Between the Tides – Semakau Intertidal Walk
September 27, 2009 at 11:00 am | In itchy backside | Leave a CommentTags: Animals, Education, Environment, Nature, Uniquely Singapore
Itchyfingers had been waiting so long for this chance. Although I was invited by friend from RMBR for their trip to Pulau Semakau before, I never really have a chance to join them, mostly due to bad timing. So when Itchyfingers knew of the public walk to Semakau in September, we quickly signed up with some friends from our volunteering group. Access to the island is restricted and the public can only visit by joining activities conducted by designated interested groups and organisation. The intertidal walk conducted by RMBR is such a popular activity that openings are often taken up very quickly once they released the date. So we had to quickly grab our seats (in June!) before they were gone, therefore it was a long three month wait.
But the wait proved to be worthy. The day started very cloudy. Then it poured heavily and continued to drizzle after lunch. I was so worried that the trip might have to be cancelled due to bad weather, or if we were to go ahead, would we be able to see much interesting stuff or be able to take any photos on a wet day. When we finally reached Marina South Pier, there was still a light drizzle…Worries continued…
Itchyfingers were surprised to see our friends from RMBR there as nowadays they are less involved in guiding. More surprise followed as the guide for our group turned out to be another friend!
The boat to Semakau took about an hour or so. It was still drizzling but the cool weather and good company made my worry go away soon. Instead, we spent the time chit chatting and taking photos at the deck.

Pulau Jong 炯岛 as seen from our boat. My RMBR friend said it has the
shape of a bun…Ooo…maybe during their many boat trips they must had been
quite hungry to associate the island with a bun… hahah…so this was called
the 包岛 (Bun Island) by me…hahah…Apparently this little bun size island
had some interesting marine lives too as seen from this site
Once we reached Pulau Semakau, we were ferried in mini vans for the Semakau Landfill tour, before heading for a short slide presentation. Certainly informative especially for first timers but it would be a bit dry for repeat visitors I guess. But I found out later that, not only was the tour and presentation important to educate the public about the importance of reducing wastes and encourage recycling, it was also to buy time for the other guides to recce the shore for interesting marine lives before the start of our intertidal walk in the late afternoon. By now the sky had miraculously cleared and the temperature was cool, perfect for an excursion!
We were warned of the many mozzies ambushing in the forest waiting for their next warm meal before trekking through the muddy forest ground. True enough, there were so many mozzies that all of us had to hasten our pace, absolutely no mood for any pictures!

Starting of the short forest trek…I didn’t apply the repellent made of natural
ingredients offered by our guide as I hate the oily feeling on my palms. Didn’t
want to use my own repellent to spray on the legs as we would be treading in
the water and the chemicals might not be very safe for the marine lives
It proved to be a wrong decision, cos the mozzies there were seriously out for a feast! Even when we were out of the forest, they were still chasing after us and it was disgusting to have at least 8 or 10 blood suckers on the same calf or arm at the same time! Eeeek!

The forest was darker and more humid with mozzies chasing us, and imagine
reaching the end of the forest patch and saw this open land! The feeling was like
reaching paradise…hahah…
The mozzies followed us until we were further
out in the open…

You would think this tree was the only one surviving on the shore but look
under your feet and you would realise lives were everywhere!

The mangrove tree, Bakau Pasir (Rhizophora stylosa) that Tisu Boy said
looked like the Nature Society’s logo, or the Sungei Buloh’s logo…
Bakau
are used as firewood and also made to charcoal…

Oysters! Hee…I dun eat shelled fish, so wasn’t drooling…

The bright orange flags were laid by the guides who went scouting for
interesting animals earlier on. They called them the ‘hunter seekers’ :p
So we were led from one discovery station to another

Can see Pulau Bukom from here
During the van ride, we were briefed on the dos and don’ts when doing our intertidal walk. To minimise damage to the environment, we had to follow the guide’s trail closely. We shouldn’t be touching the animals as many might give a nasty sting. Obviously, touching would cause stress to the animals so do not be an itchy finger unless the guide says its okay to do so!

My first encounter with a life Horseshoe Crab! All these while I’d been seeing
only the dead ones in the wild…The Mangrove Horseshoe Crab
(Carcinoscorpius rotundicauda) is the smaller species found in Singapore
and the cross-section of the tail is round. They are related to spiders and
scorpions. They swim upside down and their tails are used as a rudder when
moving underwater and as a level to right themselves if they were overturned

This tiny Hairy Crab (Pilumnu vespertilio) is supposed to have silky
hair covering the body, but when I put it on my palm, it felt very prickly…
hahah…maybe due to the sediment trapped between…hahah..

At the various discovery stations, animals were placed in container so
we didn’t have to touch them, which might stress them. Swimming
Anemones (Boloceroides mcmurrichi) are fragile and the sticky tentacles
will tear off in the hands, so do not pick them up!

The Fan Worm lives in a long tube made of sand and mucus. These feathery
stalks located at one end of the worm are the modified tentacles. The rest of
the worm remains in the tube. There are eyespots on the tentacles which can
detect light intensity changes and movement, and the Fan Worm will retreat
immediately into the safety of the tube

Earlier I was wondering why the other group’s guide had a pair of wooden
chopsticks in his hand. Then we saw our guide also took out a pair of metal
chopsticks, which they used to point or pick out small animals in case they
are venomous. Here, our guide used the chopstick to gently touch the Fan
Worm and immediately it disappeared into the tube

Tape Seagrass (Enhalus acoroides) meadow. These are the longest
seagrass found on our shore, at 30 – 150 cm long and is one of the main
food of Dugongs. We had to be careful not to trample the meadow and sticked
with the trail already cleared by earlier groups to reduce the impact. I guess
that’s always the pros and cons with organising trips to nature areas. While
educating the public is important for the conservation of these wild lives, a
balance has to be struck so as not to compromise the survival of these
fragile lives

These floating whitish bits that resembled styrofoam are actually the
male flowers of the Tape Seagrass

The Round Sea grapes (Caulerpa lentillifera) are not seagrass. They are
seaweeds, which are large algae. Like plants, algae have chlorophyll and
carry out photosynthesis. To find out more difference between seagrass
and seaweed, see this site

The Noble Volute (Cymbiola nobilis) is a large shell that can grow up to
20cm and is threatened by over-collection as food and for its beautiful shells.
These predatory snails hunt and feed underneath the sand. The tube on the right
is called the siphon, and the animal uses it to seek out buried bivalves (like
clams). The black fleshy part with bright orange spots underneath the shell
is actually its large foot! After finding the bivalves, it wraps it with its large foot
and then waits patiently until its exhausted prey opens its shell to breathe.
The Noble Volute then seizes the opportunity to stick its proboscis to feed!

Spider Conch (Lambis lambis) got tis name from the six spider-like spines
on the flared lip. Can you see the pair of large eyes on stalks peeping out? ![]()
No wonder I found this familiar, as it was on the cover of RMBR’s earlier
publication, Private Lives: An Exposé of Singapore’s Shore

A Marine Spider (Desis martensi) with body about 1cm. Normally I wouldn’t
want to touch a spider, but I got it transferred to the back of my hand and
its furry legs didn’t feel that itchy…hahah…

Sponges are actually simple animals with no mouth, guts or other organs!

Sponges come in various shapes and colours!

Sponges have lots of little holes and a few large ones. They are filter feeders
(or suspension feeders) that collect bacteria, plankton and organic particles
from the water

Each hard coral is a colony of tiny animal called polyps that produce a
hard skeleton from calcium carbonate
One of the highlights of our walk was seeing the many beautiful starfishes. Though often referred as starfishes, they are actually not fish, so a better name should be sea star. :p There was a patch of shore with many sea stars, some of them buried in the sand but they often leave obvious star-shapes on the surface, so we were all very careful not to step onto them! Pity itchyfingers somehow din take photos of these nice patterns. I think our eyes must be full of stars! Hahaha….felt like singing, “Twinkle, Twinkle, Little stars..”

Sea stars are echinoderms, that is, they are symmetrical along five axes,
have spiny skin and tube feet. Other examples of echinoderms are the Sand
Dollars and Sea Urchins. This is the Common Sea Star (Archaster typicus)

The underside of the Common Sea Star. The greenish stomach can be pushed
out from its mouth at the centre to ‘mop’ up detritus from the sand…When
our guide picked this guy up, he was in the middle of his meal but quickly
retracted its stomach…eeee…

A closeup of the tube feet that emerge from the grooves along the five arms.
Tube feet may be used to cling on surfaces, gather food, excrete waste and
breathe. Itchyfingers held one up and the sea star felt stiff…The spines help
the sea star to burrow into the sand

The arms may be stiff but they can become quite flexible. Instead of a hard
skeleton, the body is made up of a tissue that can change rapidly from rock
hard to almost liquid like. This allows the sea stars not only to bend its arm
to embrace its mate during mating as seen here with the smaller male on top,
but also enable them to deliberately drop off an arm if caught between the
jaws of predators. Sea stars can regenerate lost arms, but the process can
take as long as a year! During mating, their sexual organs do not meet
and fertilisation takes place externally where the eggs and sperms are
released simultaneously

We were lucky to see this six-armed Knobbly Sea Star (Protoreaster nodosus).
The other was an unidentified sea star

It has pink or purple tube feet. Unfortunately this one was so alarmed when
our guide ‘molested’ it that it kept almost all the tube feet in immediately…
amazing how the grooves closed so neatly almost like a zipper!

Underside of the unidentified sea star. Sea stars use sea water to support
its body and move its tube feet. Thus it is stressful for a sea star to be left
out of the water

The more common five-armed Knobbly Sea Stars. Notice the colours can
vary too

These sea stars do not look like the normal ones with long arms. They are
the juvenile Cushion Stars (Culcita novaeguineae). My friends said they
look like malay cakes!

This elegant animal is a Marine Flatworm. But they way they mate is
quite vicious! As flatworms are hermaphrodites, that is, having both the male
and female reproductive organs, they engage in a sort of ‘penile fencing’,
where the needle-like organ is pierced anywhere in the body of the partner
See how they mate!
“The loser bears the burden of motherhood”….
We all said this trip we learnt a lot about biology….hahah..

Another interesting find by the hunter seekers – the Sandfish Cucumber
(Holothuria scabra). These are the edible ones found in Chinese restaurants…
eeeee…But they must be probably treated to remove the toxin. Some sites say it
looks like garlic bread…hahah…Why was the last one contorted like that…? :p

Cos the moment our guide picked it up and it started to squirt some liquid
as if peeing…! Hahah…Under stress, they will squirt water from both ends.
I took picture of that but thought it looked a bit obscene to show here…hahahah…
It was interesting cos when I first held on the sea cucumber, it was still
quite solid, but gradually turned flaccid while waiting for this picture
to be taken…
Quite heavy though :p
Under extreme stress, some sea cucumbers are capable of expelling their innards. The stomach will eventually be regenerated but the sea cucumbers will not be able to feed until the regrowth. Like sea stars, sea cucumbers are echinoderms and they feed with their tube feets. Similarly, instead of a hard skeleton, the bodies are mostly made of tissue capable of changing from hard to soft, thus aiding movement etc. According to the WildSingapore site, “a unique feature of some sea cucumbers is an internal breathing system of branching tubes along the length of their bodies. Called respiratory trees, most large sea cucumbers have a pair of these, each connected to the opening on the backside. To breathe, the sea cucumber pumps water in through its backside and up through the respiratory trees. The water is then flushed out through the backside again. With this constant flow of water, some tiny creatures find the backside of a seacucumber a cosy and safe place to be! Small or thin-walled sea cucumbers, however, simply breathe through their skins.“
I am glad I do not eat sea cucumbers cos always think they look quite gross…hahaha…

Another sea cucumber, the Ocellated Sea Cucumber (Stichopus ocellatus).
We were not allowed to handle this one cos it is said that under too much stress,
it may become limp and disintegrate. The many white “eyespots” on its back were
believed to possess some sensory functions to help the animal move around
or hold to the substrate. By now the tide was starting to come in…

With the sun setting soon and the tide coming, it was also towards the end
of the walk. Time to head back. Everyone was treading slowly to avoid stepping
onto animals

This cute little cuttlefish topped my list of favourite animal of the trip! At
barely 4cm, it already has the ability to change colour! Sweet!

Last animal of the day. The Onch Slug breathes air with simple lungs
and has thickened skin to prevent themselves from desiccation when the tide
goes down. They leave a trail of faecal material whenever they go! Eeee…. :p

Time flew and the sun was setting fast

And then near the forest entrance, I managed to see this dead jellyfish
It was a great trip with good guide and good company. There are so much more we have yet to learn about the many amazing creatures on our own shores! Itchyfingers certainly hope to be back again!
Also see related posts:
> The Raffles Museum of Biodiversity Research
> Private Lives: An Exposé of Singapore’s Mangroves
Oriental Beauty
September 19, 2009 at 10:32 am | In itchy mouth | Leave a CommentTags: Arts, Culture, Design, Museum, Uniquely Singapore
While on our way down from Fort Canning, Itchyfingers saw some sculptures across the road on the SMU field. My immediate reaction was, “Botero?” cos the corpulent figures looked similar to that of the famous Colombian artist. But when I went nearer, I knew they were not Botero’s. They looked too oriental to be his.
I was right. The sculptures laid on the field were indeed not from Fernando Botero, but they were equally beautiful! The figures had lines that were simple, expression that were so lively. Excited, I went around to take photos of all the sculptures…but Itchyfingers shall not show all of them here…yet…

Beautiful big fat toes…

The toes really reminded me of Botero’s sculptures…

Attack! Charge!
I was curious who did these but was disappointed to see no credit given to the artist. Finally I found the inscribed seal…Ahhhh…Bingo! A Chinese name…

So, they were from this artist called LiChen…
But why wasn’t there any sign to credit the artist? Then I saw across the road another sculpture standing proudly in front of the Art Museum. Have not passed by the area for some time so not very sure when were these put up. Could these sculptures been placed there for an upcoming exhibition? Maybe they had been laid not long ago, so signs were not put up yet. I decided to cross the road to take a look at the lone sculpture to find out if there was any sign there…

He looked like he was gonna embrace everyone…so beautiful! And no,
no sign either…
Being Itchyfingers, I decided to check it out at the museum reception. True enough, the man at the counter told me the artist’s name and they were there in conjunction with his solo exhibition to be held at the museum on the 25th of September! Yeah!!! Certainly something worth waiting for!!!
Itchyfingers will definitely be back when the exhibition starts!

Do look out for Li Chen’s “Mind. Body. Spirit” exhibition from 25th September
to 4th December at the Singapore Art Museum!
The Forbidden Hill
September 18, 2009 at 12:54 am | In itchy backside | Leave a CommentTags: History, Life, Uniquely Singapore
Fort Canning (福康宁) was known as Bukit Larangan in Malay in the 19th century before the arrival of Stamford Raffles in 1918, whch means “Forbidden Hill”. This is because the Malays believed that it was the site of palaces built by their ancestral kings. The Keramat Iskandar Shah at the foot of the hill was believed to be the resting place of the last Malay king of the island, and was venerated by Muslims. Later, Singapore’s colonial leaders made their residences there, and the hill became a military base during the Second World War.

Short writeup of Fort Canning…The Civil District logo was done by my
friend…
I knew there were some archaeological excavation years back on Fort Canning Hill, but I think it was kinda covered or out of bound to visitors for some time before they were done with all the digging, cos I couldn’t remember seeing the site at all.

So, the work should be done only in the late 90s as this exhibition site was
only opened in 2001…and that was the time when I was not in Singapore…

The excavation site…it was interested to read the explanatory signs
around..the only thing was the hot and humid weather made it very
uncomfortable to really read slowly…so as usual, I took photos so I can
read back again at home.. :p
The excavation work actually started back in 1984. Among the artefacts recovered were porcelain, earthenware and glass shards. These artefacts show that there could have been a Malay kingdom on Fort Canning Hill, with possibility of glass and gold workshops.

One of the signs explaining how archaeologists determine the age of
ceramics artefacts – by using a method called Carbon-14 dating, which has
a margin for error of at least 75 years. Another technique called
Thermoluminescence (TL) dating, which measures bits of trapped energy in
the crystalline materials of pottery. The shadow you see was from my
Itchyfingers…

Bits and pieces of porcelain excavated from Fort Canning. No complete
pieces were found as it was not a burial site. Rather the area was more
like a place where daily activities were carried out. Maybe a bit like a dumping
ground where unwanted stuff were just left there..?
From the excavation ground, we went to look at the rows of embedded tombstones…Fort Canning Hill used to have the earliest Christian cemetery. This cemetery ceased to be used by the end of 1822; all traces of this burial ground have also disappeared except the inscriptions on tombstones now embedded in the wall surrounding it.

I would love to look and read all the tombstones again, but it was such a
hot and humide day and I was wearing a rather thick tee-shirt…not forgetting
all the mozzies flying around…
The caretaker was still with us so I didn’t want to take up too much of his time either, though I am sure he was more than happy to have people talking to him. In the end, I managed to take a few photos of the tombstones…

Many of the people died at a very young age. This belongs to Jane, an
assistant surgeon on the Bombay Establishment, wife of Thomas Henry.
She was only 22 years old when she died…

He was just a baby…! Wonder what was the cause of death…

Does the name Spottiswoode sound familiar? Not sure if the road with the
same name was named after this Charles Spottiswoode. He was a respected
merchant who was living at his residence “Spottiswoode Park” at the time
of his death…
I read that there were some prominent person who were buried in the cemetery. One of them was George Dromgold Coleman, the first Government Architect, Superintendent of Public Works and Executive Officer of the Convicts and Surveyor. Oooo…must find some time to go back again to look for it…

At the other end were these remaining tombs. But my friend said they
should be just monuments as tombstone with bodies buried underneath
should normally read something like, “Herein lies xxx…”

But this one looked like a tombstone…

Hmmm…maybe she was right. The bottom line said this monument was
erected by the nephew

The inscription here were quite clear after all these years…

I found this interesting and tried to look up for this person…but could not
find any information other than a link on a The Straits Times (pg 14) notice on
27 September 1927. It read, “NOTICE IN THE ESTATF OF LEE KHIA SOON,
DECEASED Pursuant to Ordinance No. 144….” I think he must be one of those
rich merchants…
There were lots more interesting stories and person behind these old tombstones or monuments, but as it was getting late again, we decided to make our way down. Itchyfingers would definitely be back, as I missed some of the old buildings and many of the trees were so beautiful…Fort Canning Hill today is no longer the “Forbidden Hill”, as it is a popular venue for outdoor performances and events. I think if people were to spend more time to understand the history of Fort Canning Hill, we would be able to appreciate it even more.
Also see related post:
> Guardian Angel at the Forbidden Hill
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