I’m back from Semporna

Here are some photos taken around the Port of Semporna, south-eastern Sabah. (see map previous post)

1. Note the banks of lights on the squid boat…

2. Water village

3. Note the logs floating on the right, on their way to the sawmill.

4. Children pulling boats – they are diving for tin cans on the ocean floor for recycling.

5
&
6
The Kalimantan Fisheries Company- with some washing drying on a saw-horse, and on the end of the jetty, the tails of stingrays and the swim bladders of fish.
Expensive delicacies….

7. Photos of the tourism centre and hotel complex all built over the water.

8. Is a picture of the dog that was sitting right outside the tourist complex. Does no one here realise how repulsive tourists, at least Western ones, think such a sight is? What is the point of a lovely tourist complex on the one hand, if a few paces away, the tourist sees something that makes him think we are heartless and uncaring?

Semporna Islands Park, here I come…

Leaving for the islands in the next hour. Well, actually I have to give the workshop in Kinabalu National Park and World Heritage Site first. We will be staying in the Warden’s cottage for 2 nights, and then on to Sandakan for one night, and Semporna the next day.

Then three nights in the islands – Bodhey Dulang Island (literally Water Tray Island) followed by Sipadan. Unlike the normal tourist these days, we will be staying overnight at the latter dive site. Especially interesting to me because of the birds… And the snorkelling. I don’t dive and have never had any wish to learn.

The blue line is our route across North Borneo…and to think when I first came here, too many years ago to count, there was no way of driving across the island.

I will be back next Tuesday, and may manage to get online in between whiles, but don’t bank on it.

Shadow of Tyr…coming soon in UK

I see that the cover of The Shadow of Tyr is already up on Amazon here, so I guess I can post it here too. I love it, love it, love it.

Another great cover from Larry Rostant (the cover artist) and the design team at Orbit, who produce the best covers in the business, bar none.

And there on the front cover is a terrific quote from another of my favourite authors of unputdownable books. Kate Elliott did the one for Heart of the Mirage, and now I have Karen Miller – love these guys.

And just look at the art work. We have the Tyranian city of Tyr in the background, but the cracked sky above is that of the Mirage.

And there’s the winged spear and symbol of Tyrans – but look, the shadowed pattern to the right is the pattern of the Mirager’s sword (see the cover of Heart of the Mirage). And if you look carefully, you will notice that the wing to the right is dark and broken and drooping. Tyr is in trouble – Ligea is on her way to extract revenge for the wrongs done to her….

That is one heck of a good cover.

And just to add to my cup of Amazon goodies, I see that they have put up the first advert for the French version of The Aware here. No pix as yet, or release date, but ah, those magic words: GRANDS FORMATS.
Yep, my first trade paperback (i.e. large size), and it comes from J’Ai Lu…
C’est formidable…

The title? CLAIRVOYANTE , book 1 of Les Iles Glorieuses

Life is so exciting. And today I am off to tropical isles…more about that in another post if I have time before I go.

Fasting children in Ramadan

There was a news item in a daily newspaper here last week, extolling the achievement of a local nine-year-old boy. He was apparently going to attempt to fast for the whole of Ramadan. Last year, aged 8, he achieved a so-called half-day fast.

[For those of you who may not be aware of what fasting is all about: briefly, it includes going without food and water from sun-up to sundown for a lunar month. The purpose is to turn one’s thoughts to one’s spiritual life, and to feel compassion for those who do not have the necessities of life.]

The boy’s parents were proud, the newspaper reporter obviously thought this was an achievement of merit.

Sorry, I think it stinks. And I think his parents need a lesson in parenting, in childcare and in compassion. Are they really thinking of their child, or just enjoying boasting about him and getting his picture in the newspaper?

Islam says that fasting is for adults, not children. One assumes this is for obvious reasons: a growing child’s body has certain needs – like water in a hot climate like ours. Send a kid to school, where he races around with his playmates without thinking that he has to last the whole day, and he could get severely dehydrated, putting a strain on immature kidneys. Doing this for day after day after day for a month, and you could be sowing the seeds of kidney disease in later life.

I would like to see religious leaders speak out against this kind of unholy abuse of children. I would like to see religious teachers in schools condemn to their students the whole idea of “half-day” fasts (which have no merit anyway) and not to condone any other attempt by children to emulate their adults in fasting month. I would like Muslim doctors to speak out and tell parents what the consequences can be.

Encouraging a child to fast is unIslamic, surely. I lived in an Arabic Muslim country for 2 years, and parents there were horrified at the idea of children fasting, and certainly would never have encouraged any childish attempts to do so.

Progress report

Probably won’t get much writing done today, as I have to do the powerpoint presentation for the workshop I am giving in Kinabalu Park. But here’s an update:

Here’s the length completed as of now, compared to the estimation of final length:
(YAY! Up over 90%!)

Zokutou word meterZokutou word meter
162,234 / 180,000
(90.1%)

Here’s where I am up to going through reworking the MS. (Remember the words yet to be written aren’t going at the end, but in the body of the book.)

Zokutou word meterZokutou word meter
129,525 / 180,000
(72.0%)

Guess where I am…


Just hopped off yet another plane. I am now back in Sabah. And next week I am giving a short course to staff of Sabah Parks up at Kinabalu National Park.

Payment is in kind…A trip.

I am going to the islands off the east coast, where I have never been before.

Eat your heart out, you poor folk chained to your office desks; next week’s blogs will be about Sipadan Island and other places from
the Land Below the Wind.

Other people dream about tropical islands and deserted coral sands – I go there.

*Evil laughter…*

Competition winner

It was actually pretty much as Patty predicted – see the previous comments section! One has high hopes, but…

The biggest problem was that the battery on my laptop doesn’t last long enough, a mere 2 hours, so most of the time when I was trapped inside a plane and felt like writing would be a good thing to do, I couldn’t. When I was in transiting Tokyo, I didn’t have time to recharge it because the flight arrival was delayed, so that wiped out the flight from Tokyo to Singapore. In Singapore I had loads of time but I was so wiped out by then….

Anyway, I started the flight with 158,005 words and I touched down in Kuala Lumpur with a mere 160,073. Which means that the total was 2,068, and Joanna wins with her estimate of 2,000.

Send me your email addy Joanna, and then wait patiently for a year or too. Congratulations!

And I thought my trip across the Pacific was a marathon?

(Competition results later today. Still time to enter..)

With improved battery technology, there has been some success recently in tracking migratory waders. Here’s the journey of a little lady unromantically called Bar-tailed Godwit N7. [She stands maybe nine inches (22 cm) tall – that beak is 3.4″ (8.6 cm) long.]

She had a summer holiday in New Zealand. I mean, who wouldn’t want that, when the alternative is spending the winter up in Alaska? She was fitted with a satellite transmitter while there, which apparently didn’t trouble her, because in March she popped over to China, near the Korean border, for 5 weeks rest and gourmet dining. A New Zealand to China non-stop flight lasting a mere 7 and a half days, travelling at an average speed of 56 kph (34.7 mph). No wonder she was hungry enough to stay 5 weeks enjoying Chinese food.

She then travelled on to Alaska, probably for some sex and family time. She stayed a couple of months, but winter doesn’t look too good in that part of the world, so she headed off to New Zealand again at the end of August. More or less south. She doesn’t think much of Hawaii or Fiji apparently, because she declined to stop. Nothing like non-stop flights…for 8 and a half days.

She’s now back in New Zealand. Having flown over 29,000 kms (18,000 miles) this year – or 500 hours of flying time. Pity she can’t sign up for a frequent flier programme…
…and I have the cheek to complained about 37 hours to get back to Kuala Lumpur from USA? And I didn’t have to flap my arms, either.

Photo courtesy of Ooi Beng Yean, one of Malaysia’s most talented bird digiscopers. Please do not use without permission from him.