Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Hotel Seri Malaysia Lawas

Hotel Seri Malaysia Lawas Sarawak is located at small frontier town in the northeastern corner of Sarawak state in Malaysia Borneo. The town is located in a strip of Sarawak territory sandwiched between the Temburong district of Brunei and Malaysia's Sabah state. It is cut off from the rest of Sarawak and is more easily accessed from Sabah.

Lawas is also the starting point for the logging road to Ba’Kelalan in the Sarawak. One of the most popular tourist attractions in Lawas is Tamu Lawas (Lawas Produce Market), which is held every Saturday. Local products such as vegetables, fruits and sea products are sold by locals in this market which is frequented by locals and people from the neighbouring Temburong district of Brunei. 

Lawas is fabulous place to enjoy the art of eating and drinking. Other interesting places in Lawas are Punang Beach, Sungai Bangat Beach, Pa' Lelau in Merarap, Mount Murud, Kampung air Terjun (along Jalan Trusan) and Sri Tanjung Resort in Kuala Lawas. 

Kuala Lawas, Punang and Awat Awat are famous with its Kampung Air. It is similar to Kampung Ayer in Brunei but smaller. The main road of transportation is perahu (boat) to cross the river.The hotel also has multi-functional rooms ideal for conferences, meeting and other events







Monday, March 24, 2014

Sarawak Forestry has sole right to charge entrance fees

A nature trail layout map of Santubong National Park in which entrance fees based on State Laws are imposed, to be used to maintain the trails inside. – Photo courtesy of Sarawak Forestry

KUCHING: Certain quarters have been misleading the public by claiming that entrance fees to Santubong National Park should be paid to them instead of Sarawak Forestry.

In light of this blatant claim, Sarawak Forestry in a press statement reiterated that under the Sarawak Forestry Corporation Ordinance, 1995, the corporation is to “act as an agent of the Government and provide services in administering, assessing, collecting and enforcing payment of royalty, premium, fees and other dues or levies chargeable under, and to perform other functions conferred by the Forests Ordinance, the National Parks and Nature Reserves Ordinance, 1998 and the Wild Life Protection Ordinance, 1998.”

“Sarawak Forestry was established by the Sarawak government in 2003 to handle all matters pertaining to the management of the state’s protected areas, and therefore, on behalf of the state government, we are the legal entity to collect and issue all entrance tickets into Sarawak’s national parks and nature reserves,” stressed Sarawak Forestry chief executive officer and managing director Datu Ali Yusop.

“The waterfall trail, all the way up to the summit, falls well within the boundary of Santubong National Park and the entrance fees imposed, which are based on State Laws, are used to maintain the trails inside.”

Subject to Section 5 and 6 of the National Parks and Nature Reserves Ordinance 1998, any person may enter a national park or nature reserve upon payment of entrance fees and other charges as prescribed in the Second Schedule.

Therefore, visitors are advised to pay and retain the Official Sarawak National Parks’ entrance tickets from the Santubong National Park headquarters to avoid being prosecuted for unauthorised entry.

Any person who fails to comply with the law, will be guilty of an offence and is liable to a fine not exceeding RM3,000 and in case of a continuing offence, to a further fine not exceeding RM500 for each day the offence continues.

“To prevent further misinformation, illegal activities and encroachment of the park boundaries, Sarawak Forestry’s officers will be on duty at the Bukit Puteri Trail during weekends.

“Visitors will also be given an official Santubong National Park’s map of trails upon registration at the park headquarters. We would like to advise all visitors to get their information regarding the park from our officials to avoid any confusion,” Ali added.

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Saturday, March 22, 2014

Pitcher Plant-unique and interesting

Kuching squat red pitcher uses water to drown prey.

The nepenthe ampullaria (Bau green).

IF you’re caught out in the jungle without a shelter, building one from natural materials around you can help keep you dry and safe, especially when you have spend the night out in the wilderness.

You can use whatever resources Nature provides, but after getting the necessary raw materials – wood or bamboo — you may be left without nails.

Don’t fret. Just look for pitcher plants (nepenthes) and once you’ve found them, your problem is solved. The plants’ lianas or woody veins are the best alternative for nails to build huts or shelters with in the jungle. The lianas can also be used as ropes to bind wood or bamboo, and if kept dry, can last up to a year or longer.

Moreover, the pitchers can double as pots, commonly used to boil rice or tapioca. Normally, flour from these two staples is filled in the pitcher and pinned with a tiny wood, the size of a toothpick. The pitcher is then boiled together with water in the pot for several minutes until the rice or tapioca is cooked.

Carnivorous plant

The pitcher plant has generated a lot of interests among naturalists because of its uniqueness. It’s a species of plant that eats insects.

Also called carnivorous plant, it is found in nutrient-poor soil but still thrives because it obtains nutrition from insects it catches.

Carnivorous plants are predatory flowering plants that kill animals in order to derive nutrition from their victims. They eat things like insects, spiders, crustaceans and other small soil and water-living invertebrates and protozoans, lizards, mice, rats, and other small vertebrates.

A report in sciencedaily.com says pitcher plants rely on insects as a source of nutrients, enabling them to colonise nutrient-poor habitats where other plants struggle to grow.

Prey is captured in specialised pitcher-shaped leaves with slippery surfaces on the upper rim and inner wall, and drowned in the digestive fluid at the bottom.

If an insect tries to walk on the wet surface, its adhesive pads are prevented from making contact, causing it to slip on the water layer.

New research has found that during heavy rain, the lid of nepenthes, especially the gracilis pitcher, acts like a springboard, catapulting insects, seeking shelter on its underside, directly into the fluid-filled pitcher.

Nepenthe rafflesiana (Kuching squat red) pitcher.

Eve’s cup and others

The pitcher plant is also known by many as Eve’s cup, fly-catcher, flytrap, huntsman’s cup, smallpox plant and water-cup, and is found in abundance in Sarawak.

One need not go to the jungle for a first-hand look at the plant as it can be found at Padawan Pitcher Plant & Orchid Garden at the 10th Mile Bazaar.

The Garden showcases lowland pitcher plants from around Borneo and protected plants in Sarawak. It now has about 30 species — from climbers N albomorginata (Kuching spotted) to non-climbers N ampullaria (Bau green).

Padawan Muncipal Council (MPP) agriculture officer Willie Ngelai, who heads the Landscape Division, said their pitcher plants were collected from the jungles in various parts of the state.

He said N albomorginata are found in the lowland and have narrow felted leaves and stems. This species has large quantities of slender pitchers with a

conspicuous chalky-white collar below the peristome. Its colour varies from pale green to deep red, depending on the type. It consumes insects and termites.

According to Willie, the Kuching spotted, which are climbers, usually survive at altitudinal distribution of 0 to 1,000m above sea level.

“Their typical habitat consists of kerangas forest but they are also recorded from the summit vegetation of lowland parks,” he said.

The non-climbing Bau green are found in lowland areas.

This species produces globe or egg-shapped pitchers, reaching 10-15cm in height. The pitchers forming at the ends of short tendrils are no more than 15cm long.

The young plants are wholly covered with long, caduceus, brown or white hairs. Mature plants often have a sparse indumentums of short, brown hairs though they may be completely glabrous.

The colour of their leaves is green — up to 25cm long and 6cm wide. The pitchers range in colouration from light green throughout to completely dark red with many immediate forms recorded.

Willie said this species fed on dead plant parts and largely moved away from carnivory and digested leaf matter that fell to the forest floor.

This plant grows in damp, shady forest from sea level to 1,000m altitude.

“In Borneo, it usually occurs on relatively flat terrain in kerangas forest, peat swamp forest and degraded swamp forest.

“Through the network of lianas, the peculiarly-formed pitchers of this species gleam fourth, often in tight cluster from the base of the plant,” he explained.

A smaller type of local pitcher plant at the MPP nursery.

Only licensed agency

Willie said collecting pitcher plants from the jungle involved extracting the whole rooting system from the ground and transferring it into a pot. The plants were then brought to the nursery for monitoring before being transferred to the Padawan Pitcher Garden.

He added that MPP is the only agency licensed by the State Forest Department to extract and cultivate pitcher plants.

“Nepenthes will never produce pitchers if the leaves or tendrils are plucked because the pitchers appear as a result of leaves modifications.

“That’s why we always remind visitors not to pluck the leaves or tendrils otherwise the plant will never produce a pitcher,” Willie pointed out.

A pitcher plant usually consists of a shallow root system and a creeping or climbing stem, often several metres long, and usually around one centimetre or less in diameter.

From the stem arises leaf-like expanded leaf stalks, similar to certain Citrus species, ending in a tendril, which, in some species, aids in climbing. The end of the tendril forms the pitcher, considered to be the true leaf.

The pitcher starts as a small bud and gradually expands to form a round or tube-shaped trap which contains a fluid secreted by the plant, and may be watery or syrupy, and is used to drown the prey.

The lower part of the trap contains glands which absorb the nutrients released from the decaying prey. Along the upper inside part of the trap is a slick waxy coating which makes the escape of its prey near impossible.

Surrounding the entrance to the trap is a structure called the peristome (lip) which is slippery and often quite colourful, attracting the prey but offering an unsure footing.

Above the peristome is a lid (operculum). In many species, this keeps rain from diluting the fluid within the pitcher. The pitcher may contain nectar glands which attract the prey.

Temporarily closed

The Padawan Pithcer Garden is now temporarily closed for upgrading work. It is expected to re-open early next year.

Willie said the Garden was created for Nature lovers and study purposes.

“It is created on the concept of forest in the urban — a passive zone where visitors can only walk in the park.”

The Garden was opened in 2004 and temporarily closed in 2011 to control the outbreak of hand, foot and mouth disease.

Renovation work at the park began in 2013. Between 2004 and 2013, the park registered about 100,000 visitors, including 65,339 paid visitors. The rest were students who entered free of charge.

Tree shrews (tupaia montana) and nocturnal rats in the forests of Borneo are said to have a unique relationship with carnivorous pitcher plants, according to the Journal of Tropical Ecology.

The mammals defecate and the pitchers are happy to receive.

A study published on May 31, 2011, showed a species of giant mountain pitcher plants (nepenthes rajah) supplement their diet with nitrogen from the faeces of tree shrews that forage in daylight and summit rats (rattus baluensis) which are active at night.

When the small mammals lick nectar from the underside of the pitcher’s lid, they stand directly over the jug-shaped pitcher organ.

Scientists have found that bats use living toilets made of carnivorous plants, gracing them with their faecal matter.

Other pitcher plant species

Other species available at the Padawan Pitcher Plant & Orchid Garden are:

N albomarginata, N belli (orange); N bicalcarata (Marudi); N gracilis (Sport); N gracilis (Green); N hirsuta (Kuching spotted); N mirabilis; N chaniana; N sanguine; N ventriciosa (Black Peristome); N hookeriana (Red Persitome); N sibuyanensis; N boschiana; N vetricosa red (climbers); N ampullaria (Bau green); N bicalcarata (Sri Aman); Nmaxima (Borone); N rafflesiana (Sandakan); N rafflessiana (Kuching squat red); N rafflesiana (Johor spotted); N truncata, N veitchii (Bareo); N veitchii (Hose Mountain); N sumatrana (8cm spot); N spectabilis (Sinabung); N spectabilis (Sibuatan); N diatas, N madagascriensis and N veitchii pink.

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Saturday, March 15, 2014

Sultan Sharafuddin enjoys walk in Semenggoh Wildlife Centre in light rain

KUCHING: The Sultan of Selangor Sultan Sharafuddin Idris Shah paid a visit to the Semenggoh Wildlife Centre to experience nature.

Clad in a casual stripped T-shirt and holding his own umbrella, the brief rain did not hinder the Sultan from taking a short hike into the forest to see the orang utans there.

After listening to a briefing on the Wildlife Centre and the habitat of the orang utans, the Sultan showed great interest in the orang utans, asking questions after questions about the primate and the centre.

Interestingly, just before his departure from the centre, he was greeted by Ritchie, a dominant male orang utan.

Earlier, he was informed how Sarawak was committed to Sustainable Forest Management to conserve its natural resources and increase acceptance of forest produce.

Sarawak Forestry Corporation deputy chairman Datuk Sudarsono Osman said with a rich biodiversity of over 8,000 plants, 185 species of mammals and 533 species of birds, Sarawak was in need of biodiversity conservation.

“Sarawak is also committed to managing and conserving its native wildlife population and natural resources while strategically aiming to balance and integrate them with the economic and development needs of the state,” said Sudarsono.

According to him, the state government has passed four key legislations pertaining to the protection and conservation of Sarawak’s biodiversity and ecosystems.

The state is currently aiming for seven Forest Management Units (FMU) to be certified and implemented by 2017, starting from Anap Muput area in Bintulu, which was certified by Malaysian Timber Certification Board last year.

Also contributing to the Sarawak’s long-term economic well being is its land-use policy, which includes provisions for sustainable forestry sector based on a targeted six million ha of permanent forest estate, an agricultural sector on three million ha of agro plantations and small holdings and one million ha protected areas.

“As of to-date, we have achieved more than 800,000 ha including 200,000 ha of water bodies,” said Sudarsono.

Semenggoh Wildlife Rehabilitation Centre is situated in Semenggoh Nature Reserve. Established in 1975, it cares for wild animals that are injured, orphaned or kept as illegal pets. It has an area of 653 ha and is home to 27 orang utans. The Star

Saturday, March 1, 2014

His Excellency Pehin Sri Haji Abdul Taib Mahmud has been appointed as Governor of Sarawak on 1st March 2014

taib-mahmud-sarawak-DUNBernama

After signing the instrument of appointment, Taib took his oath before chief judge of Sabah and Sarawak Richard Malanjum at the state legislative assembly

Abdul Taib Mahmud, who stepped down as chief minister of Sarawak after almost 33 years in office yesterday, was sworn in as the new Yang di-Pertua Negeri of Sarawak today, marking another historical milestone for the state.

The ceremony began at 11.00am with Adenan Satem, who succeeded him as the new chief minister, reading the instrument of appointment, which was presented to Taib by Yang Dipertuan Agong Tuanku Abdul Halim Mu’adzam Shah at Istana Negara in Kuala Lumpur yesterday.

After signing the instrument of appointment, Taib took his oath of office before chief judge of Sabah and Sarawak Richard Malanjum at the State Legislative Assembly building here in the presence of Adenan.

Taib’s wife Puan Sri Ragad Kurdi Taib, state assembly speaker Amar Mohamad Asfia Awang Nassar, members of the State Cabinet and several local dignitaries were among those present.

He succeeded Abang Muhammad Salahuddin Abang Barieng whose term of office as Yang di-Pertua Negeri of Sarawak ended yesterday.

Taib was the fourth chief minister of Sarawak, having assumed the office on March 26, 1981, by succeeding his uncle Abdul Rahman Ya’kub.

The eldest of 10 siblings was born on May 21, 1936, to Mahmud Abang Yahya and Hamidah Ya’kub.

Taib worked as a judge’s associate in the Supreme Court of South Australia after having completed his law studies at the University of Adelaide, before returning to Sarawak.

He entered the world of politics in 1963 when he joined the Sarawak Legislative Council and served until 1966.

He was appointed Sarawak Minister for Communication and Works in 1963 and served in that capacity until 1966 when he was appointed as the Minister of Development and Forestry.

His career at the federal level began when he won the Samarahan parliamentary seat in 1970 and was subsequently appointed as the deputy minister of Works, Post and Communication (1970), Primary Industries Minister (1972), Defence Minister (1978), Acting Foreign Minister (1979) and Federal Territories Minister (1980).

On March 9, 1981, Taib resigned from his post as Federal Territories Minister to contest in the Sebandi state by-election.

He won the Sebandi seat unopposed and was later appointed as Sarawak Land and Mines Minister.

Subsequently he was appointed as Sarawak Chief Minister on March 26, 1981.

-Bernama