Wednesday, July 27, 2011

KUCHING

HOTELS
Fairview Guesthouse – 6 Jalan Taman Budaya; 011-60-82-240-017; thefairview.com; nice location in secluded garden; walking distance to museum and reservoir.
Hilton Kuching Hotel – Jalan Tunku Abdul Rahman; 011-60-82-428-984; www1.hilton.com; clean and modern.
Singgahsana Lodge – 1 Temple Street; 011-60-82-429-277; singgahsana.com; backpacker youth hostel.



RESTAURANTS
Jambu – 32 Crookshank Street; 011-60-82-235-292; jambuestaurant.com; French-accented cuisine, including luscious desserts; in colonial, elegant mansion.
Popular Vegetarian – Abell Road, Lot 105, Section 50; 011-60-82-238-752; strictly vegetarian, tasty food; Bornean, Chinese, and Malay dishes.
Teochew Chinese Hawkers’ Center – 23 Carpenter Street; Chinese and Sarawakian dishes.
Top Spot Food Court – Padungan Street; garishly lighted with colorful neon; improbably perched atop multistory parking garage; fresh fish and seafood.



SERVICES
Borneo Adventure – 55 Main Bazaar; 011-60-82-245-175; borneoadventure.com; travel agency that organizes highly regarded, ecologically sustainable excursions and tours.



SHOPPING
Weekend Market – Satok Street (half mile from town center); runs from midday Saturday until Sunday afternoon; culinary highlight.



SIGHTS & SITES
Fort Margherita – Kampun Boyan; snow-white fortress in English Renaissance style, garnished with crenellations, octagonal keep, and pepper pot turrets; overlooks river from atop cliffs; built in 1879 by Charles Brooke (Sarawak’s 2nd “White Rajah”).
Gunung Gading National Park – 5 minutes from Lundu (2 hours from Kuching); 16 square mile, “old growth” rain forest overlooking South China Sea; Sarawak’s best locale for spotting Rafflesia flowers (when in bloom, blossoms up to 3' across; blooms are rare).
Semenggoh Nature Reserve – Semenggoh; 35-year-old nature center that rehabilitates formerly captive orangutans; 2.5 square mile area among world’s best places to see these apes.
Waterfront Promenade – half-mile long ribbon of flower beds, food stalls, and tropical trees; strings of fairy lights in evening give magical atmosphere; make sure to visit “Main Bazaar,” where colonial-era Chinese shop-houses still do business.

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