Tag:marudi

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
Soon Hong No. 7 sits at the jetty at Long Terawan as passengers board for the trip down river to Kuala Baram via Marudi. 1989.

Daily Photo – Soon Hong No. 7

Just like those bigger riverboats, the Soon Hong No. 7 carried a spare drive shaft and propeller. I still don’t know how they would have gone about changing that mid-river.

Continue Reading
The crew and a fellow passenger on the boat I took for the 75-mile ride from Marudi to Long Terawan on my way to Mulu in 1989.

Daily Photo – Tutoh River Taxi Revisited

The answer is in the photo below. At some point in this boat’s history the owners obviously decided to do away with the advanced steering system and replace it with a manual one. I really didn’t think about it at the time but looking back now I think these guys managed to scrape together enough money to buy a derelict hull and bolt a new(ish) outboard to it. Hey Presto – people will now pay us to ferry them up and down river!

Continue Reading
This was the boat I took for the 75-mile ride from Marudi to Long Terawan up the Batam Barang and Tutoh River on my way to Mulu in 1989.

Daily Photo – Tutoh River Taxi

Clearly the boat had seen better days. The windshield and side glass had long since disappeared. I wondered if in fact they had been plexiglass that had turned yellow and opaque. Note also that there is no-one steering up front! As you’ll see in tomorrow’s photo, even this wire and pulley arrangement was no longer in service, the steering mechanism having been superseded again. But despite the engineering modifications, the boat floated and it got the job done.

Continue Reading