing spare change into a cup in NYC), the way the kids play is different (often disturbingly so – one kid was using a stick as a gun and pretending to shoot his friend from behind a tree), their homes are different (clothes lines EVERYWHERE, kids constantly helping their parents with the housework, no windows – just holes in the walls and tin roofs)… everything is different. It really is fascinating.
Anyway. Tomorrow’s coral day! The next day’s fish day! Then a terrestrial day. Then two days for our projects. Then back to KK and off to Deramakot.
I feel so lucky to be here! We’re on this tiny little GOREGOUS island in the middle of NOWHERE, and I never in a million years would have thought to ever come here if the circumstances weren’t what they are! And as we’re learning, with the way people are treating the environment these days and the way rainforests are being burned for oil palm plantations and the way rising sea temperatures are killing all the coral reefs, this kind of beauty might not be around for much longer. When I think about that, all these things – the ants in my bed, the horrible things happening to my digestive system, the mosquito bites and the leech bites – all of those issues seem even smaller than bugs on a windshield. I feel so blessed to be here exploring it! J J J (Thank you, Mom and Dad, for making this and all the opportunities I’ve had possible!!!!!! Love you and miss you so much!!!!)
Goodnight!
6/23 – Day 2 in Gaya
Wow. This place is unbelievable. It’s amazing. Wow. As soon as I woke up, the first thing I saw was the gorgeous view of the turquoise ocean through out ten window. I had fallen asleep to the sound of the waves lapping up against the shore, after having a nice look at the beautiful stars – they twinkle more here, because the air in the atmosphere is hotter. And I woke up instantly in an amazing mood because of the sound of the waves and the beauty of this place.
Then we had breakfast and I took some photos with Jess (we’re both photographers J). Then we got a lecture on corals (their structure and stuff) from a guy that works here. Then a quick break and a discussion on coral taxonic axes and stuff. Then we were off into the water! Gorgeous again – but more exhausting this time around. I think it’s because I had my flippers on so I kept diving down. The hour and a half in the water wore me out! Luckily, it was lunchtime and then an hour’s worth of break. AMAZING hour. Lay down on the sand (it’s softer than Jersey shore sand, because it’s not ground up rocks, it’s ground up coral and macroalgae), then got hot, so I just floated on my back in the shallow water. It was SO relaxing. The water is SO warm here, and we’re in a bay, so it’s not rough. It was like being lulled to sleep. Awesome.
Then we talked about the families of corals that we were learning to identify. Then it was off some new reefs, about a five-minute boat ride off the island. It was AMAZING. I saw a sea snake AND a sting ray! And some people saw sea turtles, but I missed them. L Oh well, next time! This was awesome!!
Then we came back and worked out on the beach, haha. Abs, pushups, lunges, squats – good stuff. It’s weird how low tide makes the water level SO low. Crazy. It was cool to watch while we worked out.
Then dinner (we told funny stories about home, it was fun), then a lecture that was basically just a slideshow from MS. SO COOL!!!! And in the middle of it we saw a wild boar out the window! It was dark so we couldn’t see it too clearly, but it looked like an elephant in the dark because they have long beards that look like trunks.
Fish day tomorrow! Good stuff. J Loving this!
6/24 – Day 3 in Gaya
Fun day! Woke up – it rained last night, which was cool! It’s neat to be in a tent on the beach in the rain – got breakfast. Two lectures: One on fish families by Cam, and one on schooling patterns in fish by a guy from Japan.
Then it was off into the ocean! First we went to a mangrove, which was SO cool!!! It’s a place where the ocean goes right into a forest, with no beach in between – these plants have adapted to grow straight out of mud, sand, and saltwater! It was so cool to swim next to all the roots, fingering their way down through the water into the sand. I’d never seen anything like it – and these things only exist in the tropics! J
Then it was back to our regular bay to look for the fish that we had learned to identify. Fun stuff, fun stuff. J
Then lunch. Then we saw some macaques! A whole family of them was right on the edge of the forest, wandering onto our campsite! Some of the locals started throwing them pieces of bread, which was bad, but they did come much closer, and I got some AMAZING pictures. SO COOL.
Then a walk into the forest. The trail here is MUCH easier to walk, but its’ also much more artificial, so you don’t see as much. But we saw a TON of lizards. Lucky Kristina – lizards are her focal taxon. But no phasmidae for me. L Oh, well. We are planning to go on a night walk soon, and that’s when we see them the most. Too bad it rained tonight.
Anyway. After the walk in the forest Kristina, Shana, Molly and I worked out. Squats, glut-exercises, pushups, abs – it was intense. Luckily, we jumped into the ocean right when we were done. That was a SCARY experience. We jumped in without even thinking about the fact that it was low-tide. It was not until we were in the water that we realized that snorkeling at low-tide is both amazing and incredibly stupid. It’s amazing because everything is just more densely packed together. So the corals and fish are all SO close to you – they’re all around you! The bad part is, the water level is SO low, and you’re just floating on the surface, so sometimes you can’t control it, but your stomach and chest are dangerously close to scraping against the reef – and scraping against the spiky sea urchins!! It was TERRIFYING. It made me SO claustrophobic. We swam and swam and swam as carefully as we could out into deeper water. Then when we wanted to come back in we were stranded! It’s dangerous (and unhealthy for the ecosystem) to walk on the reefs – you could step on a stonefish and totally get your leg paralyzed or even amputated! But we couldn’t swim back, because it was too shallow! Luckily, one of the TFs walked by and we shouted to him and he showed us a way back where there was no reef and just sand. Phew! That was SO scary.
Then shower, then dinner, then a lecture on fungi. Pretty cool. Now we’re working on our project proposal for tomorrow. YAY CLOWNFISH AND ANEMONES!!!!! J J J
6/25 – Day 4 in Gaya
Wow. What a day. Packed with adventure. Woke up, ate breakfast, got a lecture from Cam on how diversity between the forest and the ocean are related. Then project presentations! Douwe, Sreekar and I are doing clownfish; Christina, Molly, and Shana are doing the ecology of the ropes that tie the buoys together; Mindy and Le are doing hermit crabs; Alex, Andrew, and Serena are doing sea cucumbers; Jess and some people are doing butterfly fish… I forget the rest, but they’re all pretty cool. J
Then it was off to do some sampling! We went out to the prettier reef, and it was INTENSE! The water was ROUGH! Swells were up to 1 meter! It was so hard to collect data, but it was fun – and Cam was freaking out like a nervous Dad, lol, and Douwe got yelled at for swimming out too far (not me, Mom! Don’t worry!). Then we came back in and I had a very interesting discussion over lunch with Cam’s wife, Shana, and Molly about religion. Very interesting. I wish Dita or Agri had been there. Maybe next time.
Then it was back into the water to do more sampling. By now it was low tide, so it wasn’t as rough, and we got lots of good data. J Douwe’s a great diver, I need to get him to teach me how to make your ears pop so I can stay down there longer…
Then we came back and had a break before dinner. But during the break a huge windstorm came in and started blowing away our tents! Everyone took a mad dash to the tents and tried to pin them back down – except Cam, who stood there laughing and taking pictures of us, lol. Then someone found a snake under their tent! Cam took pictures of us taking pictures of it, lol. I got some AWESOME National-Geographic-type photos.
Then dinner. Then a lecture about the Sabah Foundation. Then a NIGHT SWIM!!!! Man, Dad, you told me I sound like Indiana Jones – I never felt more like Indiana Jones than I did tonight. I was TERRIFIED to get into that water when it was pitch black out, it was low tide, AND it was raining and I was freezing! But the water here is so warm it felt like a hot tub, and I hung onto Jess’s hand – she had the flashlight – and we saw some AMAZING things that are never out during the day! Squirrelfish (pink and white stripes! Beautiful!), cuttlefish (look like squids but they’re bioluminescent and translucent! SO cool! Cam poked it and it squirted ink!!!), Marine catfish, pufferfish, beautiful coral polyps that opened up – and we swam through a huge swarm of ctenophores. Jess says a swarm of ctenophores is called a SMACK of ctenophores – so I swam through a SMACK of jellies! They’re these tiny little jellyfish that you can see electrical pulses going through, and they’re really pretty – but not when there’s a swarm of a million of them! It feels like swimming through tapioca pudding while getting STUNG a million times all over!!! They’re just little stings, though – nothing like what Ross has on his back – but they certainly are annoying when they’re happening all over your body all at once. Swimming in that warm water, feeling the cold rain beating down on your back, searching through the pitch black water and seeing the beam from the flashlight land on something incredible that I’d never seen before – that was an unbelievable experience.
Then we went on a night hike that was pretty lame. Still no phasmids on this island L But we did see a frog, a pit viper, some lizards, and a crazy disgusting centipede.
What an awesome day!!!! Here are some other random things that I want to remember:
Stonefish are CRAZY! These huge fish that bury themselves in the sand and leave this one little thorn sticking out, so you can’t even see it, but if you step on it you could get so hurt that they might have to amputate your leg! Cam says we probably walked past one 10 times already! But that you have to be REALLY unlucky to step on one. I don’t know, those odds freak me out.
Saw a crazy long flat fish.
Saw another stingray today!! It was moving SO fast, flapping its little wings, I couldn’t even get a picture!
It thunderstorms every night here, like clockwork. SO COOL! More lightening than thunder, and only a little rain. It always starts right during the night lecture, which makes that more fun. J
Good night!
6/26 – Day 5 in Gaya
Our last full day on Gaya Island certainly did not disappoint! Woke up, ate breakfast, and sat in the beautiful tree that hangs over the water to read a little… aaaah. J Then it was off to a new reef to look for some anemones! The reef was right in front of a resort with tons of Asian tourists, so that was funny… as if we don’t get enough of those at Harvard. Doing field work with Douwe is so much fun… we were laughing the whole time, especially when a clownfish chased him almost two meters and he squealed like a girl (“For the humour effect,” he said, but really he just couldn’t control himself :-P).
Then we came back, took a little break, and went back into our reef in the bay. Then it was lunchtime. Then we analyzed data for FOREVER, and then it was back to the old new reef for our LAST SNORKEL HERE L L L. But, that last snorkel CERTAINLY did not disappoint, because I got to see my first green sea turtle!!! It was AMAZING!!!! I was determined to see one, I kept saying, “I’m not getting out of the water until I see a sea turtle,” and then 20 minutes one of the tourists who had overheard me called over, “Sea turtle! Sea turtle!” And then I yelled to the rest of the group, “Sea turtle! Sea turtle!” And it was a mad 20-person dash to check out the sea turtle. I was SO close to it. I was able to swim DIRECTLY ABOVE IT and see it wave it’s arms like angels’ wings; then I dove down to get a little closer and I could see it from the side, the platelets on its head, and the symbiotic fish swimming under its shell! It was INCREDIBLE. Then Douwe – the Harvard-Swim-Team show-off that he is – dove right down there and started following him. The turtle noticed him and SHOT OFF – he went from a nice, slow, relaxed, beautiful pace to showing us that those things can move FAST! He swam in a circle for a little bit trying to get away from Douwe, and then when Douwe ran out of breath and came up for air, he shot off into open sea. Wow. That was one of the most amazing experiences!!!
Then when we came back to the bay, Ross and MS let me and Douwe and Alex try breathing out of their scuba tanks. It was SO cool (even though Cam got really mad and yelled at them later, because apparently we could have died since we’re not SCUBA trained or something… whoops). I really want to get scuba certified now! You can see so much more than you can see when you’re snorkeling and need to come up for air.
Then took a shower and we all watched the sunset together! Beautiful and fun. J
Then we had dinner and then we met THE COOLEST PEOPLE EVER. I’m not even kidding, I think these are the coolest people, hands-down, in the world. It’s a group of 14 adults from all over the world who got together and decided that they wanted to sail around Southeast Asia and Hawaii and record personal stories that show the effects of climate change – on REAL people, putting a face to an issue. So they gave up the next 3 years of their lives and are in the middle of sailing across the world recording stories of the effects of climate change on island tribes and peoples. They are SO COOL. AND they are always looking for members of their crew, even if only for a little while, and they said that they would LOVE for me to join them over winter break and film their expedition, and I could TOTALLY make a VES project out of that. I have their email addresses – looks like I found some potential (and pretty likely!) plans for winter break!
Now we’re all sitting here finishing our projects – presentations are tomorrow, and then, sadly, we leave this beautiful island. Back to the city, then climbing Mt. Kinabalu. Aaaah, so sad to leave, yet so excited to be going on a new and different adventure! J
6/27 – Leave Gaya, back to KK
Today we left our island paradise. L It was so sad. But first we presented our projects! Douwe, Sreekar, and I proved that levels of aggression in anemonefish are species-specific, and that the Spine-Cheek Anemonefish is more aggressive than the False Clown Anemonefish. And that colony size, anemone size, length of anenome’s tentacles, and the presence of juveniles are not statistically significant factors. (Oh, well. It was a really fun experiment. J) Then we heard quickly from a marine biologit from Scotland and about her work on dolphinids in Sabah and Hong Kong. Very interesting.
Then we packed up, struck the tents, and got on the boats back to Borneo. On our way back to the hotel we stopped at a delicious restaurant. I drank coconut juice (yes, juice, not milk – that’s the stuff you get when you grind up the bark and press it) out of a fresh coconut; it was actually kind of gross, but pretty cool.
Back at the hotel, we all took a short break, and then Mindy, Le, and I took our first trip to a Malaysian movie theatre! We saw Transformers, which I was not dying to see, but I really wanted to see what Malaysian movie theatres were like. They were actually pretty similar to American movie theatres, except instead of candy they sell fish chips, and the large popcorn is quivalent to about half of an American small popcorn, and the seating is assigned. OH, and you have to PAY to use the bathroom. Yeah. .20 ringgitts per flush, and add an extra .30 if you want toilet paper. I have never paid to go the bathroom before. That was weird.
Then we came back to the hotel, and now I’m loving internet connection! Tomorrow’s another day off (I’m going to try to make it to the Sabah State Museum), and then Monday we leave to hike Kinabalu. (Cam’s words: “For some of you, this will be the highest and most diffiult climb of your life. So stay out of the karaoke bars and get some sleep.” Well, I knew that “some of you” DEFINITELY meant me, so I’m heading to bed ASAP!) After Monday morning there’s a good chance I won’t have internet access until I get back!! I miss you all!!!
G’night!