Fairy Cave Nature Reserve, Bau – A Unique Limestone Adventure in Sarawak

If you are exploring Bau District in Sarawak and looking for something beyond small-town charm and gold mining history, one destination stands out for its dramatic landscape and accessible adventure — Fairy Cave Nature Reserve. Located within the Sarawak Delta Geopark region, Fairy Cave offers visitors a rare opportunity to step into a massive limestone … Read more

Chinese New Year Lights Up Bau’s Pub Street

As Chinese New Year approaches, Pub Street in Bau has undergone a festive transformation — shifting from its Christmas décor into a vibrant CNY-themed street filled with red lanterns, warm fairy lights, and celebratory colours. Tempat ini nama saja Pub Street tetapi ia bukan PUB sahaja. Ia adalah tempat keluarga berkumpul, berjumpa kawan-kawan sambil duduk … Read more

One Fine Saturday I was in Serikin – The Hottest Tourist spot in Jagoi area

“Pasar Raya” di perbatasan Sarawak – kalimantan adalah tempat yang paling sibuk tibanya hujung minggu. Biasanya sampai trafik jam dari lebih satu kilometer. Perkampungan Bidayuh Kpg Serikin merupakan “Pasar Raya” terbuka dibawah bumbung langit yang biasanya panas & hangat olehkerana kedudukannya ditepi Garis Khatuliswa. Sampai saja dikampung, mesti mahu cari letak tempat kenderaan. Dari tempat … Read more

Echoes of the Brooke Era – Discovering Fort Hose and the Legacy of the Bungan Movement in Marudi

Introduction On 27 August 2015, I found myself wandering through Marudi, a quiet riverside town in northern Sarawak that once stood as the gateway to the vast Baram interior. Though time has slowed the pace here, traces of Sarawak’s colonial past still stand firm — the most striking being Fort Hose, built during the Brooke … Read more

The Floating Home of Miri Bay

They say money can’t buy happiness — but maybe it can buy silence.
And silence, on the open water, is priceless.

This yacht rests quietly at the marina, its reflection rippling with every soft breeze. It’s not just a vessel; it’s a statement — that some people choose to live differently. No fixed address. No land tax. No hotel check-ins. Just endless sea, open sky, and the rhythm of waves hitting the hull.

Miri — once known as the Oil Town — has always attracted a special kind of traveler. The kind that builds fortunes beneath the ground, then spends them floating above it. Some say these yachts are owned by expatriates who never really left; others whisper they belong to locals who prefer solitude over traffic and neighbors.

Inside, it’s all polished wood and quiet luxury. The kind of space where time slows down and you start measuring your days by sunsets instead of schedules. For some, it’s a dream. For others, it’s an escape from the weight of the world’s noise.

From the shore, the yacht looks still — lifeless even. But step aboard, and you’ll hear it breathe: the hum of generators, the gentle creak of ropes, the soft clink of a coffee cup on teak. It’s still life in its truest form — a painting that floats.

When night falls over Miri Bay, the yacht lights up like a private constellation, anchored between reality and freedom. And somewhere out there, someone raises a glass to the quiet — because in this kind of stillness, even the sea feels alive.

Wild Photography: The Robots of Marina Bay, Miri

They arrived quietly at dawn — tall, rust-skinned robots standing guard by the coconut trees of Marina Bay. At first, the fishermen thought it was a movie set. But no film crew came. No lights. Just these silent giants looking out to the South China Sea.

Miri has always been a city of iron and oil — the birthplace of Malaysia’s petroleum dream. For decades, pipes and rigs filled the skyline, and men from all over the world worked beneath the hot Sarawak sun. When the oil boom faded, the machines that once powered the rigs were abandoned, melted down, and reborn. Some say these robots were built by retired welders and mechanics who couldn’t let go of the glory days — shaping old metal into sentinels of the past.

Others whisper that they are reminders — of a time when the land, the sea, and the industry moved as one. Now they stand here, weathered by salt and wind, locked in an eternal standoff against the ocean breeze.

Tourists snap photos. Kids run between their iron legs. The robots do not move, but somehow, they seem alive — watching the tides change, remembering the rumble of engines long gone.

Marina Bay isn’t just a beach anymore. It’s a stage — where machines meet nature, where Sarawak’s industrial past meets its creative future.

And if you visit at sunset, when the orange light hits their rusted armor, you’ll swear you can hear the faint hum of oil rigs far out at sea — like the robots still remember where they came from.

Opening Ceremony Iconic Siniawan Waterfront

MAJLIS PERASMIAN SINIAWAN COUNTRY MUSIC FESTIVAL BERSEMPENA DENGAN PERASMIAN PROJEK WATERFRONT, SAMBUTAN 185 TAHUN PEKAN SINIAWAN DAN SAMBUTAN 15 TAHUN MARKET SINIAWAN -by Yang Amat Berhormat Datuk Patinggi Tan Sri (Dr) Abang Haji Abdul Rahman Zohari bin Tun Datuk Abang Haji Openg, Premier Sarawak. Tarikh : 27 September 2025 (Sabtu) Masa : 09:00 pagi Tempat … Read more