three and a half weeks to go, counting down....yes, I am going back to Asia on another trip in search of the world's wierd and wonderful wildlife. Its going to be mainly an Indonesian trip with some Borneo in the middle and some Thailand at the end. Because I will be away for over five months, from 29 May to 13 November, I shall not be posting much for quite a while.
Starting point is Bali because that's cheap to get to, but as Bali doesn't actually appeal to me overly much I'm just going to be there for a few days birding with a side trip to the Baluran National Park in east Java, then I'm off into the Lesser Sundas (aka Nusa Tenggara) where I shall be visiting Sumba, Komodo, Rinca, Flores and West Timor. Most of the wildlife I shall be seeking there will be of the birdy persuasion (eg, Sumba hornbill, Timor finch, Wallace's hanging parrot, etc) but the highpoints will undoubtably be the Komodo dragon and Flores giant rat (if I can find the latter).
Next stop will be Sulawesi for about a month, where the strange creatures are far too numerous to mention but include babirusa, anoa, giant civet, several species of tarsiers and macaques, bear cuscus, maleo, red-knobbed hornbill, etc etc etc. Some of the localities I aim to visit (depending as always on current accessibility, time and luck) include Tangkoko, Dumoga-Bone, Lore Lindu, and Morowali.
After Sulawesi I head to Sarawak (Borneo) to visit Bako and Mulu National Parks, then through Brunei and on to Sabah to hit Mt. Kinabalu, the Kinabatangan river and Danum Valley amongst several other places of interest. I'll be in Borneo for about one and a half months, then I'll probably have to sit around in Singapore for a while waiting on my next two month visa for re-entering Indonesia.
Once the visa is sorted I fly into west Java to do some animal-spotting in Gunung Gede Pangrango, Ujung Kulon, and some other little random places. There is of course absolutely no hope that I'll find a rhino in Ujung Kulon, but my motto in wildlife-spotting is that its always better to give it a shot and fail than to not even bother trying at all.
Krakatau (aka Krakatoa) is right next to west Java so I hope to be able to get across for a day-trip because you can't really be that close to Krakatau and not make a visit can you? I just hope it doesn't choose that day to erupt again.
Onwards to Sumatra, with just three key sites for me, spread over about three or four weeks: Way Kambas, Kerinci-Seblat, and Leuser National Parks.
After Sumatra I'll only have about a week or two before my flight home from Bangkok, so depending on time I may go to Taman Negara to find a Malayan tapir, and maybe go to the Cameron Highlands for a few days; then its up into Thailand where I'd quite like to make another attempt for Gurney's pitta at Khao Nor Chuchi (after a miserable failure to find any in 2006) and on to Bangkok.
And that's the plan. Because its a wildlife trip there won't be a lot of spare time for zoos but I shall be wanting to see the Bali Bird Park; in Borneo the Lok Kawi zoo and Kota Kinabalu aquarium (which was due to open in late 2008 but it keeps getting delayed, so fingers crossed); probably a few of the ones in Java and Sumatra; and I may make return visits to ones in Singapore, KL and Bangkok. I shall endeavour to keep this thread updated along the way with the animals I see and the (mis)adventures I have but it will of course be somewhat irregular. If I don't post for more than a month then I'm probably dead.
Starting point is Bali because that's cheap to get to, but as Bali doesn't actually appeal to me overly much I'm just going to be there for a few days birding with a side trip to the Baluran National Park in east Java, then I'm off into the Lesser Sundas (aka Nusa Tenggara) where I shall be visiting Sumba, Komodo, Rinca, Flores and West Timor. Most of the wildlife I shall be seeking there will be of the birdy persuasion (eg, Sumba hornbill, Timor finch, Wallace's hanging parrot, etc) but the highpoints will undoubtably be the Komodo dragon and Flores giant rat (if I can find the latter).
Next stop will be Sulawesi for about a month, where the strange creatures are far too numerous to mention but include babirusa, anoa, giant civet, several species of tarsiers and macaques, bear cuscus, maleo, red-knobbed hornbill, etc etc etc. Some of the localities I aim to visit (depending as always on current accessibility, time and luck) include Tangkoko, Dumoga-Bone, Lore Lindu, and Morowali.
After Sulawesi I head to Sarawak (Borneo) to visit Bako and Mulu National Parks, then through Brunei and on to Sabah to hit Mt. Kinabalu, the Kinabatangan river and Danum Valley amongst several other places of interest. I'll be in Borneo for about one and a half months, then I'll probably have to sit around in Singapore for a while waiting on my next two month visa for re-entering Indonesia.
Once the visa is sorted I fly into west Java to do some animal-spotting in Gunung Gede Pangrango, Ujung Kulon, and some other little random places. There is of course absolutely no hope that I'll find a rhino in Ujung Kulon, but my motto in wildlife-spotting is that its always better to give it a shot and fail than to not even bother trying at all.
Krakatau (aka Krakatoa) is right next to west Java so I hope to be able to get across for a day-trip because you can't really be that close to Krakatau and not make a visit can you? I just hope it doesn't choose that day to erupt again.
Onwards to Sumatra, with just three key sites for me, spread over about three or four weeks: Way Kambas, Kerinci-Seblat, and Leuser National Parks.
After Sumatra I'll only have about a week or two before my flight home from Bangkok, so depending on time I may go to Taman Negara to find a Malayan tapir, and maybe go to the Cameron Highlands for a few days; then its up into Thailand where I'd quite like to make another attempt for Gurney's pitta at Khao Nor Chuchi (after a miserable failure to find any in 2006) and on to Bangkok.
And that's the plan. Because its a wildlife trip there won't be a lot of spare time for zoos but I shall be wanting to see the Bali Bird Park; in Borneo the Lok Kawi zoo and Kota Kinabalu aquarium (which was due to open in late 2008 but it keeps getting delayed, so fingers crossed); probably a few of the ones in Java and Sumatra; and I may make return visits to ones in Singapore, KL and Bangkok. I shall endeavour to keep this thread updated along the way with the animals I see and the (mis)adventures I have but it will of course be somewhat irregular. If I don't post for more than a month then I'm probably dead.