|
At Long Napir, with the lack of anything else much to do, we followed the Penans upriver to fish. We started out from the village and trekked for a short while in the secondary forest before we came across the Medihit river. Eversince the Magoh trek, I am not too fond of river crossings (I fell so many times in the river that time because it was dark, slippery and my backpack was so heavy). However, this time, I only had my Think Tank Speed Demon pack strapped around my waist instead of a 14kg bag on my back (but still a Nikon D300 + 18-200mm VR lens + SB-800 speedlight combo is quite hefty). I had a walking stick with me, which is an absolute essential when crossing a swift current river lined with slippery rocks. And most important of all, I ditched my horrid La Sportiva trekking shoes (can't bring myself to throw them out because they were a gift from hubby) and wore my Teva sandals. In such wet and slippery conditions, my feet never better! In some parts, the river was deep and swift, and we had to scramble up ridiculously steep slopes (I'm talking 80-85 degree incline here) off the river bank to bypass the rushing water. There was also a point where we had to jump to the river bank from a huge rock in the water, where in-between was a superfast mini-rapid which looked both menacing and threatening at the same time. The Penans that went with us were a motley bunch: from elderly aunties, children, youths, young women and to middle-aged men. I think they were amused that we city-slickers wanted to follow them fishing. From the look on their faces, they were not very convinced we would last ten minutes out there. But hey, after surviving an 11 hour trek to Magoh through the forest until midnight, these are a hardy bunch of city slickers they were dealing with, heh heh.
During the trek, one of them explained to us that there are no more fish downstream, that was why they had to trek a considerable distance for a catch. It took us about about two hours to reach the ulu (upstream) part of Medihit river. The ladies immediately started a campfire, while the men went further ahead upstream to fish using nets and harpoon. About half an hour later, the men returned with the catch of the day, and the ladies immediately proceeded to scale and cut up the fishes for grilling and to make soup. After the meal, we quickly packed up to return to the village. This time, we took an easier trail through the forest which only took us 1 hour (wondered why they didn't use that route in the first place). The trek back was interesting because the Penans kept pointing to us the various plants they use to treat common ailment. The lady guide in front of us kept plucking leaves for us to munch on. Eventually, I declined. "Kalau saya makan daun ini daun itu, nanti saya mabuk sudah!" I said. Back at the village, I cannot help but admire these folks. As with all Penans, they have very little. One of them aptly explained to us: Kami Penan, dari dulu tidak perlu wang. Hutan itu bank kami. Apa-apa yang kami perlu, kami ambil dari hutan. Akan tetapi, bank kami makin tiada. Hutan makin pupus. Yes, they have very little, but they shared with us whatever they had. It was a humbling experience for me to meet such friendly and hospitable people who didn't ask anything from us. However, we brought with us some clothes and essentials to give them. We also got rice and eggs as our ration back in Limbang and shared with them. On a personal note though, next time I should bring bags of dog food with me. The dogs at the village are seriously emaciated (while the cats are fat and healthy). It tore me apart to see their sad eyes and their ribs poking out from their torso. It would be great to get a vet to come along next time too. Sometimes we are so concerned with the welfare of other humans, but we always forgot that of animals, who cannot speak for themselves. Okay now, on to the pictures:
The picture above was taken on the way upstream. There were two kids with us, and they unceremoniously jumped in the river to play. The kids were facing the riverbank, which was shaded with trees (that explains the shadow).
When the above picture was taken, it was noon, and the sun was directly above him. It was luck on my part, because when he threw the net, the sun highlighted the details of the net nicely. For both pictures, I dialed enough ISO to get a reasonably fast shutterspeed (to freeze the motion of splashing water), set to continuous shooting mode and jammed my finger on the shutter. Now, on to post-processing. For these series of images, I desaturated the image, while maintaining
the vibrance. I then added a wash of sepia and a vignette.
I use Lightroom a lot. I mean A LOT. Editing my images in Photoshop takes a lot of time. First, because a 12 MP .psd file is huge, and waiting for it to be opened in Photoshop takes forever. Even more so when I have adjustment layers in them. Heck, I can even go to the kitchen, boil water in my small kettle to make my superkaw teh halia, and the darn thing would still be loading! And we are talking just one image here. Imagine if you have 10 or more images to edit! I only use Photoshop when I want to run a noise-reduction or sharpening filter on my images, or when I want to do spot-editing (which is rare). For more images on the Medihit series, click here.
|