After visiting the water people, resting, drinking tea, and tasting Malay snacks, we continued to take the boat to the next attraction mangrove forest, watch the long-nosed monkey, can you meet the long-nosed monkey completely see our character, the weather that day from the clouds to the sunny high photo, it is also a bit hot, Little creatures only come out when the weather is cool, so we have a probability of 50 %, and wait with peace of mind, let's go! Go!! Go!!! From the water village, I first saw a bridge that has not been built. After consulting, I learned that the bridge connects the land and the water village, that is, in the near future, the water village can enter from the bridge, not only by water taxi (boat). The boat was on the Brunei River, and everyone looked around for the thick woods on both sides, and we dared not speak loudly to see the long-nosed monkeys, for fear of disturbing the little ones. After entering the mangrove forest, I saw a lot of otters, indicating that the ecological environment here is good, I consulted some information about the long-nosed monkeys, and chatted with locals to learn that the long-nosed monkeys can only survive in the mangrove forest at the mouth of Borneo, and other artificial environments. There is no way for the monkeys to survive, because the monkeys only eat leaves from the mangroves. Because it is connected to Sabah in Malaysia (the digression is that Sabah was originally the land of Brunei, and was later sold to Malaysia by the United States to make money, until the 28th king stopped selling the land to preserve the current Brunei), So only Sabah and Brunei can see the long-nosed monkeys. So far only the Bronx Zoo in New York has successfully built a habitat for the long-nosed monkeys.