Due to the responsibilities of school we decided that a trip
that consumed the entire weekend would not be wise, and opted to just go
adventuring Friday and Saturday. We rented a car (an ancient, disintegrating
Proton Saga) and set off for the Cameron Highlands. Landon was driving and
Berthold seemed to have the navigation under control, so I merrily studied and
listened to music.
| I've crawled through many a culvert in my time, but never one with a waterfall at one end. |
About half an hour into the steep, winding drive up into the
highlands, I noted a peculiar smell of burning. We stopped in a pull-off and
found that there was, in fact, suspicious vapors rising from under the hood. It
turned out that the radiator had just run out of coolant and was boiling over,
so we snagged some water from a nearby waterfall and refilled it.
That (and
turning off the AC) seemed to mostly solve the problem, but we had to stop a
couple more times when it began to overheat again.
As our altitude increased the lack of AC ceased to be a
problem as the temperature and humidity dropped. I had forgotten how lovely weather
could be. The jungle covered hills were shrouded in clouds, constantly shifting
under the influence of prevailing winds and illuminated by the setting sun. We
stopped at a tea plantation and wandered in the tea fields a bit.
| I think that I shall never see a field as green as one growing tea. |
Much to my excitement, the shop sold tea at reasonable
prices, and I bought enough (I hope) to last the rest of the semester. I have
been missing tea.
We couldn’t seem to
find our hotel so we called them and were told ‘I can see you, stay there.’
Someone came and led us down an alley, through the back of a restaurant, past
cages of chickens and to the hotel reception.
Relieved of our belongings we went to find the night market
which, according to the internet, was one of the best. We found a few stalls but
no real market. After asking around we discovered that the night market had
been forbidden from happening this particular day because of a bicycle race
whose terminus was in this town the following day. Disappointed, we found a
nasi goreng stall and took the edge off our hunger.
One of the nearby mountains (Gunung Brinchang, 6,666 feet)
had a trail which began nearby, and I convinced the others that it would be
best to get up early and hike before the heat. I was awakened much earlier than
I would have liked by the call to prayer from a nearby mosque. After the
obligatory cups of tea, we set off up the mountain. Some helpful locals
redirected us after a wrong turn or two, and suddenly we found ourselves in the jungle.
The trail was relatively steep, but the tangled roots of trees
which laced the pathway provided reasonable steps. One tree (potentially an
Ent), growing in the middle of the path appeared to be mid-stride.
As we ascended, the wind strengthened and the fog and moss
grew thicker. We found a break in the trees which coincided with a break in the
clouds to provide a reasonable view of the mountains. The wind brought dense
chunks of fog rolling over the ridge behind to dissipate.
The clouds beat us to the peak and when arrived visibility
was not more than 25 meters. Berthold and Landon opted to find their way down
the mountain and seek other activities that the Cameron Highlands had to offer,
but Kevin and I decided that four kilometers and 250 vertical meters wasn’t
enough of a trek.
There was supposed to be a trail from the top of Brinchang
to Irau, the highest point in the Cameron Highlands. The maps weren’t very
clear, and neither were the directions we received from a taxi driver, so we
decided to just try to find it ourselves.
There were numerous trails leading
into the jungle from the main road and since we didn’t know which was the trail
we were looking for, we took most of them. Most just vanished into dense mossy
undergrowth.
| One simply went to a rock face. |
| We scrambled up it and found a wall of vegetation with one small opening in it. |
| We forced our way through and it opened into a whole new world. |
After a number of enjoyable side excursions,
we found a legitimate-looking trail and followed it. We soon discovered that
the first hike was just pregaming. This trail was far steeper, more slippery
and treacherous and interspersed with mud pits. For a while I made a game of
never stepping directly on the ground and traversing via roots and rocks alone.
It was quite an enjoyable challenge and had a bonus of keeping my feet clean. Of
course all it took was one misstep on a slippery log and Squelch! I lost the
game.
The trail undulated like a serpent,
taking us up one steep, slippery, root entangled stretch and then back down
just as steeply, and once we reached the bottom, back up again.
It was more
like climbing most of the time than hiking. I found that Gollum style was very
effective, and decreased the feeling that I was always about to go bouncing
down to the nearest bottom. The risk of
turning an ankle was constant, and the necessity of being prepared to slip at
every step was even more exhausting. About a kilometer in we came upon a sign
that indicated that it was the trail that we had been looking for, and we had
another two kilometers to go.
I didn’t really care where the trail
was taking us; just traveling it was rewarding enough in itself. We were
surrounded by so much beauty that we had to stop from time to time simply to
try to absorb it. As usual, my photographic urges to capture it were completely
foiled.
The vegetation changed dramatically
between the ridges and valleys, but for most of the trek we were surrounded by
moss. Mist saturated the forest of massive, twisted trees, so covered in moss
that they formed an almost solid roof at times. Moss cloaked trees, moss draped
bushes, moss covered rocks, and moss carpeted depressions where every sound
from the outside world was muted.
| Can you spot the leprechaun? |
The air got wetter and wetter as we hiked, and
when we reached the peak it finally decided to rain. The cloud we were in
blocked all visibility on the top, but we had made it. While our displacement
may have been three kilometers, the actual distance traveled was significantly
greater. I was planning to do a backflip to celebrate, but then a group of
hikers we had passed showed up, and I didn’t want an audience. Maybe it’s for
the best; I didn’t exactly have ‘energy legs’ at that point. I found some socks
hanging in a tree, and they looked pretty nice so I decided to keep them as
adventure socks. (Ha. As if I wear socks on any real adventure.)
I almost had service on the top, so
I texted Landon that we would be later returning than we expected. He responded
that they were stuck in the next town, five kilometers away, because of the
bike race. Since we had almost fifteen kilometers to get back instead of six we
decided that we should bid the peak farewell and mosey back.
The trek back was even more
difficult than the way up, since the rain had deepened the mud and made
everything more slippery. It was still beautiful though, and coming from the
opposite direction was enough of a perspective change that it was almost like a
new trail. We slipped, scrambled, scaled, and squelched the ‘three’ kilometers
back to the trail-head. From there we began walking the 12 kilometers back to
town.
It seemed that a cloud had eaten the
entire mountain and for several kilometers we walked down a misty road through
the jungle. Walking down a steep road in sodden, muddy shoes, after seven hours
of intense jungle trekking, having eaten only a few slices of bread and some
chips that day, is not something I would recommend. A small creek provided an
opportunity to rinse off some mud, and the water also cooled our strain-swollen
ankles and burning muscles.
Then the jungle abruptly changed to mist-shrouded tea plantations. The chartreuse tea fields, bordered by mist-shrouded evergreens, vanished into the sea of cloud. It was exquisite.
| We just stood for a while, trying to commit all the sensations to memory. |
Eventually we remembered that we
still had around ten kilometers to walk (ideally before dark) and continued our
exhausted amble down the mountain.
Apparently the roads opened and
Landon was able to come and meet us, so we only walked ten of the thirteen
kilometers on the road. Our total trek was approximately 20 kilometers, but
half of that was on one of the roughest trails I have ever hiked.
We stopped at a Buddhist temple and
bought some petrol (apparently it is the only source in the area) and then
coasted down out of the clouds back to the heat and humidity of the lowlands.

Dude, the pictures are amazing. What an awesome country. I'm glad your taking advantage of your time there and doing lots of traveling around in the area. Also the tea plantation! So green! I really loved the tea estate we visited outside of Nairobi.
ReplyDeleteI so want to be there that I'm trying not to cry...
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for the pics... it is a great way to share the experience and you are a great photographer... maybe you should change your major to 'travel photography'... that would open possibilities for a fun life.. but you'd have to find some place other than Rolla to go to school... awww bummer... someplace like Hawaii..