I would echo Jenny comments. I visited Taman Negara in March 2003 and
stayed at Nusa Camp. It's much cheaper and the birding around the camp
is interesting (we had goodies like Wallace's Hawk-eagle and Great
Slaty Woodpecker on the logging road behind the camp, and in place of
Jenny's Green Broadbill, Red and Black Broadbill). However the birding
is from logging tracks, so you're looking at the vine tangled edges of
regrowth forest, rather than walking through the middle of unlogged
forest (except for the track to Asai Waterfall) and so you would want
to take the boat back to Tamara Negara and do the main tracks there
where you get more ground and lower level birds like Babblers and, if
you're lucky, Pittas and Pheasants.
John L
On Apr 11, 2005 6:03 PM, Jennifer Spry <> wrote:Hi all,
I have just had a work trip to Malaysia and wangled a 4 day break in the middle. With the choice of cheap shopping, birding or cultural travel I did a bit of all.
First, if you are lucky enough to get to Malaysia at the moment the exchange rate makes buying a digital camera something you should do when you get there, rather than duty free in Melbourne. Right now you can get one for just about 50 percent of the Melbourne duty free price.
And then, there is the birding!! I went to Taman Negara which is a rain forest national park in central Malaysia. There are three options for accommodation. First is the Mutiara resort, which is very expensive. Next is the little village (Kampung) across the river which is cheap and good from what I was told. I went further up river to a place called Nusa Camp. This was basic, cheap and good.
It is "further" though! To get to Taman Negara you first do a three hour bus trip from KL. Then you get in a beautiful, long, wood canoe that is 2 people wide and takes 20 passengers, so it is about 12 meters long with an outboard on the back. The river trip is 3 hours to the Mutiara Resort and then another 15 minutes to Nusa Camp, and there is no way off or out. So it is wise to remember your parents admonition before you got in the car to go on a family trip "have you been to the bathroom?"
I am told that at the Mutaira it was full of very noisy tourists; but I am also told none but the keenest went more than 500 metres from the bar. At Nusa camp there were only about 8 guests at any time so, I had miles and miles of trails all to myself and saw over 60 species of birds. Sunbirds were everywhere but maybe the most startling bird was the Fiery Minivet. It really is Fiery in colour, especially when seen in the full sunlight. Swifts were everywhere and while I heard Great Argus calling all the time I could never get close to one due to the thickness of the jungle.
Hornbills were not common and I did better with those on my last trip when I went to Fraser Hill for the weekend.
Bird of the trip? Probably the Green Broadbill because it is bright green all over and looks just like a little round ball of electric green radiance.
Moral dilemma for the trip?
Well, back in the hotel in KL a Red Junglefowl arrived in a secluded little corner of the garden. It was obviously an escapee as it had a band on one leg. It had probably escaped from the KL Birdpark which is a flight cage where most birds are free flying under a cover of heavy mesh. It covers some 3 to 5 hectares and is some 2 K from the hotel as the chook flies. Now, this escaped bird was within its normal range, was free flying and looked nothing like a domestic chook. In Victoria we count Cape Barron Geese and Magpie Geese that have probable been captive bred and released, it is just that my Junglefowl had not been bred for release, it had obviously flown the coop, was AWOL.
So, what to do? It was and is a free flying bird within it its normal range, was not a hybrid, was not domestic, was not dead and was not captive. I still have not claimed it for my list, but …..
Anyway, the trip to Nusa Camp was wonderful and I highly recommend it to anyone who is going to have at least 4 days spare for birding in Malaysia.
Jen
-------------------------------------------- Birding-Aus is now on the Web at www.birding-aus.org -------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message 'unsubscribe birding-aus' (no quotes, no Subject line) to m("vicnet.net.au","majordomo");">
-- John Leonard Canberra Australia www.jleonard.net
|