Today, at low tide, visitors walk on a wooden boardwalk over a living carpet of starfish, fiddler crabs waving their single giant claw, and mudskippers that look like fish attempting to evolve into amphibians. It is one of the few places on the planet where you can see a coastal ecosystem that has remained virtually untouched for a millennium.
— The ferry ride takes less than ten minutes, but it feels like a journey back half a century. As the sleek skyline of Marina Bay shrinks into a hazy mirage behind you, the air changes. The diesel fumes of the bumboats mix with the scent of salt and damp earth. Ahead, a green hulk rises from the strait: Pulau Ubin, Singapore’s forgotten island. singapore pulau ubin
The Singapore government has repeatedly promised to "conserve" Ubin for as long as possible. Plans for a "Ubin Park" have been floated. But the island faces existential threats. The population is aging and shrinking. Storms are eroding the coastline. And the mainland is always hungry—for land, for housing, for memory. Today, at low tide, visitors walk on a