Monday, June 13, 2011

Lets visit Agro Technology Park Mardi,Cameron Highlands

About Agro Technology Park
The district of Cameron Highlands countryside is endowed with inexhaustible historical, natural and human riches, generously revealed to the visitor.  Its traditional villages, enhance and complement a wonderful natural environment, with their local character, traditional architecture and village planning.

The MARDI Cameron Highlands Stations was first established by the British in 1925.  It was then known as the Federal Experimental Station.  Tea was first introduced in the country in 1925 and these early tea bushes are growing healthy at the station until today.  The first tea factory built in 1935 is still capable of processing black tea.
The Agrotechnology Park MARDI Cameron Highlands is located within the station and was officiated by His Royal Highness DYMM The Sultan Of Pahang on 14th of June, 2003.  Since then, about 65,000 visitors, visit the park each year.
The Agrotech Park is only 1km away from the town of  Tanah Rata and easily reaches by car, taxi, bus or even by foot.  Among the major attractions are the English Garden, strawberry production, vegetable and cut flower production, green house research and the sale centre.
A lot of facilities you can get there for example information centre,cafeteria,sale centre,meeting room, and etc..

The visiting hour is

Monday to Thursday


Friday




Saturday and Sunday


School Holiday & Public Holiday (Closed on Aidilfitri and Aidiladha)
8.00 am. to 12.45 pm, 2.00 pm to 5.00 pm.

8.00 am. to 12.30 pm, 2.30 pm to 5.00 pm

8.00 am. to 5.00 pm.

8.00 am. to 5.00 pm.

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Explore Mossy forest!

 The mossy forest is a natural environment that grows only at the highest elevations of Cameron Highlands and other mountain ranges across Malaysia. At such heights, low-level clouds in the sky, driven by winds, blanket the forests with constant mist and moisture, creating an ideal biotope for moss, ferns, lichen and orchids. This moist tropical evergreen forest is also a rich repository for a unique set of montane creatures, encompassing insects, snakes, frogs, birds and mammals - that thrive nowhere else but in this chilly atmosphere. Visitors can explore the mossy forest through a boardwalk that begins 2km before the peak of Gunung Brinchang.




THE ENTRANCE TO MOSSY FOREST




The series of wooden platforms winds for about 150m through the mossy forest, but is slippery and missing a few planks. Tread carefully as you explore this strange environment, filled with oak trees with stunted stumps, wrinkled leaves and gnarled branches that clump together, forming dense crowns that portrude furiously from the ground like mushrooms. As you turn around, look at the rich layers of moss that drape the tree trunks and butteresses, infusing them with a soft, green appearance. Meanwhile, vines, orchids, pitcher plants and other fascinating epiphytes hang loosely from the canopy, perched silently on branches and stems in this chillingly quiet labyrinth. Venturing below the boardwalk to step on the forest floor, visitors will soon discover its moist peat-like texture, each step leaving deep water-filled imprints on the soil. At the end of the walk, a trail starts towards Gunung Irau, the highest mountain in Cameron Highlands.

Saturday, March 26, 2011

Why Cameron Highlands,Pahang Malaysia??

Cameron Highlands is a beautiful holiday destination and the only place where you can find tea plantations and strawberries in Peninsular Malaysia. At 5,000 ft (1,500 m) above sea level it is the highest area on the mainland, and enjoys a cool climate, with temperatures no higher than 25 degree Celsius and rarely falling below 12 degree Celsius year round. Actually, Cameron Highlands is a district in the state of Pahang Darul Makmur. The size of the whole Cameron Highlands district is roughly as big as two and a quarter Singapore.

Much of the character of the highlands remains unchanged since colonial times. It is endearingly known to some as the 'little corner of England in Asia'. The cool climate on the picturesque plateau and its surrounding hills and forest make this a popular retreat for golfing, jungle trekking and exploration of the many plantations and gardens. It has become a very popular resort among Malaysians and overseas tourist as well.

The Attraction such as,

- The Largest Tea Plantation in Southeast Malaysia



- Mossy Forest The Peak of Cameron Highlands


 
 
 


The Largest Flower in the world



Monday, March 21, 2011

we should aware about current issues.'TSUNAMI at Japan'

Japan sees some progress in race to cool nuclear reactors
REUTERS, Mar 20, 2011, 03.17pm IST
Tags:
united states|Tokyo Electric Power Company


TOKYO: Japan restored power to a crippled nuclear reactor on Sunday in its race to avert disaster at a plant wrecked by an earthquake and tsunami that are estimated to have killed more than 15,000 people in one prefecture alone.


Three hundred engineers have been struglling inside the danger zone to salvage the six-reactor Fukushima plant in the world's worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl 25 years ago.


"I think the situation is improving step by step," Deputy Chief Cabinet Secretary Tetsuro Fukuyama told a news conference.


Adding to the good news, an 80-year-old woman and 16-year-old youth were found alive under the rubble in the devastated city of Ishinomaki, nine days after the disaster, NHK public TV said, quoting police.


The workers, braving high radiation levels in suits sealed in duct tape, managed to connect power to the No. 2 reactor, crucial to their attempts to cool it down and limit the leak of deadly radiation, Kyodo news agency said.


It added that plant operator Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) aimed to restore the control room function, lights and the cooling at the No. 1 reactor, which is connected to the No.2 reactor by cable.


But rising cases of contaminated vegetables, dust and water have raised new fears and the government said it will decide by Monday on whether to restrict consumption and shipments of food from the quake zone.


Police said they believed more than 15,000 people had been killed by the double disaster in Miyagi prefecture, one of four in Japan's northeast that took the brunt of the tsunami damage. In total, more than 20,000 are dead or missing, police said.


The unprecedented crisis will cost the world's third largest economy as much as $248 billion and require Japan's biggest reconstruction push since post-World War Two.


It has also set back nuclear power plans the world over.


Economics Minster Kaoru Yosano put the economic damage at above 20 trillion yen ($248 billion), which was his estimate of the total economic impact of the 1995 earthquake in Kobe.


He said government spending was likely to exceed the 3.3 trillion yen Tokyo spent after Kobe, which up to now has been considered the world's costliest natural disaster.


Markets will be closed on Monday for a public holiday. Encouragingly for Japanese transfixed on work at the Fukushima complex, the most critical reactor -- No. 3, which contains highly toxic plutonium -- stabilised after fire trucks doused it for hours with hundreds of tonnes of water.


"We believe the water is having a cooling effect," a TEPCO official said.


Workers aim to reach the troubled No. 4 on Monday or Tuesday.


DRASTIC MEASURES If successful, that could be a turning point in a crisis rated as bad as America's 1979 Three Mile Island accident.


If not, drastic measures may be required such as burying the plant in sand and concrete, as happened at Chernobyl in 1986, though experts warn that could take many months and the fuel had to be cooled first.


On the negative side, evidence has begun emerging of radiation leaks from the plant, including into food and water.


Though public fear of radiation runs deep, and anxiety has spread as far as the Pacific-facing side of the United States, Japanese officials say levels so far are not alarming.


Some airports in Asia have been checking passengers arriving forom Japan for signs of radiation, including Jakarta airport where offocials were using Geiger counters on all those coming on flights from Japan.


Traces exceeding Japanese safety standards were found in milk from a farm about 30 km (18 miles) from the plant and spinach grown in neighbouring Ibaraki prefecture.


Tiny levels of radioactive iodine have also been found in tap water in Tokyo, about 240 km (150 miles) to south. Many tourists and expatriates have already left and residents are generally staying indoors.


Harmless levels of iodine and cesium were also found in northern Ibaraki and in dust and particles in the greater Tokyo area, the government said on Sunday.


The fresh reports did not appear to have much effect on people in the metropolis, one of the world's biggest cities with a population of about 13 million.


"I think we need to monitor it, but I am not going to stop eating vegetables today," said Andy Ross, an American buying vegetables at a store in Tokyo.


But Physicians for Social Responsibility, a U.S. non-profit advocacy group, called for a halt to new nuclear reactors in the United States.


"There is no safe level of radiation exposure," said Jeff Patterson, a former president of the group.


PUBLIC APOLOGY Facing criticism of its early handling of the situation, TEPCO's president issued a public apology for "causing such great concern and nuisance".


Even after restoring power, the company faces a tricky task reactivating the cooling pumps, with parts of the system probably damaged from the quake or subsequent explosions.


"The workers need to go through the plant, figure out what survived and what didn't, what can be readily repaired and get the cooling systems back up and running to deal with the cores and the spent fuel pools," said David Lochbaum, of U.S. nuclear watchdog the Union of Concerned Scientists.


U.N. watchdog the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) offered encouragement. Its chief, Yukiya Amano, who is Japanese, hailed the "strengthening" of work at the site.


Prime Minister Naoto Kan, who has kept a low profile during the crisis except for shouting at TEPCO, sounded out the opposition about forming a government of national unity to deal with the crisis.


But the largest opposition party rejected that.


MOVING EARTH Showing the incredible power of the 9.0 magnitude earthquake, the largest to hit tremor-prone Japan since accurate records began in the early 1900s, Oshika peninsula in Miyagi prefecture shifted a whole 5.3 metres (17 ft) east and its land sank 1.2 metres (4 ft).


The quake and ensuing 10-metre high tsunami devastated Japan's north east coastal region, wiping towns off the map and making more than 360,000 people homeless in a test for the Asian nation's reputation for resilience and social cohesion.


Food, water, medicine and fuel are short in some parts, and low temperatures during Japan's winter are not helping.


The traumatic hunt for bodies and missing people continues. "This morning my next door neighbour came crying to me that she still can't find her husband. All I could tell her was, 'We'll do our best, so just hold on a little longer,'" said fire brigade officer Takao Sato in the disaster zone.


About 257,000 households in the north still have no electricity and at least 1 million lack running water.


Japan's crisis spooked markets, prompted a rare intervention by the G7 group of rich nations to stabilize the yen on Friday, and fuelled concerns that world economy may suffer because of disrupted supplies to auto and technology industries.


Automaker General Motors Co said it was suspending all non-essential spending and global travel, plus freezing production at a plant in Spain and cancelling two shifts in Germany while it assessed the impact of the Japan crisis.


NHK said the two survivors had responded to a call from a police rescue team. They were weak but conscious.


On Saturday, Kyodo news agency and the military reported the "miracle rescue" of a young man pulled from the rubble of his home, only to find out that he had been in an evacuation centre beforehand and just returned to his home. ($1 = 80.610 Japanese Yen)

Monday, February 21, 2011

Travel Tips..(CAMERON HIGHLANDS)

When to visit Cameron Highlands
The best time to visit Cameron Highlands is during the off peak season or during the weekdays. It can get really crowded here with during the school holiday weekends and festive holidays and traffic can get really bad especially around the towns and tourist spots. Driving from Tapah or Ipoh can also take twice as long during these times.

Road Travel 
Be careful when driving to Cameron Highlands especially if you are a first timer. There are a lot of trucks and buses on the roads here most of the time. Overtaking can be a challenge especially on the Tapah-CH road. If you are not confident, just follow the vehicle in front you at a slow speed. Usually the local trucks and buses will signal for you to overtake when it is safe. During the rainy season, you can expect small rocks and tree branches on the roads.
If you are an inexperienced driver, avoid travelling at night if possible since there are no street light all along the way and there is very limited mobile phone coverage.

Petrol StationsMake sure you have at least half tank of fuel before you start your journey from the expressway exit. Petrol stations in Cameron Highlands are only available in the following towns :
  • Ringlet - Shell & Petronas
  • Brinchang - Shell & Petronas

The townsTanah Rata - This is where most of the smaller hotels, lodges and guest houses are located. Tanah Rata is generally more quiet and less crowded even during the peak season and it is the spot most backpackers prefer to stay. If you want to enjoy some peace and quiet, this is the place to stay.
Brinchang - Weekend night maket is located here and its only 5-10 minutes drive to the Kea Farm area. Traffic and parking can be a big problem during the peak season. This is the place to stay if you dont mind the crowd.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

The 50 Most Inspiring Travel Quotes of All The Time..


1. “Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness.” –Mark Twain
2. “The world is a book and those who do not travel read only one page.” – St. Augustine
3. “There are no foreign lands. It is the traveler only who is foreign.” – Robert Louis Stevenson
4. “The use of traveling is to regulate imagination by reality, and instead of thinking how things may be, to see them as they are.” –Samuel Johnson
5. “All the pathos and irony of leaving one’s youth behind is thus implicit in every joyous moment of travel: one knows that the first joy can never be recovered, and the wise traveler learns not to repeat successes but tries new places all the time.” – Paul Fussell
6. “Our battered suitcases were piled on the sidewalk again; we had longer ways to go. But no matter, the road is life.” –  Jack Kerouac
7. “He who does not travel does not know the value of men.” – Moorish proverb
8. “People travel to faraway places to watch, in fascination, the kind of people they ignore at home.” – Dagobert D. Runes
9. “A journey is like marriage. The certain way to be wrong is to think you control it.” – John Steinbeck
10. “No one realizes how beautiful it is to travel until he comes home and rests his head on his old, familiar pillow.” –  Lin Yutang
11. “Your true traveler finds boredom rather agreeable than painful. It is the symbol of his liberty-his excessive freedom. He accepts his boredom, when it comes, not merely philosophically, but almost with pleasure.” –  Aldous Huxley
12. “All travel has its advantages. If the passenger visits better countries, he may learn to improve his own. And if fortune carries him to worse, he may learn to enjoy it.” – Samuel Johnson
13. “For my part, I travel not to go anywhere, but to go. I travel for travel’s sake. The great affair is to move.” –  Robert Louis Stevenson
“One’s destination is never a place, but a new way of seeing things.” –  Henry Miller
14. “Traveling is a brutality. It forces you to trust strangers and to lose sight of all that familiar comfort of home and friends. You are constantly off balance. Nothing is yours except the essential things – air, sleep, dreams, the sea, the sky – all things tending towards the eternal or what we imagine of it.” –  Cesare Pavese
15. “One’s destination is never a place, but a new way of seeing things.” –  Henry Miller

Sunday, January 23, 2011

LAPORAN KAJI CUACA UTK 22/01-28/01

SUHU MINIMUM 12.8c - MAKSIMUM 21.6c (utk 23jan2011)
Sabtu, 22/01/2011


Cuaca Baik
Sepanjang Hari Pagi : Tiada Hujan
Petang : Tiada Hujan
Malam : Tiada Hujan
Minimum : 17 °C
Maksimum : 24 °C


Ahad, 23/01/2011


Cuaca Baik
Sepanjang Hari Pagi : Tiada Hujan
Petang : Tiada Hujan
Malam : Tiada Hujan
Minimum : 17 °C
Maksimum : 24 °C


Isnin, 24/01/2011


Cuaca Baik
Sepanjang Hari Pagi : Tiada Hujan
Petang : Tiada Hujan
Malam : Tiada Hujan
Minimum : 17 °C
Maksimum : 24 °C


Selasa, 25/01/2011


Cuaca Baik
Sepanjang Hari Pagi : Tiada Hujan
Petang : Tiada Hujan
Malam : Tiada Hujan
Minimum : 17 °C
Maksimum : 24 °C


Rabu, 26/01/2011



Hujan
Petang Pagi : Tiada Hujan
Petang : Hujan
Malam : Tiada Hujan
Minimum : 17 °C
Maksimum : 24 °C


Khamis, 27/01/2011



Hujan
Petang Pagi : Tiada Hujan
Petang : Hujan
Malam : Tiada Hujan
Minimum : 17 °C
Maksimum : 24 °C


Jumaat, 28/01/2011



Hujan
Petang Pagi : Tiada Hujan
Petang : Hujan
Malam : Tiada Hujan
Minimum : 17 °C
Maksimum : 24 °C




SELAMAT BERCUTI..PILIH HARI YANG TERBAIK UNTUK MASA ANDA DAN KELUARGA..


*INI HANYALAH RAMALAN SAHAJA,SEGALANYA ADA LAH KETENTUAN TUHAN..BERDOA UTK YG TERBAIK=)

Friday, January 21, 2011

UPDATING INFO..

School holiday is coming!!so guys,why not bring your family to visit Cameron Highlands..Do other activities besides visit to strawberry or tea farm..go and feel relaxes at Robinson waterfall..other than that,you can stay at Eight Mentigi Guesthouse,this is for those who want the reasonable price to having a nice holiday and fun with families. There have a accommodation such as the dormitory rooms house to a room with a double decker beds. other than that.standard rooms are able to lodge from the basic 2(twin or king-size beds).3(king size-single) and for 4 person.they also have a leisure area for relaxion. not only that this guest house is located and the surrounding is within walking distance to tanah rata town so you have good access to tanah rata amenities .


For any inquiries,





EIGHT MENTIGI GUESTHOUSE,
NO8A,JALAN MENTIGI,39000
TANAH RATA CAMERON HIGHLANDS,PAHANG
TEL/FAXS:+605-4915988
EMAIL:eightmentigi@hotmail.com
MOBILE:+6013-5053614
CONTACT:MR.SMITH

Monday, January 17, 2011

one of the most beautiful place u must visit when u come to cameron!!

The mossy forest grows around the peak of Gunung Brinchang, the second highest mountain in Cameron Highlands. This is also where the highest tarred road (leading to the peak from Kea Farm) in Malaysia is located. Tourists and visitors on holiday to the Cameron Highlands are highly encouraged to visit this beautiful mountain, which is full of the treasures of nature. The road also provides easy access for most vehicles to the peak.



 

At 2000 meters above sea-level, the scenery from the peak is amazing and breathtaking, allowing you to gaze across an endless landscape of mountains and forest. In addition, the strong winds and chilly mist provide an exhilarating touch to the atmopshere. To catch the view, you can climb a watch tower perched on the peak alongside some telecommunication towers.


Through the mossy forest that grows on this mountain is home to a wide variety of birds, snakes, frogs insects and plants. The endemic Trimeresurus nebularis, or the Cameron Highlands pit-viper, occurs here, being found no where else in the world. During the night, insects and montane frogs can be heard calling, punctuating the silent atmosphere with their voices.




What distinguishes the mossy forest from lowland or hilly jungles is the tremendous amount of moss and lichen enveloping the entire environment. The trees themselves appear stunted in appearance; thin and twisty, with short stumps and wrinkled bark. Such trees and plants thrive only in these high altitudes where there is perpetual moisture and rain.



To visit the mossy forest of Gunung Brinchang, visitors can take the left exit on the road downhill from Butterfly Garden and continue through a path that passes colonial bungalows, plantations and the Boh Tea Valley. Along the way, it is highly recommended to stop for photos and take in the amazing view of green tea fields. At the last few km of the journey, the road becomes abruptly steep. Vehicles with weak horsepower or low engine displacements often stall on the road, so skillfull avoiding is advised. Previously, the road up was marred by pot holes and strewn rocks, but it was recently repaired though it is only a matter of time before it reverts.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

TIPS PEMANDUAN DI TANAH TINGGI

  •  Apabila memandu di kawasan di selekoh tajam pada waktu siang, bunyikan hon untuk memberitahu pemandu lain tentang kehadiran anda dan pada waktu malam gunakan lampu tinggi.
  • Untuk mengelakkan mabuk ketika menaiki kawasan bukit,gunakan gear satu atau dua.elakkan membrek terlalu kerap sebaliknya lebih bermain dengan minyak.
  • Jangan memotong dilaluan berkembar dan kawasan berbukit kerana pemandu tidak boleh melihat apa yang ada dihadapan
  • Pandu dengan kelajuan sesuai.jika jalan berminyak,berpasir dan keadaan tayar kurang mencengkam,seeloknya jangan pandu laju
  • Jika kenderaan di hadapan memberi isyarat kiri dan memberi laluan ke kiri,ia sebenarnya memberi laluan untuk kenderaan belakang memotong
  • Di selekoh tajam,halakan pemanduan lebih ke kanan utk memastikan tayar belakang melepasi selekoh berkenaan...
SELAMAT MEMANDU DAN SAYANGILAH NYAWA ANDA SERTA ORG2 TERSAYANG..