Time for another "Chlidonias Goes To Asia" I think.
If you haven't been paying attention, or if you're new here, or if the implications of the "part five" in the thread title have escaped you, there have been four previous installments in the series. The first one was a six-page thread. The second one was a four-page thread. The third one somehow turned into a seventy-one-page thread. The fourth one managed six pages, which was fairly remarkable given that the trip was less than a month long. How many pages will this one be? Bets are open.
The first part of the thread will cover a short jaunt through Sabah. I am doing this bit with my friend Mr. Andy (tapirus on Zoochat) who wanted to go birding somewhere fun with me. He eventually settled on Borneo as his destination but because he has adult responsibilities, like a wife and a baby and a job, it could only be a short trip - just ten days or so. Given the short time-frame we chose easy places to which I had already been so I knew my way around, but to which he hadn't so there would be lots of new birds and mammals for him to see.
The flights from New Zealand come in to Kuala Lumpur, so we decided to start off at the nearby hill station of Bukit Fraser where we spent a couple of days looking for siamang before continuing on to Sabah. In Sabah we will be at Sepilok (that's where we are right now) and then Mt. Kinabalu because he has always wanted to go there. This was my fourth time at Bukit Fraser, my third at Sepilok, and will be my fourth at Mt. Kinabalu. Consequently life-birds will be few and far between, but hopefully there will be some nice mammal lifers to make up for that.
Once his time is up Mr. Andy will fly back to New Zealand and I will go in the opposite direction, to New Delhi. I've been to India before, in 2014, but only to Calcutta and Assam. This time I'm doing the more classical India, the one with nilgai and mowglis.
For those who like to know the costs of travelling, before even leaving New Zealand I had already spent roughly NZ$2100 on the trip. If you don't want to google that it is about US$1560 or £1165 or €1390. Rounding the figures up or down somewhat, it's divided something like this: $880 on flights, $700 on travel insurance (always have it, never actually used it, but anyone who goes without it is an idiot!), $100-ish on the Indian visa, and $400 on new and booster innoculations (the major one being the very expensive three-shot innoculation for rabies, because India). My flights total is fun because I've bought eight flights, making an average of $110 per flight which is alright considering several of them are international. (NZ$110 is about US$82, £61, or €72)
If you haven't been paying attention, or if you're new here, or if the implications of the "part five" in the thread title have escaped you, there have been four previous installments in the series. The first one was a six-page thread. The second one was a four-page thread. The third one somehow turned into a seventy-one-page thread. The fourth one managed six pages, which was fairly remarkable given that the trip was less than a month long. How many pages will this one be? Bets are open.
The first part of the thread will cover a short jaunt through Sabah. I am doing this bit with my friend Mr. Andy (tapirus on Zoochat) who wanted to go birding somewhere fun with me. He eventually settled on Borneo as his destination but because he has adult responsibilities, like a wife and a baby and a job, it could only be a short trip - just ten days or so. Given the short time-frame we chose easy places to which I had already been so I knew my way around, but to which he hadn't so there would be lots of new birds and mammals for him to see.
The flights from New Zealand come in to Kuala Lumpur, so we decided to start off at the nearby hill station of Bukit Fraser where we spent a couple of days looking for siamang before continuing on to Sabah. In Sabah we will be at Sepilok (that's where we are right now) and then Mt. Kinabalu because he has always wanted to go there. This was my fourth time at Bukit Fraser, my third at Sepilok, and will be my fourth at Mt. Kinabalu. Consequently life-birds will be few and far between, but hopefully there will be some nice mammal lifers to make up for that.
Once his time is up Mr. Andy will fly back to New Zealand and I will go in the opposite direction, to New Delhi. I've been to India before, in 2014, but only to Calcutta and Assam. This time I'm doing the more classical India, the one with nilgai and mowglis.
For those who like to know the costs of travelling, before even leaving New Zealand I had already spent roughly NZ$2100 on the trip. If you don't want to google that it is about US$1560 or £1165 or €1390. Rounding the figures up or down somewhat, it's divided something like this: $880 on flights, $700 on travel insurance (always have it, never actually used it, but anyone who goes without it is an idiot!), $100-ish on the Indian visa, and $400 on new and booster innoculations (the major one being the very expensive three-shot innoculation for rabies, because India). My flights total is fun because I've bought eight flights, making an average of $110 per flight which is alright considering several of them are international. (NZ$110 is about US$82, £61, or €72)