By Professor Robyn Quin
ITWPA Member
Sabah, north Borneo, offers visitors diving, snorkeling, white water rafting, jungle trekking, mountain climbing, and wildlife viewing. Travelers keen to see the wildlife of the jungles should visit the east coast, around Sandakan. Here the dense jungle is populated by orangutans, proboscis monkeys, macaques, mangrove snakes, monitor lizards and langurs.
While many of the ten species of primates in the region can be observed by going on jungle walks or river excursions, the orangutan is elusive. It is a solitary animal and much harder to spot than troop monkeys such as the macaques and lemurs. A visit to the Rehabilitation Centre offers a sure way to see the orangutans up close, while at the same time supporting conservation efforts. 
Rehabilitation can take up to 10 years. In the wild, the young orangutans remain with their mothers for about eight years, which explains why the restoration process can be such a long one. When considered ready the orangutans are released into the jungle at Sepilok. It is a staged process marked by progressive movement further into the jungle, a transition governed by the location of feeding platforms. There are three feeding platforms on which fruit and vegetables are spread twice a day. Only the first stage feeding platform is accessible to visitors; the others lie deep in the jungle. As the orangutans become more acclimatized to jungle life and better able to fend for themselves, they are moved to the location of the next platform further into the jungle interior.

The tourists tend to drift away as soon as the orangutans take off. The canny visitor should wait and will be rewarded with the sight of a troop of macaques coming to enjoy the leftovers. There is obviously a jungle pecking order at work and the monkeys will not approach the feeding platform until all the orangutans have left.
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