Monthly:February 2013

Laban Rata marks the transition on Mount Kinabalu from mostly vegetated to mostly bare rock. It's quite an abrupt transition. Mount Kinabalu. 1989.

Daily Photo – Around Laban Rata

It was quite a relief to emerge from the trees and arrive at Laban Rata. The angle of the path reduced and the stairway gave way to a gravel path.

Continue Reading
Mount Kinabalu is mostly granodiorite, similar to granite but with a different ratio of plagioclase and feldspar. This is a telephoto shot, not of the summit but of one of the peaks above Laban Rata.

Daily Photo – Granodiorite Peaks

Mount Kinabalu is formed from granodiorite. This is an intrusive igneous rock, very similar to granite but with a different proportion of plagioclase and feldspar.

Continue Reading
View to the south from the Laban Rata trail on Mount Kinabalu.

Daily Photo – From the Laban Rata Trail

I took the photo below on my ascent to Laban Rata. Ascent, that is, as in climbing the stairs rather than something more skillful.

Continue Reading
Most of the ascent of Mound Kinabalu from the Timpohon Gate to the Laban Rata Guesthouse is a trek up a massive staircase. It might be the stairway to heaven but if you're not used to climbing like this for several hours (and who is really?) it can be quite a struggle.

Daily Photo – The Climb to Laban Rata

Laban Rata is pretty much at the altitude where the vegetation peters out and the base granite starts. The trek there is through the jungle/rainforest so it can be pretty warm and humid. Most of the climb that I recall was this seemingly endless zigzag of stairs cut into the side of the hill and shored up with wood or stone, without which the entire climb would be a muddy scramble.

Continue Reading
Evening arrives as the sun sets on the summit of Mount Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia. Clouds gather around the mountain as the cooler night air moves in. Towards the middle of the image you can make out the three radio stations and above them, the Laban Rata Guesthouse. 1989.

Daily Photo – Mount Kinabalu

This is a view of Mount Kinabalu taken from the Park HQ in the evening. The sun has already set on the Park HQ but still illuminates the mountain top.

Continue Reading
Selamat Datang - Welcome! Our riverboat approaches the landing at Kampong Bukit Linei on the Tutoh River. A couple waits to board for a trip down river either to Marudi or to Kuala Baram and Miri while other villagers look on. Still curious as to why the "Slow Down" sign is in English. All the boat drivers I encountered were locals. The shack is a fuel depot for the longboats of the community.

Daily Photo – Selamat Datang

The shack on the landing is a fuel depot for the longboats of the community. What I still fund curious is that ‘Slow Down’ is written in English. I only ever saw locals driving boats on the rivers. Maybe they determined ‘Melambatkan’ wouldn’t fit in large enough letters to be visible until it was too late. Or maybe they determined it was only English reading explorers that were speeding on the rivers.

Continue Reading