Pix 6: Used to be a British bungalow, but now it's a visitor centre.
Pix 7
Pix 8
Pix 9
Pix 10: fern sea grass (Halophila spinulosa)
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I love Pulau Ubin so much!!!! It is one of the most beautiful islands in Singapore!!!
Chek Jawa of Pulau Ubin:
Pix 1
Pix 2
Pix 3
Pix 4
Pix 5
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Wanna see Borneo? Just click...http://junglemikey.blogspot.com/

Pix 6: Used to be a British bungalow, but now it's a visitor centre.
Pix 7
Pix 8
Pix 9
Pix 10: fern sea grass (Halophila spinulosa)
![]()
Wanna see Borneo? Just click...http://junglemikey.blogspot.com/

Pix 11: fern sea grass (Halophila spinulosa)
Pix 12: Sea shell (Mactra mera) & the sea weed (Ulva reticulata)
Pix 13: Dead sea shell (buried)- Perna viridis
Pix 14: Katydid
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glad you had a good time looking around.... sorry wasn't in town when you came!
the Halophila seagrasses are marine flowering plants in the same family as Elodea, Blyxa and Vallisneria. As shown on this site, they come in many shapes and sizes, one even looking like a tiny crypt. But most seagrass meadows around Singapore are gone now, due to dredging and land reclamation.
There's a huge amount of stuff to see and do at Ubin if you don't go expecting it to be like a theme park or zoo (once I heard someone say 'but we can see this at the zoo leh' when he saw a hornbill there). Cycling, fresh seafood, trail walking, photographing (birds, butts, macro, kampung life, temples, quarries scene), angling, the boardwalk at Chek Jawa, the Sensory Trail etc... It costs just $2 each way by bumboat from the ferry terminal at Changi Village to get there. Those who can cycle should join the free Pedal Ubin guided tours of the island which shows many areas and features you won't find in guidebooks.
http://pedalubin.rafflesmuseum.net/
http://toddycats.wordpress.com/2008/...01-march-2008/
http://toddycats.wordpress.com/2008/...st-march-2008/
More info here:
http://www.wildsingapore.com/ubin/
http://www.nparks.gov.sg/park38_1.asp
http://www.nparks.gov.sg/park38_7.asp
Chek Jawa, which Mike visited, is at the eastern tip of Ubin. You can either cycle there or pool together to hire a white van (the drivers are former villagers who stayed near Chek Jawa before they were evicted) to take you there and back. As Mike's photos show, there's an informative visitor centre there, and a boardwalk that lets you see much marine and bird life, especially when the tide is low. To go down to the shore itself, you have to sign up for the regular guided walks run by NParks. But every last Sunday of each month, there's also a free guided tour of the boardwalk run by volunteer groups, which you can join without registering beforehand.
Last edited by budak; 14th Mar 2008 at 09:16.

Wanna see Borneo? Just click...http://junglemikey.blogspot.com/

Wanna see Borneo? Just click...http://junglemikey.blogspot.com/

Wah, I stay Singapore for so long also haven't been to Chek Jawa. You lucky chap.
- Luenny

Wanna see Borneo? Just click...http://junglemikey.blogspot.com/

P. Ubin was like my second home during my Sec Sch days... geez, it really look different from a photographer's vision. Really stunning.![]()

Yeah, team building at P. Ubin but never go to Chek Jawa. Maybe we should organize a trip there.
- Luenny
Mike.. you were in singapore???


Wanna see Borneo? Just click...http://junglemikey.blogspot.com/
hiya... next time tell us mah!!!

Yes Michael tell us next time you're here lah.
A little OT here, but how about an AQ goes to chek jawa field trip guys?
Michael's photos have inspired me.
celticfish
It is a good day to die!!!
I finally uploaded an avatar and Cupid is dead!!!![]()

That's a good suggestion. AQ goes chek jawa. Count me in.
- Luenny

count me in as well![]()

Chek Jawa has a landward side (coastal forest and mangrove) where there's plenty of photo-opps for macro and birders. Eagles, sharmas, hornbills, bulbuls, loads of spiders, dragonflies, butterflies, bugs etc....
the marine side is only exposed during low tide. that's when many wading birds (herons, egrets) will come down to hunt and you can easily see animals in the shallow water or on the mud itself (e.g. hundreds of fiddler crabs). but to get the most out of this, you should time your arrival about an hour or two before the low tide of the day. See the NEA's tide table http://app.nea.gov.sg/cms/htdocs/article.asp?pid=2293 This time of the year, the low tide's usually in the late morning.
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