Tanjung Sepat.

I have been frequenting the district of Rembau for quite a while now since the admission of my youngest daughter to the UiTM Rembau for her Dip Mass Comm course.

And of course i took the time to be at the foothills of Gunung Datuk but has yet to climb it.

I do not consider Rembau to be that far away from where i lived as her elder sister about to finish her degree is even farther down south in Batu Pahat.

I am kinda fond of driving and exploring to an unfamiliar places and for this i sometimes  would hide behind the reason of her safety to justify my picking her up from and to her college though she has more often than not insisting to commute the public transportation on her own or with friends over the weekends. 

When i picked her up for the mid term semester break last week I took a different route home. I drove off and away from the tolled route and the highways. From the campus site in  Kampung Paya Lebar Luar Pilin i drove up towards Linggi and then further up to Rantau.

Then from Rantau to Lukut and i headed up to Sg. Pelek in Sepang, a more familiar town near the border of Selangor and Negri Sembilan. 

From there i continued on the coastal road passing by Bagan Lalang and Tanjung Sepat, Morib and so forth.

But it was at Tanjung Sepat that i decided to take a detour and explore the small seaside town attraction which is predominantly chinese. In facts I have friends who hails from this town.



I learned that a long walk and calm conversation are an incredible combination if you want to build a bridge.

This is their recently constructed 306m long concrete bridge  replacing the old wooden jetty also popularly known as The lover’s Bridge for reason not known to me. I guess it is more romantic to walk on a wood than on a concrete.

And so I walked with my daughter right to the end where a loading and unloading crane is located.


Life is the art of drawing without an eraser.

After the walk on the bridge we browse around at the nearest shop selling locally produce products and i notice some attractive display of street arts at the back of it. 


There are always new places to go fishing. For any fisherman, there’s always a new place, always a new horizon.

This is my last shot of Tanjung Sepat where the fishermen parked their boats and sampans.

And i continued driving passing by Batu Laut, Morib, Banting and some smaller towns when it started to rain and it was a downpour before we reached home. 

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