Houston Zoo Carnivore Supervisor, Kevin Hodge is part of an effort to assist the Borneo Clouded Leopard Project (BCLP) in Sabah, Malaysia. This is his second update from the field which has limited internet access but seems to have plenty of forest leeches.
Let me interject here for Kevin that he ends his email with “All and all things are going great!”
I went out on what was supposed to be a 3 night camping trip that turned in to 5 days and 4 nights. My legs are covered with leech sores and my feet are swollen. I had hundreds of leeches on me one day but if you took time to pull them off more would just climb on you so I would wait until they filled with blood and squeeze them until the ruptured. I also have had a few ticks on me which are worse than the leeches.
We went high in to the mountains and saw a lot of hunter’s camps and notified the Sabah Wildlife department which is starting to go out with us to destroy the camps. We have 1 male clouded leopard on the camera traps so far, a marbled cat, hoses’s civet, malay civet, grey leafed monkey, linsang, banded palm civet, bearded pig, pitta, pig tailed macaque, mongoose, moon rats, tree shrews and the malayan giant squirrel. So we are pretty pumped up that there are clouded leopards here. We also caught a few hunters and their dogs on camera.
Our camping diet consists of rice, sardines, ramen noodles and corned beef every day with coffee in the morning. It was very cold at night and after falling and floating down stream in the river my sleeping bag and tent were wet so I froze a few nights and almost fell off a cliff on another occasion. (Remember – “All and all things are going great!”)
My legs are getting stronger but the altitude still presents a problem for me on the uphill ascents. The adidas kampung shoes they recommended for me (these are like soccer shoes with rounded cleats) to wear has good traction on the slippery soil but not on rocks and with out any type of support my feet are in terrible shape. I noticed that the local people that we work with have feet that are the same length as mine but twice as thick and twice as wide with no arch which works better on this terrain apparently. We have off today and tomorrow to rest up in Kota Kinabalu then I go out for another camping trip. All and all things are going great!
Some background on the Crocker Range in Sabah, Malaysia on the island of Borneo. Sabah by the way is one of the 13 Malaysian states. 11 are on Peninsular Malaysia and Sabah and Sarawak are on Borneo.
The Crocker Range separates the east coast and west coast of Sabah. At an average height of 1800m, it is the highest mountain range in Sabah. Mount Kinabalu (at 13,000 feet), which is one of the highest mountains in Southeast Asia, is part of this range. Part of the range, has been gazetted for protection as Crocker Range National Park since 1984. The area surrounding Mount Kinabalu has been a national park since 1964 and was the country’s first World Heritage Site.
More Posts Like This!
- Houston Zoo’s Carnivore Supervisor, Kevin Hodge in Borneo Houston Zoo Carnivore Supervisor, Kevin Hodge is part of an effort to assist the Borneo Clouded Leopard Project (BCLP) in...
- Life Aquatic: Borneo in the rainy season Typically when you work in a seasonal floodplain, you expect nothing less than seasonal flooding. But sometimes, the river overflows...
- World’s most endangered otter re-discovered in Borneo The Houston Zoo has supported researchers in Malaysian Borneo on a number of small carnivore projects over the past 2 years....
- Borneo Field Research Part 3 There are 25 species of Carnivores on the island of Borneo but little is known of their habitat, ecology or...
- Borneo Elephant Project Blog #2 Usually when we find a group of elephants, I will take note of the group’s composition and their general activities....











