Pulau Dayang Bunting (Island Of The Pregnant Mermaid) is the second
largest island of the Langkawi archipelago, second only to Pulau
Langkawi itself. Located at a distance of about 17.6 km from Kuah Town,
Pulau Dayang Bunting is accessible from Kuah Jetty or Pantai Cenang
through a 15 minute boat ride.
The island derives its name from Tasik
Dayang Bunting (Lake of the Pregnant Maiden), the largest lake on
Langkawi. The lake and the island are shrouded in legend. Tales of
Mambang Sari and Mat Teja's ill-fated love story loom over one's mind
as one cools off in the scintillating waters of the lake. The story of
Mat Teja's courtship of his beloved and their sweet romantic endeavors
take the tourists back into the world of nymphs and genies. Their love
child did not survive long and the anguished mother bid her son
farewell. The child is believed to have assumed the form of a white
crocodile as she placed him in his watery grave. This crocodile guards
the lake till date, natives hold, and is said to appear only to the
pure at heart. Mambang Sari, overflowing with maternal affection and
distraught at such a fortuity, blessed the waters that took her son
into their fold with magical qualities. Since then, the natives
believe that a sip of the waters of Tasik Dayang Bunting endows
fertility to any childless woman.
Gua Langsir (Cave of the
Banshee), located on the western shore of the island, is another major
attraction of the island. The natives superstitiously believe the
existence of a banshee haunting the interiors of this dark cave. However
the name may also be associated with the banshee like wail created by
the howling of the wind. Many attribute this wail purely to the
acoustics of the cave. Thousands of bats are known to inhabit this
cave. The Gua Langsir is located stop a 91 m limestone hillock, about 8
km north of the only jetty. This jetty has been fashioned in a small
cove to aid tourists alight their boats before proceeding to explore
the Pulau Dayang Bunting.
Pulau Dayang Bunting is famed for the
mangrove swamplands and the dense tropical rainforests it encompasses.
A vast variety of birds such as the kite, woodpecker, hornbill,
drongo and kingfisher nest here and Pulau Dayang Bunting the
ornithologist's Eden.

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