Day Two:
For anyone who hasn’t experienced a Bornean buffet breakfast, I cannot recommend it enough. The hotel restaurant was amazing, so much food, and wonderful staff who cooked eggs and pancakes to order. Awesome way to start the day! After eating, we discovered that our tour shuttle had arrived 30 minutes early, so we raced to get our gear, and joined our guide and driver. Both were very friendly guys, and our guide pointed out some of sites as we headed north out of the city. Notably, we passed a number of coastal mangrove wetlands, which contained large numbers of white egrets, I think Great and Intermediate.
As January is the rainy season in Borneo, we were not expecting the best weather, but it turned out to be surprisingly dry, which was excellent. El Nino might have helped. Another bonus of the supposed rainy season, is that there are relatively few tourists around, and so most of our tours were just with one other party or just us, rather than the 12-20 people we had expected. Today we were being joined by a family of four that were staying at Shangri-La's Rasa Ria Resort, which was almost an hour from KK. However, the shuttle was 30 minutes early for them too, so we had a bit of time to hang around and explore. This resort looked incredible, and I’d have loved to have been able to stay here, although it is far from the city. They have a small orangutan rehabilitation centre here and deer too apparently, but I only saw the entrance area, and another new bird for the year – Tree Sparrow.
Once the others joined us, we drove further north to a rural area with farms, plantations and a little remaining forest. Our destination was Borneo Bikes, a company that runs a variety of biking tours around KK. Their premises were basically a shipping container in a rural backyard in the Kiulu Valley, with a water buffalo grazing nearby. Our local guides there were excellent, very friendly and helpful, and the bikes ideal. We rode initially along a road, before heading up along a dirt track that led past farms and small settlements. There was little wildlife around here that I saw (it’s not the best way to spot birds), although Spotted Doves were ubiquitous.
It got quite warm, and we cycled up into some hills covered in rubber plantations, and got our first views of Mount Kinabalu, South-East Asia’s tallest peak. We then headed downhill, and through several villages and towns, before re-entering a more rural area, where small groups of horses, cattle and goats grazed on the roadside. There were dogs too, often sleeping on the road, and they were all friendly. The people were also very friendly, many of them waving to us, or stopping to let us through. We also crossed a couple of long, narrow suspension bridges, the first of which was busy with chickens and motorcyclists, so we dismounted. The other was older, with ominous signs banning heavy loads, and we cycled across that individually. Apart from egrets and doves, I also saw my first Bornean lifer: Oriental Magpie Robin.
After 27km, we arrived back at the base. It was now noon, and time for the shuttle to take us to our second destination, the Riverbug Rafting Centre. Here we had a BBQ lunch (surrounded by scrounging dogs and their puppies) before driving upstream to the white-water rafting launch point, in the town of Kiulu. The lack of recent rain meant the water levels were quite low, so the water was only white in a few small areas. We rafted past farmland and rainforest, as well as small settlements. We didn’t take cameras, so I have no record of the wildlife spotted, but again we weren’t able to see much - a few Water Monitors, a Striated Heron, many unidentifiable swifts and plenty of fish. There were a few deeper stretches where some people got out and swam, and we also saw some locals swimming as we passed a wedding. After 15km we were back at the Centre, and the shuttle returned us to KK.
On the way back we got our first experience of Malaysian traffic, which was diabolical. It took about twice as long to get back to the hotel as it had taken in the morning. By now it was late afternoon, and we decided to visit the mall (Wisma Merdeka) adjacent to our hotel. My planned destination here was The Borneo Shop, which stocks a large range of natural history publications. Online there are various statements about the bookshop having closed down and moved online only, but there is certainly an excellent replacement store operating. I had perused the hotel lobby library earlier and decided on a number of books I wanted, although these were not all available. In the end I picked up field guides of South-East Asian birds, Bornean mammals, and Bornean amphibians & reptiles, as well as a small book about Tabin Wildlife Reserve. We then had a drink by the hotel pool and watched the sunset, before dining at the buffet restaurant (which was as fantastic as the breakfast!).
Borneo Wildlife Species Lists:
Birds:
1 Great Egret Ardea alba
2 Intermediate Egret Ardea intermedia
3 Eurasian Tree Sparrow Passer montanus
4 Cattle Egret Bubulcus ibis
5 Spotted Dove Streptopelia chinensis
6 Oriental Magpie Robin Copsychus saularis adamsi *
7 Striated Heron Butorides striata *
Reptiles:
1 Water Monitor Varanus salvator
Photos below show: Borneo Bikes premises in Kiulu Valley; having a rest in the shade before heading up that hill on the bikes; view from the top of the hill, of plantations and Mount Kinabalu in the background; cycling past a rubber plantation; a suspension bridge over the Kiulu River in a small town (with large temple); and finally the rafting start point on the Kiulu River.