Arrived in Kuching (city of cats) and caught a Taxi to our hotel (via a detour to a hotel that the Taxi driver seemed to want us to stay at). First thing that suprised us is the comparison of what you get for your money in Borneo compared to the mainland. Hotel was very clean and modern but pretty basic with no night tables, wardrobe etc, etc
Kuching is lovely though, with lots of colonial (albeit private enterprise colonialism) history. We enjoyed wandering the streets, soaking up the atmosphere of the markets and chinatown and touring all the 'tourist' sites such as the fort and the government adminstration buildings. The whole waterfront area is done really well and it was a delight to just sit and admire the birds in the 'picnic' tower greeting the night by chattering away and swinging on the cables!
Found a great Middle Eastern Restaurant (Little Lebanon) .. bizarre I know but the food here was fantastic ... made all the better with Tiger beer!
Stayed here 5 nights before catching a public bus to Bako National Park
We spent 3 nights in Bako National Park which is truly a pristine paradise. Access to the park is via boat only and even this method entails leaving the boat 150 meters from the shore (at low tide) and wading to shore. The park accommodation is basic but our bungalow had a lovely deck area where we sat in the evenings to watch the bearded pigs foraging in the undergrowth, the monkeys up to their usual antics and the pythons, well, just ‘sitting’ in the trees!
The food in the park canteen was surprisingly good and even more unbelievably was really good value … we had expected it to be astronomically expensive given the isolation.
Walked all but three of the trails that the park had to offer and consequently felt very tired most nights. Even my Tevas decided that they had had enough and shed their soles after only 2 months of wear.
The sun was evil, the scenery beautiful, the wildlife fascinating and the time truly well spent.
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