Boren0-What Remains

Borneo is a place of astonishing beauty and quiet heartbreak — a rainforest caught between what it once was and what it is desperately trying to hold onto.
Here, ancient forests fall to palm oil plantations and farmland, and the wild is pushed into smaller and smaller corners of the world. What’s left clings to the edges: broken patches of green, pockets of life still fighting to breathe.

Yet even in these fractured landscapes, the rainforest endures. Orangutans still move like shadows through the canopy that remains. Hornbills still carve their way across a sky split by plantations. Tiny streams still carry the memory of untouched forest, whispering the stories of what was lost and what refuses to disappear.

Borneo taught me that conservation begins with paying attention — to the beauty that survives, and to the grief that sits beside it.
These photographs are my attempt to honour both.

They capture what is still wild, still sacred, and still fighting for space in a world that is closing in.
This gallery is not just about what has vanished — it is about what endures, and why it matters

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