Saturday 26 October 2013

A few of my favourite team pictures

Me out on expedition at Sipitang forest reserve (September)

Lee and I sitting out a thunderstorm under an old water trough!

Lee and Rusdi on the Canopy walkway at Maliau Basin (August)
Check out the muscle as the Banteng girls put their weight lifting to good use!!... ok maybe we got the car stuck by trying to go around a lorry that was stuck (Maliau Bain September)
Naomi still managing to smile and navigate while knee deep in mud on expedition in Malua Forest Reserve!

11am = lunch time in the jungle! 

I spy with my little eye,..

So... each month i’ve been keeping a record of the species that I have seen, once they are listed I don’t put down every single time see them!
August
White Crowned Hornbill... very rare sighting we were lucky enough to see a family at Tabin Wildlife lodge
Rhinocerous Hornbill.. no as rare but still beautiful
Storm Stork-a scarce resident but I have managed to see a few mainly in oil palm plantation trees
Buffy Fish Owl.. down by the river while we were washing the car.. Grandma I thought you’d like this one!
Orang-utan.. a large male sat in the tree behind the house
Bornean Elephant... many!
Sambar Deer
Muntjac
Bearded Pig Family
Monitor Lizard
Rat Snake.. on a branch right above my head whilst out walking!
Mosquitoes, rats, geckos, sandflies- these seem to think they are our housemates!


September
BANTENG.. I actually saw them!! J thought I was going to have a heart attack with excitement and trying to keep quiet, but it was amazing. I no longer think they are mythical!
Egret
Male Crested Fireback-a member of the pheasant family with amazing colouration
Swifts
Long Tailed Macaque
Leopard cat... not to be mistaken with a clouded leopard, these are house cat sized!
Common Palm Civet
Banded Linsang
Tarsier
Terrapin..we saved it from being run over
Malayan Banded Wolf Snake.. luckily only a juvenile, it was in the shower and the boys caught it!
Fish...i’m sorry but we may have eaten some of you!

October
Coucal
Pacific Swallow
Raffles’ malkoha- after much deliberation and sitting watching through my binoculars this is the conclusion we came to!
Male Oriental Magpie Robin
Red Leaf Monkey.. swinging in the trees!
Malay Civet- See October’s blog post for the full story of this little devil!
Yellow Throated Marten.. a pair crossing the road while we were walking
Short tailed Mongoose
Flying Lemur- actually saw it flying
Thomas’ Flying Squirrel
Flying lizard

HUGE snake in the river.. I was with Lee who is terrified of snakes which was quite funny!

November and December
Due to the extensive list above, actually seeing a new species is become less and less frequent, however there have been a few!
Water Buffalo- I didn't know they were even here until I saw them!
Ranee Mouse- a cute little mouse made a nice change from big rats!
Crested Serpent Eagle- I've probably seen lots of these but I didn't know what they were until now

October- The expedition of getting stuck and hunting activity

Maliau Basin and Sipitang Forest Reserve
The expedition of getting stuck and hunting activity. At the beginning of October we (Penny, Jo, Elena and I) headed back to Maliau Basin Conservation area to check on the camera traps that had be set their in previous months, once again we stayed in Belian Camp in our hammocks under the gazebo, but this time not under the table! We only spent 2 nights and one day in Maliau Basin but in this time we managed to make friends with a Malay Civet who was first attracted by the smell of guava and jumped on the table right next to me whilst i was using my laptop and then decided our empty cups on the table made a great toy and lots of noise o scare the life out of us when we were sleeping in the middle off the night! The photos from the camera traps revealed the very rare Bulwers Pheasant, a pangolin and some gorgeous photos of a large male banteng who stood and posed for the camera for us!
From Maliau Basin to Sipitang forest reserve it is another 7 hours drive, this was made longer because a full diesel lorry had got stuck on the track out of Maliau Basin and when we went to go around it the bank gave way and we ended up stuck too! A Maliau Basin staff truck tried to pull us out from the front and ended up getting stuck too so in the end we had to be pulled out from the back and then put rocks out to drive over in order to get our journey to sipitang under way! We dropped Elena off in .... on our way and arrived at Benthes camp in Sipitang forest reserve just before dark.
Benthes camp is a forestry staff contractors camp and is at about 1100m in altitude, unlike the rest of the places I have visited in Sabah I didn’t take my jumper off the whole time I was here, it was probably around 20 degrees but this still felt like the arctic compared to the usual 35!.. yes, I am going to freeze when I return to the uk! The camp has long wooden buildings with the long sides open, there is an open kitchen and sitting area at one end and then back to back bedrooms two rooms wide filling up the rest of the building. We stayed in one of the little room which was just big enough for the 2 bunk beds that were in it, the showers and toilets were in a little block. The first night dared a cold shower but after that we boiled the kettle and made warm water to shower with!! We stayed at this camp for 4 nights and the 3 days of walking we did nearby turned out to be extremely interesting!
On two days of walking near the first camp we encountered 2 groups of 6 hunters out hunting, one group ended up having to help us when our car got stuck on a rock the size of a coffee table! Thankfully there were no banteng signs at the locations with the hunters, although 2 of our cameras had been stolen so we don’t know what pictures these contained. On the other day of walking we did find some old banteng dung, so we are still hopeful to see some of the Sipitang herd on our cameras. On this day we also visited a site that was meant to be an old deserted village, but it contained two manmade wood buildings, one with clothes and a padlocked trunk and the other on silts full of bags of some kind of grain, so wasn’t so deserted after all. This day turned out to be a very long day of walking, some of it along a river and some of it climbing up and down very steep forest, ending with a pitch black trek back to the car!
After four nights in camp we moved onto another compartment of Sipitang Forest where Sabah and Sarawak meet and the logging is actively going on around you. We spent 2 nights here, staying in the contractor’s camp cafe on the floor! The family that ran the cafe we so welcoming and provided us with plenty of meals, mattresses to sleep on and they had a tv, it was luxury! At this location the team planned to walk to the Sarawak border to see if there were signs of banteng, but of course the best place for borders are the ridges of mountains so it was a climb to 1500m for the team!..Altitude got the better of me and sent me straight back to my bed!
The full final day in Sipitang took us to yet another area, this time where the team saw more recent dung and are hopeful of getting pictures, although the area of forest is a 1km wide stretch of wildlife corridor which is surrounded by secondary replanted forest that was being logged as we were driving through. The final night was spent at another contractor’s camp where my height became apparent when I went for a shower only to realise that the wall was only up to my chest, thankfully I’d turned my torch off and the water was soo cold it was only a quick wash anyway!!
The next day we set of before dawn in order to reach our house in Lahad Datu before dusk, 600km (14 hours) of half tarmac and half track with pit stops at lots of bakeries to keep us stocked up on food. Half way through our journey we were flagged down by a man standing by his car on the side of the track, so we assumed he’d had a puncture, when we stopped we were very shocked to find out that his friend had chain-sawed his wrist and needed a lift to hospital, which was over 2hours away. So the injured friend jumped in the car and, with a very grimaced face, endured the next 2 hours of journey along the rough track with a gaping wrist not covered with any bandage just held to his body with a make shift sling! At 6.30pm we finally arrived back at the Lahad Datu house.
So all of that only takes me to October 11th(!)
On October 12th I went back into Malua to go on Banteng watch duty with Lee until the 25th. There wasn’t a lot of banteng watching to be done thanks to the daily thunder and lightening, but this time the forest house had water so showering and washing could be done at the house and the river just used for swimming.

The end of October means the end of our first 3 months and time for a week’s break, so Naomi and I are off to Thailand for a week of hot showers, a proper toilet and relaxing!

September

Firstly every month Danau Girang Field Centre make a newsletter called the Jungle Times, as part of the Banteng team Naomi and I wrote last month’s Banteng report for it, the Banteng team will hopefully have a monthly update in it. The Jungle times also shows all the other research projects and current news for Danau Girang Field Centre.. check it out http://www.cardiff.ac.uk/biosi/facilities/danaugirangfieldcentre/index.html 

I spent the first 2 weeks of September with Rusdi on night time Banteng watch duty. During this time we spent the days at the forest house in Malua and the night times keeping watch for banteng. At the forest house we showered and washed our clothes and dishes down at the river because the water pump to pump the water from the river to the house was broken, when it finally got fixed I believe it was just a slipped belt that was stopping it working!!! We also played dominoes (thank you YFC indoor sports!), the boys played the guitar and we sat in the hammocks underneath the house chatting and reading... i would joke its a hard life but 17 hour night shifts are quite hard!! On September 16th was Sabah Independence day so the forestry staff went home for the day, returning on the 17th was a feast of fresh fish and lots of biscuits! One of many, many meals of fish that I ate in my time at there... fish caught from the river made up most of our meals over the 2 weeks. 
At the end of September I went on expedition to collect the sd cards and change the batteries in the cameras on the 2 grids of camera traps in Malua. On the first day I walked with Rusdi and we walked 2 transects of camera traps, 9km in total and were home by 1.30... despite me getting ants in my nose and falling down a bank, all in one go! The next day we all (Jo, Lee, Rusdi, Elena and I) started walking together and then split off into groups to check different transects, unfortunately the cameras from 3 of our stations had been stolen by hunters, despite them being padlocked in metal cases that were bolted onto the trees. At the next grid the boys decided that they could walk faster without us girls slowing them down so they went off to walk on 3 days while Jo, Elena and I sorted pictures from the previous grid and only walked on one day. One evening we went down to the house by the river where Rusdi climbed the tree to cut down some fresh coconut for us and dinner contained fresh mushrooms which the forestry staff had picked. I was very good at eating the coconut but pretty bad at cutting them open, I wouldn't survive very well on a desert island!  

Below is a photo of Rusdi up the tree, I missed him climbing it the first time so he had to climb it again for the photo!!