Approaching another land of Animals in Tanzania…reminiscing about Borneo Malaysia!

Borneo…3 years ago this month…so excited to be approaching another land of animals in Africa! We will spend a year in East Africa,so we will hopefully be able to take many photos! 

Borneo. The name has that wild air to it; pigmy head hunters, wild men, jungles. I googled “wild man of Borneo”, terms I remember from movies my parents and grandparents had watched. Actually there were two wild men from Borneo, but in reality they were two dwarfs from Massachusetts that a carnival promoter had dressed up in furs and primeval garb, waving long spears. But who would ever catch on; who has ever been to Borneo, especially in our grandparents day?
Indonesia, on the east, and Malaysia, on the west, share the island of Borneo. From either country, you can venture inland or up narrow tributaries to marshes full of large crocodiles, exotic proboscis monkeys, the parochial orangutan, bearded wild boar and all sorts of other unique animals. Fortunately the natives are friendly. Conveniently, the language in Malaysia is as similar to Indonesian as American is to British or Australian. After 7 months wandering through Indonesia, we did what we could to pick up rudiments of that language so now we get two languages for the effort of one.

We were happy to put Indonesia over the horizon on our stern. Bali was a bust. The yacht agent at the neighboring island of Lombok and her coconspirator customs man, were combing our ships papers looking for any questionable marks for which to hold us ransom. But we held our ground and left town without bending to their corruption. But what a surprise clearing into the small country of Malaysia. The customs, immigration and harbormaster were all happy to have us enter their country. When seeing we are from the U.S., they would always exclaim “America, Obama!”. Everything happened so fast, so friendly, so uncorrupted, with a minimum of paperwork, we thought something had to be wrong, which might cause us problems later on. We had forgotten how a modern country works. In fact, they didn’t even ask for our clearance papers from Indonesia, the papers we had such a difficult time getting. Finally, we arrived in the land of educated people, normality.

And a modern country it is. The city of Kuching is as nice as any Australian or American small city, complete with divided 4 lane roads and long lines of rush hour traffic in the morning and evenings. New cars and SUVs were bumper to bumper. There are motorcycles, but not the heavy swarms that move more like herds clogging roads in other countries. This attests to the wealth of Malaysia. Oil rigs near shore and oil terminals on land help to finance the upscale lifestyle. Kuching in Malaysian means “cat”. There are a couple cat statues around the city, and of no great interest, a cat museum, but very few live cats roam around. No one really knows how the city wound up with its name but it is thought that an early native word was mistaken for “kuching” and when the Europeans arrived, and stayed, “Kuching” stuck.

We were anchored just inside of a muddy river at Santubang, 25 easy driving miles into the country. So we had country living with easy access to the big city via an inexpensive shuttle van that traveled the route several times a day. And to make it even better, one of the wealthiest people in Malaysia owns water front property where he operates a fish farming enterprise. His floating docks are there for visiting cruisers to tie their dinghies to and have free access to the water faucets. Anywhere else we have been in the world, someone would have been charging a significant day rate. The city water at the dock and throughout Malaysia, is healthy to drink which is quite unlike all of Indonesia and most other island nations we have visited in the Pacific.

Our first days in the Santubong and Kuching area of Malaysia gave us a big boost to our cruising attitudes, which had soured in our final days in Indonesia.
There was no shortage of activities in the Kuching area. National Parks are important to the Malaysians and they take conservation as seriously as the Americans and Australians. There were mountains to climb, park trails to explore, rare flowers and animals to spy, crocodiles and very venomous snakes to avoid and cultural events to participate in. Since Brick House was the only boat anchored in Santubong, and it would be two weeks before other cruising friends would drop anchor nearby, Rebecca and I sailed off to not so distant parks to start our explorations of the sights of Malaysia.

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Sailing Books Read on Brick House

Someone who was aboard just recently asked us this…

“You write articles, you could write a book, you make YouTube videos…but I see you still have sailing Books aboard…which ones were so good you still have them onboard after 11 years of full time cruising around the world?”

We have a whole page dedicated to the books we have onboard.

Here are the Sailing Books we have onboard Brick House

 

 

 

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Indian Ocean Emergency Contacts for Sat Phone

Many sailors buy and install an Iridium GO or other Sat phone capabilities before they head off on a big Ocean Crossing like the Indian Ocean or the Pacific Ocean. They put great effort in to setting up email so they can stay in touch with their friends and family back home. They learn how to use Predictwind to get their weather. All important stuff.

They may even give their satellite phone number to their family in case of a family emergency.

But what about programming the phone numbers in to your satellite phone for if YOU have an emergency!?! Would you have any idea on who to call if YOU had an emergency. If you called the one number in your phone, would THEY have any idea on what to do in an emergency, ecspecially if they aren’t even sure where “Chagos” is?

See the form below to access the file

The prudent sailor should not only get a list of any and all emergency numbers in area they may sail through or to, but even ones to which they could accidentally drift to if all is lost. They should program these numbers in to their phones in an easy to find format. They should most importantly make sure every single one works! Contact numbers change frequently!

if you put NO other number in to your Iridium GO Contacts, you should know that pushing the SOS button on the GO or in the application will contact GEOS safety Solutions. They will know who to call! So if a number on this list doesn’t get you right there…push that Button! It’s not an EPIRB…please still carry an EPIRB for when the sh** really hits the fan. But this button is great for medical problems, and other issues.

I have compiled a list below of EMERGENCY CONTACTS for the INDIAN OCEAN. These were compiled in January 2018 with updates for StiLanka February 2019.  Many of them have been verified, but not all of them. If you find discrepancies, please report them to me and I will change this file and notify all who have downloaded it.

(Disclaimer- This list current as of January 2018. All numbers should be checked before heading to sea, and then programmed in to sat phone before departure)

 

Here is the file:

Emergency contacts Indian Ocean Feb 2019

 

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