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Tuesday 23 July 2013

Mulu national park

Mulu.JPG
Gunung Mulu National Park
Gunung Mulu National Park near Miri, Sarawak, Malaysian Borneo, is a UNESCO World Heritage Site that encompasses caves and karst formations in a mountainous equatorial rainforest setting. The park is famous for its caves and the expeditions that have been mounted to explore them and their surrounding rainforest, most notably the Royal Geographical Society Expedition of 1977–1978, which saw over 100 scientists in the field for 15 months.The national park is named after Mount Mulu, the second highest mountain in Sarawak.

D'Cave homestay

D'Cave Homestay

 

 

 

 

 

 

D'Cave Homestay, halfway between airport and Park HQ. Offers lunch/dinner. There is no menu, just request what you like to eat and how you like it done. Remember that ingredients availability is limited. Price around RM 12 for rice, meat and vegetable. Bring a torchlight if going there at night. Homemade rice wine, tuak available at times.

 

Mulu caves 

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Gunung Mulu National Park, lie the most spectacular caves on earth. Over millennia the flow of water draining from the slopes of G.Mulu towards the sea has cut deep gorges through the Park’s limestone mountains and, within the rock itself, a complex network of vast caves has been formed.


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