About Homestay
Bilit Village Homestay Program offers unique live-in experiences for visitors to stay with local host families in their homes, eat locally cooked meals (mostly traditional ingredients) and learn about the cultural life style of the locals. And, best of all, visitors are packaged to boat-cruise up and down the mighty Kinabatnagan River to see wild life-probocis monkeys, ‘orang utans (if lucky enough!)’, the Bornean Pygmy elephants and birds and a few other activities in the package.
Contact :
2D/1N
2D/1N
Price: RM245 per person.
Minimum 2 persons per depart in a day/
50% discount aged less than 10yrs.
Include : In house Guide , evening cruise , morning cruise , Meals as stated on itinerary , return transport back to Sandakan.
Day 1
(meals include : Lunch and dinner)
Pick up at Hotel at 10.00am and proceed directly to Bilit Homestay . Check in at Homestay and Lunch will be prepare at 01.00pm. Take a short Kampung Tour. Late afternoon at 04.00pm until sunset , enjoy river cruise down to Kinabatangan River for sighting of Proboscis Monkey and other wildlife.Dinner.
Day 2
Cruise after breakfast , we will proceed to have a cruising at 06:00am . Morning time are fantastic foggy view of river and Meals include : Breakfast)
Morning birds snapshot.Return to Sandakan at 09.00am from Bilit . Arrived at 12.30pm at Sandakan.
3D/2N
3D/2N
Price: RM345 per person.
Minimum 2 persons per depart in a day/
50% discount aged less than 10yrs.
Description : Bilit Homestay accommodation , evening cruise , morning cruise.
Include : In house Guide , evening cruise , morning cruise , Meals as stated on itinerary , return transport back to Sandakan.
Itinerary
Day 1 (meals include : Lunch and dinner)
Pick up at Hotel at 10.00am and proceed directly to Bilit Homestay . Check in at Homestay and Lunch will be prepare at 01.00pm. Take a short Kampung Tour. Late afternoon at 04.00pm until sunset , enjoy river cruise down to Kinabatangan River for sighting of Proboscis Monkey and other wildlife.Dinner.
Day 2 (Meals include : Breakfast, Lunch,Dinner)
Morning Cruise after breakfast , we will proceed to have a cruising at 06:00am . Morning time are fantastic foggy view of river and birds snapshot.Lunch at 12.30pm .Free at leisure by afternoon – feel free to walk in just nearby village World Wildlife Nursery activities . Nursery project are fully organized by funds and charity collecting by most All over the world for one reason –Better Living For Next Generation . Dinner at 07.30pm.
Day 3 (Meals include :
Breakfast. Farewell with homestay and depart at 09.00am to Sandakan.Arrived at 12.30pm at Sandakan
Monday, 23 August 2010
Kinabatangan is known for its remarkable wildlife and fascinating habitats such as limestone caves at Gomantong hill, dryland dipterocarp forests, riverine forest, freshwater swamp forest, oxbow lakes and salty mangrove swamps near the coast.
Ecology
The ecology of the upper reaches of the river has been severely disrupted by excessive logging and clearing of land for plantations. However, the original lowland forests and mangrove swamps near the coast have largely survived and provide sanctuary for a relatively decent population of Saltwater Crocodiles (Crocodylus porosus), and contain some of Borneo's highest concentrations of wildlife. Of special note are Borneo's indigenous proboscis monkeys and orangutans, Asian elephants and Sumatran rhinoceros. The area is also known for its great variety of birdlife.
Each year, the lashing rains of the northeast monsoon cause the river to swell rapidly. Unable to disgorge into the sea quickly enough, the river frequently overflows its banks and spreads across the flat land of its lower reaches, creating a huge floodplain. The lower Kinabatangan teems with both animal and plant life, making it the best area for viewing wildlife, not just in Sabah but all of Southeast Asia.
In 1997, 270 square kilometres of the lower Kinabatangan floodplain was declared a protected area, and in 2001 this designation was upgraded to that of "bird sanctuary", largely through the efforts of the various NGOs. However, further efforts to have the area declared a "wildlife refuge" or even "national park" had been opposed by the largely oil palm plantation owners seeking to expand their cultivated land.
Thankfully by August 2006 following media attention after a decapitated elephant's head was found floating down the river, the area was finally gazetted under the State's Wildlife Conservation Enactment of 1997 as the Kinabatangan Wildlife Sanctuary. It is now under the preview of the Sabah Wildlife Department.
Currently, most nature tourism is concentrated around Sukau, accessible by road and offering comfortable accommodation to visitors prepared to pay for well-managed tours. The most populated area and also the Central Administration for Kinabatangan is Kinabatangan Town, located along the Sandakan-Lahad Datu highway, and about 90 kilometers from Sandakan Town. The largest cave system in Sabah, Gomantong Caves, also can be found in this region.
[edit] History
For centuries, the rare treasures of Borneo's forests acted like a magnet for traders in search of edible bird's nests, rhinoceros horn, elephant ivory and hornbill casques for the Emperor and the wealthy mandarins of China.
They also sought a hardwood resin, damar; flexible rattan vines; beeswax to make candles; fragrant woods and oil-rich illipe nuts.
[edit] Getting there
One can fly from Kota Kinabalu to Sandakan on Malaysia Airlines, whilst those from Kuala Lumpur can take direct daily flights to Sandakan on AirAsia.
Alternatively, one can take an air-conditioned coach to Sandakan or Lahad Datu from Kota Kinabalu. One can also take a ferry to Sukau from the Sandakan harbour.
[edit] When to visit
The Kinabatangan region can be visited all year round, though it is often flooded during the wettest part of the year in December and January.
The main flowering and fruiting season, from April to October is generally fairly dry and a good time to spot many birds and animals.
During the northeast monsoon, from November to March, there are often heavy showers during the afternoons, particularly during December and January. During the rainy season, however, it is possible to negotiate many of the river channels leading in to the oxbow lakes, where there is a greater concentration of wildlife.
[edit] Accommodation
In Sukau, many of the major tour operators maintain lodges. All lodges offer packages, which usually include transport, accommodation, food and guiding services. However, most of the money spent in these Lodges leaves the area. Visitor's should also check locally run bed & breakfast and homestay accommodation. More information can be obtained on the Sabah Tourism Website.
Further up river at the villages of Bilit or Batu Putih you could opt to stay with the local orang sungai people in the Miso Walai homestay program part or a Sabah National Project [1] . Nearby the villages there are beautiful series of oxbow lakes. They provide accommodation, food, jungle guides, boat trips, fishing and other activities. They also have recently built an eco-lodge in the jungle nearby one of the oxbow lakes - Tungog lake. The ecotourism program has been successful and helped clear the oxbow lake of weed, funded reforestation projects with partnership with LEAP and is providing a sustainable income for the communities.
[edit] Kinabatangan Orang-utan Conservation Project
Since 1996 HUTAN, a French grassroots non-profit organisation founded and run by primotologist Dr. Isabelle Lackman and wildlife veterinarian Dr. Marc Ancrenaz, has been working to develop and implement solutions to conserve the orangutans in Sabah. In 1998, HUTAN together with the Sabah Wildlife Department established the Kinabatangan Orang-utan Conservation Project. A small conservation centre was built in the village of Sukau in the Kinabatangan wetlands.[1]
Initially it conducted studies and an in-depth stakeholders' consultation process to identify the complex threats faced by the orangutans. Its findings were used by the Sabah Wildlife Department to develop and implement a sound and efficient orangutan conservation strategy, first for the Lower Kinabatangan region and later for Sabah.[2] It now has 40 staff from the Kinabatangan local community, working in collaboration with a network of Sabahan partners including government agencies, Non-Governmental-Organisations and research institutions as well as private stakeholders.
[edit] Notes
http://www.borneoultimate.com.my
1. ^ http://www.hutan.org.my/About_Us.html
2. ^ http://www.redapeencounters.com/kocp.htm


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