Sandakan
The Sepilok Orang Utan Rehabilitation Centre was set up in 1964 to
rehabilitate orphaned baby orang utan. Set in the lush 4,300-hectare
Kabili-Sepilok Forest Reserve, the Centre under the administration of
the Wildlife Department of Sabah attracts tourists and researchers
alike, giving them the opportunity to watch the orang utan up close in
their natural habitat. A boardwalk leads you to a viewing gallery and
feeding platform where the apes are fed milk and bananas twice a day at
10.00am and 3.00pm by rangers. Feeding time also attracts long-tailed
macaques to the area.
While orang utan rehabilitation is still the primary goal at Sepilok, it also focuses on public education on conservation, research and assistance on other endangered species such as the rhinoceros.
Visitors are restricted to walkways. Some orang utan have become familiar with people but touching them is strongly discouraged, and while the apes are naturally shy and gentle, the more mischievous ones may try to grab your camera or hat, in which case you should call for a ranger as trying to wrestle the 200 pound apes may not be a good idea.
While orang utan rehabilitation is still the primary goal at Sepilok, it also focuses on public education on conservation, research and assistance on other endangered species such as the rhinoceros.
Visitors are restricted to walkways. Some orang utan have become familiar with people but touching them is strongly discouraged, and while the apes are naturally shy and gentle, the more mischievous ones may try to grab your camera or hat, in which case you should call for a ranger as trying to wrestle the 200 pound apes may not be a good idea.