We went on a family get-away to Kuching last week.
The trip was rather fantastic actually. The accommodation was good, the rented car was brand new (and drove like a dream) and we did almost everything that are on the itinerary. And came home with the (coveted) souvenirs.
We stayed at a very modest (please read that as cheap) lodge called Furama. It was basic; but very clean and within walking distance to the Waterfront (but we, of course drove there). Lilian, the sweet proprietor, was apologetic because one of the 4-bedded rooms we booked was o
ut of order (and gave a refund). If anything, I'll give the place a 9.5 for friendliness, cleanliness and keeping
customers happy.
We found bla-bla-bla on the gps. I said,
ni mesti GPS tak jumpa apa-apa. As it turned out, there IS a place called exactly that - bla bla bla - right in front of our hotel.
We spent the afternoon walking (aimlessly -
sebab masih mencari bearing) along the Waterfront. And had dinner at TopSpot, a busy foodcourt-like seafood eating place. We tried
umai (fresh fish
salad with sliced onions and lime juice
) and
pansoh manok (chicken cooked in bamboo ala
lemang) and the lauded
Midin (which is actually the Sarawak species of
pucuk paku). Yes to the
umai and
midin; not to the
pansoh.
(clockwise from top left) There is only one Muslim seafood outlet here; the umai; he was sick (but funny how healthy he looked in the photo..); and the
midin goreng belacan.
We went to Bako National Park; a great place to get back to nature. You need to take a boat there and that boat ride depends on the tide. Co-incidently it was low tide when we got to the pier and had to wait a couple of hours before the boats are ready to resume their services.
(clockwise from top left) The Bako terminal, about 45 minutes drive from Kuching; and off all the boats go when the tide came in; the local fish market and the boys who were bored waiting at the pier.
(clockwise from top left) The pier on the park - at low tide the boatman will drop passengers off on the beach not the pier; you need to register upon arrival; there are miles and miles of nature to explore; and you definitely need a map to move about.
Beautiful view awaits at the end of the trails; the park has many trails to follow. City dwellers as we are, we chose the easier ones - we didnt even get to the end of our trail - although the children did.
That's the mystical Mt Santubong hidden in the clouds (beautiful, dont you agree?); photo taken by the kids at the end of the trail they followed. We, on the other hand waited for them on wooden planks in the quiet and peaceful forest. It was cool within the trees and very hot once you step out of the forest shades.
We watched Korean tourists walked by and they oohed and aahed over the
biawak that swam
across the stream. I told my husband,
biawak lagi besar dari tu pun ada kat belakang rumah kita. A group of French tourist came by after that and did the same (s
aya dan suami berkongsi senyum kambing..) But I was impressed with their guide who said he is from Sentul and spoke fluent French.
Ooh-la-la! There was of course that
biawak. There were monkeys. And we also saw this wild boar when we got off from the boat and walked up the beach.
There should have been birds and iguanas too although we didnt notice any (maybe we had scare them off with our labored breathing..)
(clockwise from top left) The children completed the trail to Tanjung Paku; park map; and (more) signboard - just so nobody gets lost I suppose; Iman
kata menyesal ikut adik2 who said she slowed them down; be cautious of sea creatures (the man in the signage look like an alien to me);
lunyai - the children came back and reported
letih giler.
But Bako was a worthwhile trip.
We spent our night at the Permai Rainforest Resort at Damai, maybe half an hour drive from Kuching. There are no words to describe the place - even breathtaking,
best sangat or amazing cant do
justice to its awesome-ness (which surprised me as it always showed up last on my google list).
(clockwise from top left) Permai Rainforest Resort; this beast takes care of your luggage to your door; that building in the tree shades is the reception; we get the novelty of walking everywhere up and down lanes and planks and bridges across small streams on the resort. In fact, the car park is located outside the resort main gates (it is guarded of course). You can only drive as far
as the gates to drop off your luggage.
The resort is located in a forest by the sea. The way the accommodations are built whilst preserving the green forest is beautiful. The resort prides itself for embracing the green
c
oncepts from their no vehicle policy to forest preservation and everything else in between.
(clockwise from top left) We stayed in a 2-bedroom cabin; that's our cabin, deep in the forest - dont you just love it?; the view of tall trees from our verandah - you can see the sun shining on the water between the trees; if you look closely that is a view of the moss-y river bank, we were on our way to breakfast.
The resort is quite sizable but all employees walk. The are no motorbikes, no buggy. And bicycles are for patrons' recreational purpose only. Amazing.
It comforts me some to think that although I am wallowing (
konon) in the comfort of the resort, I am still doing my bit for the environment.. (Delinn ~ you may go yeah, yeah here)
(clockwise from top left) The cafe looked warm and inviting in the evening; breakfast (we were lucky that breakfast comes with the room - a roti canai costs you RM10 (!) here, my friend; Eirfan on the cafe balcony which has this vast view of the sea; the menu (do enlarge to see that nasi goreng costs RM20 per plate); more view; he stared and squinted at the (unbelievable prices on the) menu - you can see the sun setting in the trees at the back.
(clockwise from top left) We also had a map for the resort; we surely need that as we were on foot all the time to everywhere; I like the no nudity signage!;the trees in the photo has a tree house in it- do you notice that? The tree house is amazing too (but rather pricey for our group stay).This is a larger view of the tree houses - arent they marvelous? They face the sea so you get all that view at tree level. The
mat sallehs all stayed in these. I told my husband it's so cool and nice and shady that it feels like walking in a Canadian forest (I know - whaaat?)
There is a beautiful, unbelievable and amazing jungle pool with cold (yes, cold) water in the tree shades over those wooden steps; and we had diving competition, jumping competition and shouts in the jungle pool (I like the sound of 'jungle pool' - almost like jungle book and at any moment you might just see Baloo or even Shea-Khan!) The children definitely enjoyed this unexpected treat.
We followed the route to the beach. It was through more trees dotted with pretty flowers. The beach was long, clean, with white sands and decorated with clear blue skies (I wish we could have stayed longer at the resort).
We visited the Cultural Village too (although we think the tickets are very expensive). But I came here in the 80's. I liked it and wanted the children to see it too.
Bila lagi? We watched the cultural show; which is rather interesting actually. And then we walked and walked and walked; and walked some more, in and out of the long houses.
(clockwise from top left) You are given a passport - when you visit the long houses you can get the passport stamped there; you get a sticker too (like when you are in any amusement park); more signage; a walk on the bamboo bridge - a popular attraction; this tall long house belongs to the Orang Ulu; Mount Santubong at the back of the village theatre.
The Melanau long house (and I always make the children do ** interesting ** stuff).
At the
rumah Melayu we found a swing which reminded me of my parents' house in the old days. We took photos and then the kids had a go on the swing. Someone fell down thus the big laugh.
We also spent a night at a place called Basaga. It looked gorgeous on the internet; and is actually quite lovely too (but unfortunately nothing can compare to the resort nestled in the rain forest).
.. even the orange juice tasted better at the forest..
It actually is a lovely place.
We went to Serikin, a border
pasar with lots of Indonesian stuff on sale. We didnt buy much. But
baju sulam Indon and
telekung are aplenty. The locals sell these colorful iguanas, called '
potet' locally, in plastic containers.
Kesian. Do they have to?
We also visited the museum and other Kuching must-sees.
At the museum - the boys are always up to something good, funny, maddening etc etc.
(clockwise from top left) The Astana - the official residence of the Yang di-Pertua Negeri Sarawak
; the Square Tower -
built in 1879, originally used as a prison, it even had dungeons; the new Sarawak state legislative assembly building behind us; and the old court house.
While shopping for last minute goodies to take home at the Waterfront, I asked where to get the yummiest
kek lapis Sarawak. The lady recommended kek lapis Dayang Salhah -
seberang sungai je, naik bot tambang tu pun 40 sen je (we had to take the challenge)
.(clockwise from top left) We went looking for the boat
tambang at the pier in front of the Hilton; the boatman must have thought we are the most
peghak tourists ever!; this boat has got attitude, I'd say; looking out to the other side.
The
kek lapis house is a busy place
rupa nye. Tourists in buses came to buy cakes that are specially packed for travel. And there are lots of flavors to choose from. Chances are if you can name something that you like, they would definitely have the cake for you. The tasting area is like a feast during hari raya; no kidding. We bought a few and got out quickly of the busy place.
We actually did have the most wonderful time in Kuching.
But after all said and done it is always a pleasure to be home. The hotel air-cond can be too cold at times. The pillows are too fluffy. The quilt too downy. The linen too soft and smooth (like puffy cotton blowing in the air!) The (drab) things at home are just simply perfect.
*****