Jumaat, 24 Julai 2009

Bestttttttt




Sekarang nie saya tengah syokkkkk gila dengan laman web nie http://www.onemanga.com/.Best tau....hingga merah biji mata kerana tak sanggup meninggalkan komputer. Bagi peminat komik seperti saya.. jom lah join sama. Banyak komik terkini dan lama di dalamnya.Antara komik yang boleh dibaca ialah

1. Beach Stars (best tahap dewa)
2. AAA (lawak nyer tapi comel)
3. 07 Ghost (tak bikin takut n best)
4. Beast Master (baca sekali pasti nak ulang romantikkkkk gilaaa lah, saya paling suka pelukis komik nie...handsome n cute)
5. Fushigi Yuugi Genbu Kaiden ( sedih tapi menarik tak sabar tunggu sambungan)
6. Natsume Yuujinchou (best)
7. Naruto (semua mesti minat nie)

dan macam-macam lagi lahhh.

ASAL-USUL NAMA PENSIANGAN / NAME ORIGIN PENSIANGAN



Asal-usul nama Pensiangan ini telah terjadi hasil daripada pertemuan atau percantuman dua batang sungai yang mengalir. Percantuman atau pertemuan ini membawa kepada terjadinya nama " PENSIANGON" dalam panggilan Bahasa Murut. Suku kaum murut dahulu sebilangannya tinggal dipinggir kuala dan batang sungai yang mengalir ini. Mereka membuat pondok-pondok di pinggir sungai tersebut sebagai tempat kediaman mereka.

Apabila sudah sekian lama tinggal dikampung ini maka tibalah penjajah Borneo disitu. Penjajah ini dikenali " Chartered Company". Seorang daripada Ketua Cartered Company tersebut bertanya berkenaan dengan nama kampung tersebut, lalu penduduk kampung tersebut memberitahu bahawa kampung ini dipanggil "Pensiangon". Sebaik saja perkataan itu didengar oleh Ketua Chartered Company tadi, maka ia memanggil nama Pensiangon menjadi Pensiangan. sehingga kini Pensiangan adalah dikenali dimerata dunia dan dalam Peta bahawa daerah Pensianganlah yang digunakan. Manakala nama Nabawan adalah sebagai pusat pentadbiran dan ianya sebagai pekan Nabawan dalam daerah Pensiangan.

Pensiangan name's origin this have occurred resulted as meeting or merger two rivers which flowed. This merger or meeting lead to occurence of name " PENSIANGON" in Bahasa Murut call. Murut tribesman once living at edge river mouth and stem which flowed this. They make kiosks in that river bank as their residence.

Selasa, 21 Julai 2009

Memberrrrrr


kawan tahap nak mampusssssss
ayulah kunun tembiranggg. First time saya bergambar mcm nie ,huhuhu huduh tahap bakakai suda, tapi tida apa terima kanyatan juga saya.Tapi nie lah 2 ekor geng yang selalu boleh dibuli kat tempat kerja. hehehe sebenarnya langsung tak boleh dibuli serius tahap dewa dan best kalau buat kawan.

Koleksi Komik




Boleh jadi gila kalau tak ada....
minat gilaaaaa sampai tahap dewaaaa
salah satu benda yang sangatttt saya sayang dan minati di dunia. Boleh jadi gila tahap terseksa yang teramat-amat sangat kalau tak ada.Telah menjadi bahan koleksi sejak berumur 14 tahun, maklumlah duit belanja time tu dah RM1.00 sehari, boleh lah kumpul sikit2. Minat tercetus dari bapa saudara (adik Mama) uncle Taneus@Tanus@Koyo hehe.waktu umur 10 tahun, masa tu boleh pinjam ja lah dan tak dapat beli duit belanja takat 50 sen mana cukup.Buku pertama menjadi bahan koleksi ialah Dragon Ball (Son Goku). Masa tu bapa marah sangat dan tak suka bila kami adik-beradik baca komik. Time belajar kami lapislah buku Dragon Ball tu kat tengah2 buku rujukan hehehe , nak buat macam mana kan... dah minat tahap Super Saiyan masa tu.



Kraftangan Sabah

Rabu, 8 Julai 2009

Kaamatan



The Kaamatan Festival is an annual event in the cultural life of the Kadazandusuns and also murut of Sabah since time immemorial. In its deepest sense, Kaamatan festival is a manifestation of Creator and Creation relationship, as well as Inter-Creations relationship. It embodies the principal acts of invocation of divinities, appeasing, purification and restoration, re-union of benevolent spirits, and thanksgiving to the Source of All. It is part of a complex wholesome Momolian religious system centered on the paddy rites of passage and the life cycle of Bambarayon - the in-dwelling spirit of paddy.

Mt. kinabalu







Tales

"Kina Balu from Pinokok Valley" - lithograph published in 1862

There are two stories that led to the main beliefs in the origin of the mountain's name.

The first derivation of the word Kinabalu is extracted from the short form for the Kadazan Dusun word 'Aki Nabalu', meaning "the revered place of the dead".

The second source states that the name "Kinabalu" actually means "Cina Balu" (which would fully mean "A Chinese Widow"). Due to the lingual influence among the Kadazan Dusun of Sabah, the pronunciation for the word "cina" (chee-na) was changed to "Kina" (kee-na).

It was told that a Chinese prince, was cast away to Borneo when his ship sank in the middle of the South China Sea. He was subsequently rescued by the natives from a nearby village. As he recovered, he was slowly accepted as one of the people of the village. Eventually, he fell in love with a local girl, and married her. Years went by, and he started to feel homesick. So he asked permission from his newly-found family to go back to China to visit his parents (the Emperor and Empress of China). To his wife, he promised that as soon as he was done with his chores in China, he would come back to Borneo to take her and their children back to China.

When he made his return to China, he was given a grand welcome by his family. However, to his dismay, his parents disagreed with him about taking his Bornean wife back to China. Worse, they told him that he was already betrothed to a princess of a neighbouring kingdom. Having no choice (due to high respect towards his parents), he obeyed with a heavy heart.

Meanwhile, back in Borneo, his wife grew more and more anxious. Eventually, she decided that she will wait for her husband's ship. However, since the village was situated far away from the coast, she couldn't afford to come to the shore and wait for him daily. Instead she decided to climb to the top of the highest mountain near her village, so that she could have a better view of the ships sailing in the South China Sea. Thus, she was then seen climbing up the mountain at every sunrise, returning only at night to attend to her growing children.

Eventually her efforts took their toll. She fell ill, and died at the top of the cold mountain while waiting for her husband. The spirit of the mountain, having observed her for years, was extremely touched by her loyalty towards her husband. Out of admiration for this woman, the spirit of the mountain turned her into a stone. Her face was made to face the South China Sea, so that she could wait forever for her dear husband's return.

The people in her hometown who heard about this were also gravely touched by this. Thus, they decided to name the mountain "Kinabalu" in remembrance of her. To them, the mountain is a symbol of the everlasting love and loyalty that should be taken as a good example by women.

Local legend among the people of Ranau, a district in Sabah, has it that St. John's Peak was the stone which her body was turned into.

Keningau




The name Keningau is derived from that of the Javanese cinnamon tree (Cinnamomun burmannii) which is abundant in the area. The tree is also known as 'Kayu Manis' in Malay and it has also been referred to as the 'king of spice'. The bark of this tree was collected by the British North Borneo Company (Syarikat Inggeris Borneo Utara) to be sold as spice.

Keningau used to be one of the most important administration centres of the British in the early 1900s. The Japanese also made use of Keningau as one of its government centres during their occupation of Sabah in World War II.

The village of Nuntunan in Apin-Apin was known as "44" during British rule. This indicated its distance of 44 miles (71 km) from Tenom, another British administration centre. Nuntunan was also known as "Office", because the British had its office by the Sg Apin-Apin riverbank which was later taken over by the Japanese. When the British returned after the surrender of the Japanese, the remaining Japanese soldiers surrendered at Nuntunan. The locals still believe that the Japanese soldiers had hidden some treasures around the village before their retreat, although this claim has never been properly investigated. Nuntunan, a particularly inaccessible locale, is believed to be the place where the Japanese soldiers hid their shotguns or even their gold treasures.

Rafflesia





Rafflesia is a genus of parasitic flowering plants.The plant has no stems, leaves or true roots. It is an endoparasite of vines in the genus Tetrastigma (Vitaceae), spreading its root-like haustoria inside the tissue of the vine. The only part of the plant that can be seen outside the host vine is the five-petaled flower. In some species, such as Rafflesia arnoldii, the flower may be over 100 centimetres (39 in) in diameter, and weigh up to 10 kilograms (22 lb). Even the smallest species, R. manillana, has 20 cm diameter flowers.The flowers look and smell like rotting flesh, hence its local names which translate to "corpse flower" or "meat flower" (but see below). The vile smell that the flower gives off attracts insects such as flies and carrion beetles, which transport pollen from male to female flowers. Little is known about seed dispersal. However, tree shrews and other forest mammals apparently eat the fruits and disperse the seeds. Rafflesia is an official state flower of Indonesia, also Sabah state in Malaysia, as well as for the Surat Thani Province, Thailand.

Maliau Basin





The "Lost World of Sabah" - Maliau Basin is truly a remote and mysterious forest enclosure that has remained pristine and completely uninhabited by humans. For those who's adventurous enough to experience a rarely visited destinations ON FOOT as there's no mode of transportation to reach this unique place, then there's simply no better place on earth more than the Maliau Basin!

Located in the south central part of Sabah which is approximately 200km from Tawau and Keningau district (40km north of Kalimantan border). Maliau Basin is almost circular in shape and surrounded by a formidable escarpment of extremely steep slopes of up to 1,500m in height. The Maliau Basin Conservation Area sprawl across 588.4 sq km or 58,840 hectares encompasses the entire Maliau Basin plus additional 198.4 sq km of forested land to the east and north of the rim including the fabled Lake Linumunsut.

The saucer shape basin measure a range of 25km in diameter and form through sedimentary inclination beds of sandstone and mudstone. The highest point found here is Mount Lotung (over 1,600m in elevation). Generally known as a basin, Maliau represents a single water catchment and is drained by a set of radiating tributaries of the Maliau River through a gorge out of the southeast of the basin into Kuamut River which in turn feeds into Sabah's longest river - the Kinabatangan.

Discovery on Maliau Basin was only made in 1947 but successful trip into the surrounding areas only occurred after almost 40 years later. Visitors are welcome here but access is strictly controlled and earlier written permission must be seek from Yayasan Sabah.

Accommodation facilities are kept in certain areas to avoid having to clear vegetation. Water and bathing facilities are kept in the nearby streams ad rivers, electricity is not available. Maliau Basin has some of the most beautiful, picturesque waterfalls and in fact it is believe to have the most waterfalls in any part of Malaysia. Its also a refuge haven for rare and endangered animals such as Sumatran Rhino, Proboscis monkey and the Asian Family genre. So far a total of 69 mammals and at least 231 species plus over 25 species of amphibians have been identified and at least one species that's completely new to science call Thelphusula sp. Crab has been been identified too.

To date over 460 species of flora have been identified which include 6 species of pitcher plants and 80 species of orchids. If getting back to your roots is intimidating you, activities in Maliau will sure make up for it. So take a walk on the wild side literally and gain a lifetime opportunity to explore nature in its truest form!

Batu Punggul





Batu Punggul is a vertical lime stone outcrop in the middle of the rainforest of Sabah. From its peak, towering a hundred meters above the canopy, one has an exhilarating view over the surroundings. The entire rock is nearly 200 meters high and also contains a series of interesting caves. A small forest reserve protects the site, which is historically important to the Murut people who inhabit the area.

The Legend

The story takes place a time long ago, when the Sapulut River still passed between Punggul and Tinagas, which then were not limestone outcrops, but longhouses!

It was a time when there were only a few boats in the possession of the Murut people. One fateful night, the Punggul people had no fire any more, and they asked the Tinagas people on the other side of the river to help them out. Only there were no boats that evening, and so the villagers on both sided riddled how they could get the fire over the rapid water. Finally a man from Tinagas had an idea. He tied a bundle of firewood and embers onto the back of a dog, and then told him to swim to the other side. But the current was too strong, and the dog drowned. The villagers broke out in laughter, and then someone proposed jauntily: "Take a chicken, take a chicken," and everybody in the Longhouse was laughing even more. Duly, the man took a rooster and tied another bundle of firewood and embers on its back. He told the rooster to fly across the river, and to the Longhouse on the other side to give the fire to the people there. But the unfortunate cock could not handle the burden, and midway over the river dropped into the water. He drowned, extinguishing the fire, just as the dog did. Now the people on both sides were cheering even more, though the Punggul people had still no fire to cook. This sneering laughter arose the wrath of the gods in the jungle, and in their anger they turned the two longhouses on either bank of the river into stone. Nothing and no living thing they spared, and in one big thunder houses, utensils, animals, everything turned to lifeless rock, except for the man who tried to get the fire over the river. But he was trapped in a cave from which he could not get out.

Some time later a few villagers from down-river came to visit Punggul, but to their great amazement they found nothing but two huge rocks. They were looking for the houses and the people, but there were none. When the visitors climbed the rocks and entered the caves with their smooth, even floors, big halls, rooms and entrances, they realised that they stood in the very Longhouses they were looking for. Suddenly they heard the feeble calls of a man. They went looking from where the shouts came from, but when they found the man they had to realise that they could not get him out. He was imprisoned in the rock. Instead, they begged him to tell what had happened. In awe the visitors listened to his story. Then they asked him to show his hand, and the wretched fellow pushed it through a narrow crevice. When it appeared the visitors chopped it neatly off and went back to their kampung, leaving the man to perish.

Back in their village they told everybody the story of Batu Punggul and Tinagas, and they held a big party to commemorate the unfortunate villagers. The hand of the survivor was buried during the feast, which is now called 'Elau’. It is still practised when someone dies in the Punggul area. Much later, the river changed its course. The two longhouses of solid stone stand now on the same side of the river, towering high above the jungle as a warning to all those who pass by.

Selasa, 7 Julai 2009

LOVE

Sand hiss in barren land
me between complicated love
When my confidence come
Not merely love
Sacrifice great love
Me wager
Forgive when i not imperfect
This love impossible me prevent
Love sentences narrate
When happy begin to touch
As if me venom outlived
However I should give up love
When me prostrate
When my confidence come
Love not just only love
Sacrifice great love
Me wager

Isnin, 6 Julai 2009

Mahua waterfall




Mahua Waterfall is a plunge type waterfall located in Kg. Patau, Tambunan, Sabah, Malaysia. It became one of the most important tourist site for the people of the district.

Jumaat, 3 Julai 2009

Sabah paddy field


Betul ada cerita mcm nieee

ada lah sorg makluk Tuhan niee(org ?)sukar saya terangkan...isss
gi munum kat kedai kopi dgn kwn2
lepas tu dia panggil pelayan
"bosss minum kat sini berapa?"(org ?)
"kalau yang panas RM1.00 kalau yang sejuk RM1.20"(Pelayan)
"ooo..bagi milo panas lahhhh"(org kg)
lepas tu pelayan tu pi lah buat minuman yg dipesan
15 minit seleps tu pelayan tu datang membawa
sebiji dulang yang berisi 4 biji gelas...mestilah dah 4 org nak minum
selepas pelayan tuuu meletakkan saja gelas tersebut di atas meja
cepat-cepat (org ?) mencapai gelasnya
dan terus minum sehingga habisss
apalagi kembanglah mulut org nieee
apa tidaknya terkena air panas
member org tu pun bertanya
"kenapa kooo minum terus tu air? panassss bah tuuu"
dengan terketar-ketar kerana kesakitan org tuuu menjawab
"kan kalau sejuk nanti jadi RM1.20,duit saya tida cukup buat tambang balik nanti"

ceritaaaa

dulu ade seorg mak ngan anak berjalan jaoh....

pastu sampai di kedai runcit...

lalu mereke membeli beberapa brg keperluan/...

lalu mereke pulang ke rumah....

maka itu je ceritenye.....

sekian.....

Perginya seorang insan

03 Julai 2009 merupakan satu titik hitam
buat jiwa seorg insan bergelar sahabat..
tabahkan diri mu wahai sahabat...
yang pergi biarkanlah pergi..
doakan saja agar perginya ke
tempat yang lebih pasti penuh dengan
limpahan cahaya darinya
dipenuhi dengan roh insan yang beriman
sesungguhnya pemergiannya bukan lagi
membawa bersama derita..
tapi kepada damai abadi...
Tuhan peliharalah dia
sepertimana dia memelihari sahabat ku..

-SKM kgau

sedar-sedarkan lah diri tu..

PUISI

Isteriku ,
jika engkau bumi,
akulah matahari.
Aku akan menyinari mu kerana engkau mengharapkan sinaran dari ku..
Ingatlah bahtera yg kita kayuh, begitu penuh riak gelombang.
Aku pasti akan tetap menyinari bumi, hingga kadang-kadang bumi terasa akan
silauan ku.
Lantas aku ingat satu hal bahawa Tuhan mencipta bukan hanya bumi, malah ada
planet lain yang juga mengharapkan sinaranku.

Lalu......
Relakanlah aku menyinari planet lain,
menyampaikan faedah adanya aku,
kerana sudah takdir Illahi sinaranku diperlukan diplanet lain...

*** Balasan Puisi sang isteri***

Suamiku,
andai kau memang mentari,
sang surya yang memberi cahaya,
aku merelakan engkau berikan sinaranmu kepada segala planet yang
telah TUHAN ciptakan kerana mereka juga seperti aku perlukan cahayamu
dan....

akupun juga tidak akan merasa kekurangan dengan sinaran mu...


AKAN TETAPIIIIIIII. .
Bila kau hanya sejengkal lilin yang berkekuatan 5 watt sahaja,
jangan lah bermimpi untuk menyinari planet lain!!!
Kerana bilik tidur kita yang kecil pun belum sanggup kau terangi.
Lihatlah diri mu pada cermin kaca di sudut kamar kita,
di tengah remang-remang pancaran cahaya mu yang telah aku mengerti...
Cuba lihat siapa dirimu...
MATAHARI atau lilin ?
atau jangan-jangan
cuma mancis saja!!!!!
please lah....!!!
jangan la nak berangan!!

aku sokonggggggg