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Ah Huat points to a wild boar snuffling under a durian tree. "That's my neighbour," he laughs. While the elderly residents provide the soul, it is the volunteers and eco-tourists who provide the island’s modern purpose. Ubin is now Singapore’s most important biodiversity hotspot. The Chek Jawa Wetlands at the island’s eastern tip is the crown jewel. For decades, the government planned to reclaim Chek Jawa for military housing. But when a survey in 2001 revealed an astonishing diversity of marine life—carpets of sea squirts, rare seahorses, and the elusive dugong—a public outcry froze the plans. singapore pulau ubin
For most visitors, the first order of business is transport. You rent a rusty bicycle from one of the elderly shopkeepers—$8 to $12 SGD for the day, helmet optional, prayers recommended. The bikes are battered, the gears often stripped, but they are the only passport you need to explore the island’s 1,020 hectares of secondary forest, abandoned quarries, and weathered wooden houses on stilts. Ubin’s modern story begins not with nature, but with rock. "Pulau Ubin" means "Granite Island" in Malay. For much of the 20th century, this was a working-class paradise. Thousands of Chinese and Malay laborers quarried granite here, sending massive boulders by barge to build Singapore’s old roads, harbors, and even the causeway to Malaysia. By [Author Name] Ah Huat points to a