
Crusing
north from Cherrating on the East coast of Malaysia we made great
pace north by heading inland. Its been a bit of a gamble sometimes as we've
been told the coast road is the good choice. Yet sometime the
traffic and limited coastal views make the inland road seem a nicer
option.
As we continued to our evening goal of Kenyir Lake, the pace
and lovely winding road begged to be not stopped now. So we kept pushing
forward and through 'the lake' as the GPS was telling me. Little did
we know at this point that the road (local name of the LPT) was
officially not open yet or designated to be usable. No dramas in
using it though, there was the odd landslide that had taken big
chunks out, but these all had bypasses already routed.
Finally
after a big day in the saddle (compared to our normal 150-300km ride
legs) we made camp in a budget hotel in Gua Musang. Staying in the
'new town' that was 2km down from the original town we dined on
possibly the most evil creation currently known to western man in
Malaysia. The Roti John. Which is a soft baguette roll fried in an egg and
then filled with shredded chicken and beef with extreme helpings of
mayonaise and sweet chilli sauce. Forcing my body to consume such a
demon I knew that my nutritional values has surely dropped a
rung from earlier years. 'Shock the body' I used to say... Yeehaaa,
take that body!
In
a strange way it probably helped power me for my solo spelunking that
was on the cards for the next day. Clarissa was still getting over
her 'welcome to asian food' stomach issues which had been hounding
her for the last week or two. So she rested in the hotel and did some facebook and reading.
The
cave was a beauty. An entry slit that required a side shimmy for the
enterance was the tightest part encountered. Unhappy with the
thought of getting stuck or getting lost underground I've put the
reins on going to deep/crazy with these caves we've been too. Alas it
was a massive multi-cavern, both in length and height.
Also something that
was a surprise was the great climb above the caves to the top of the limestone
mountain. With the flat sides and height of the mountain it certainly made me
want to jump!!! With a base jumping rig on my back of course. Something that's on the bucket list...
It
was high up there! Even found a strange inverted mushroom at the top!
Eager
as hell to get into the mountains for both the riding (Neil) and the
cool weather (Clarissa) we pushed on. What a magical ride it was too.
Over three hours or so we climbed up from sea level to 2000m through
some really nice (and cool) scenery. Watching as the palm plantations
began to change into fruit/vegtables/flowers/tea occurred quiet
quickly as we ascended into the range.
After
finding a hotel off the main road (very busy/noisy) we realised we
were in for a treat food wise. The local produce and cuisine proved
to be too good to leave early so we chilled out and explored over the
five days we spent at Twin Pines guesthouse.
No fan or A/C needed
here in the cool weather. Exploring things such as the mossy forrest (think Avatar) and
tea/strawberry farm was really a change in the Malaysia scenery pace.
Including going on a jungle trek that was just a bit too intense for
my poor Clarissa. She's sure to be a bit scarred from jungle trekking
for a while.
It
was certainly the time to meet overlanders in the Cameron
Highlands though.
Initially we met a bloody strong pom, Jilly, riding her pushbike
through the traditional overland route from the UK via the
middle east to Singapore. Wow. Made me feel a bit silly talking about riding hills when she was peddling up the crazy things. Clarissa and I really enjoyed our chats with Jilly. A real worldly character and a real gem lending her PC to help me when our macbook shit itself. Best of luck Jilly. Dominate the peddle powered systems wherever you may roam!
middle east to Singapore. Wow. Made me feel a bit silly talking about riding hills when she was peddling up the crazy things. Clarissa and I really enjoyed our chats with Jilly. A real worldly character and a real gem lending her PC to help me when our macbook shit itself. Best of luck Jilly. Dominate the peddle powered systems wherever you may roam!



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Notice the wild inside monorail car with its strange theming... |
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Yes...we had maccas...Big mac tasted the same! |
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Dammit. I said no banging! |
All
was not lost though. Amongst my googling of Genting something had
caught my sky bound eye. Malaysia's only wind tunnel. What the?
Skyventure
in the Genting Highlands got me excited to do some 'freefall' like
activities again. See if my 7 month break from skydiving had made my
skills deteriorate to nothingness. Needless to say, after about two
10-15 minute sessions in the tunnel all was not lost. Nizam, one of
the four original body flight instructors of Genting Skyventure (10
years old the tunnel is mind you!) proceeded to allow me play around
and have some good fun in the wind tunnel.
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Nizam and I relaxing after some tunnel time. |
Unfortunately the tunnel
being 6000ft ASL (above sea level) didn't allow for my big arse to
get much lift for sit flying but I certainly tried and had a good
time messing around. We even got to watch a team from Singapore do
some four way training. Great bunch of guys (and girl!) and very
envious of them dirt diving (practicing manoeuvres on the ground) and honing their skills.
Clarissa
and I knew that Nizam was golden and was someone we wanted to get to
know more. We asked if we could buy him and his family dinner. He
lived back down at sea level, in his hometown of Batang Kali. He's
been doing the insanely windy 45 minute drive up and down each day to
work in the wind tunnel for the last ten years.
We
left our apartment in the highlands, including our friendly Nepalese
guards who watched over our bikes.
Going was slow for the first 10
minutes with thick fog making it a bloody surreal descending back to
the low lands.
Arriving at town, we checked into a local budget hotel
to get ready for dinner.

Can't
stress enough how lucky we have been to meet such amazing people here
in Malaysia. The hospitality has been unbelievable and really will
set the standard when we get to repay the favour in the future at home.
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Neil being a girls blouse with the hot underground water! |
We've
continued our big donations to the economy by visiting Tambun
handsprings here in Ipoh.
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We commonly cruise around locally on the one bike. Its just easier... |

Rescued
from a circus in a state of malnutrition by the 'Lost world of Tambun' parks CEO.
Good to see them having fun playing and looking like they were doing
well. Also showing some serious sixth sense to get out of the way of
a tree that fell over in quiet a powerful rain/wind storm that hit
while we were there. There's a petting zoo with all manner of creature although the Marmoset surely was the coolest thing there.
The
hotel Sun Inn was great for a base to visit the water park/hot
springs. They even took a photo of us and bikes out side with their
state flag and the Malaysian national flag.
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Some funky creative image manipulation on the camera. |
Hopefully tonight we will catch up for a feed with Ronnie and later in the week maybe Ian if he hasn't
trail blazed his way to Laos yet!
Very sorry for the lack of posts. Hopefully you haven't fallen asleep reading this big catch up!