62 GEOGRAPHY. 



mouth of a still smaller stream, the River Saat or Sat. From 

 here Kwala Sat there are two ways further up the river Tami- 

 leng ; eastward, a way to Tringgano (arrived at after a journey of 

 8 or 4 days.) The stream Sat, flowing in a northerly direction, 

 marks the way to Kelantan. From Ulu Sat it took me 6 hours 

 more to reach the small Kam pong Chiangut, consisting of two huts. 

 Further, the water of the Sat proved too shallow even for the 

 smallest canoe, such a one as is only fit to cany two men and 

 some baggage. From Chiangut there is a footpath of only 8 or 9 

 hours walking to Kwala Limau, which belongs to the water- 

 system of the river Kelantan. From Chiangut following 

 the course of the streamlet Preten (a tributary of the Sat) and 

 always keeping in a northerly direction, one reaches further up 

 to Bat a Atop. 



This hill forms the political frontier of the territories Pahang 

 and Kelantan, and at the sanu time the watershed of the two 

 river systems (R. Pahang and R. Kelantan) - A second hill must be 

 crossed, of much the same height, about 400 feet above Chiangut. 

 From here, still going northward, I reached the small river Limau 

 at the point where it becomes navigable, and where the travelling 

 further up the stream is usually done in a " raket" or " dug-out/' 

 made of bamboo. Kwala Sungei Limau lies about 400 feet 

 lower than Batu-Atap. From Kwala Limau it takes 5 hours to 

 follow down the small river Trepal, to its mouth in the river 

 Badokan, which like the first two is still very narrow and full of 

 rapids. After eight hours more in the rivers Badokn, Ko, Bet on 

 one reaches the embouchure of this latter into the Belie, from 

 which point a convenient water-way is again reached. 



Not far from Kwala Beton the B. Areng also empties itself 

 into B. Behe, on the banks of which I met a considerable number 

 of Oranff Sakai. 



Upstream on the R. Lebe one comes to Kwala Siko. The Siko, 

 which at its mouth is wider than the Lebe, comes from W. S. W. 

 and forms the water-way to Selangor, and also to Ulu Pahang ; 

 but it takes a greater round than the way I followed (UluTamileng 



to Ulu Lebe.) 



The stream thus formed by the junction of the Lebe and Siko 

 is called the Sungei Kelantan. In nine hours one comes to the con- 

 siderable settlement of Kota BJtaru, the residence of the Raja of 

 Kelantan ; and an hour and a haf further down, to Kwala Sungei 

 Kelantan. 



