In the open back of a pickup truck, two wildlife spotters stood in front of me, whirling their flashlights. To my right stood my father, whose lifelong obsession with wildlife had inspired my own. Clothes damp from the humidity, we plunged deeper into the moonlit jungle. My father and I had long wanted to travel to Borneo together, inspired by an online community of people called mammal watchers, who shared tantalizing stories about their sightings on the island on the website mammalwatching.com.
Mammal watching is superficially similar to bird-watching: trying to see as many different wild species as possible. It is hardâmammals can be elusiveâbut rewarding, as the most interesting mammals dwell in the earth's wildest and most vulnerable places. Searching for these creatures is both an adventure and an exercise in supporting conservation, particularly in Borneo, where palm oil plantations have replaced large areas of rainforest.
So much of my interaction with mammal watching had been virtual that, on a warm June night, as we rumbled through the 140,000-acre Deramakot Forest Reserve in the Malaysian state of Sabah, I could hardly believe what I was seeing. A flashlight caught a gleam on a branch to the left. We trained our flashlights about 50 feet up a fig tree to see a binturong, a blackish gray, shaggy, whiskered creature also known as a bearcat. This was one of the creatures that had been living in my imagination since I was a child, and I felt an electric thrill.
Drawn to an endangered Eden I don't remember exactly when I came to love animals. But wildlife is intertwined with some of my earliest memories. When I was 6, we saw 16 black bears on a family trip to Canada (I kept count). The next year, I spotted a tiger in India. Over the next two decades, my interest deepened during trips to Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Kenya, Peru, South Africa, Tanzania, and other countries.
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