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TANJUNG ISSUY AND MANCONG |
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Right out from Muara Muntai, watch for the slate-grey backs of
pesut,
freshwater dolphins and, in the woods, proboscis monkeys, as you pass through the channels into Danau Jempang's hundred square kilometres of reed beds, waterfowl and fishermen. It takes about an hour to reach
TANJUNG ISSUY
, a small township of gravel lanes, timber houses and fruit trees. Turn right off the jetty, past a couple of lumber yards, stores and workshops, and follow the street around to
Losmen Wisata,
a restored Dayak
lamin
(traditional house) maintained as tourist accommodation ($5-10). It's not that "authentic", but the place is surrounded by carved wooden
patong
posts (spirit posts), and tour groups get Benuaq dances performed for them. Out the back is a six-tier mausoleum where Tanjung Isuuy's founder was laid to rest in 1984, decorated with carvings of dragons, hornbills and scenes from reburial ceremonies. The
Rumah Makan Jempang Sejahtera
just down the street does chicken curry in the evenings. There's also an unrestored
lamin
with bigger patong to check out near Tanjung Issuy's mosque, or spend the day a couple of hours' walk or
ces
ride south through farmland at
MANCONG
, a pretty Benuaq village built on boardwalks like Muara Muntai, whose own two-storey
lamin
can house two hundred people.
Continuing your journey
from Tanjung Issuy, you could either return to Muara Muntai, or hire a
ces
to take you across the forested northwest corner of Danau Jempang and back to the Mahakam west at Muara Pahu (Rp30,000).
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