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					Originally Posted by VVV
					
				 
				Ha, ha, ha, not quite. 
Please note that I only found sea cow hilts on the langgai tinggang (= sea dayak war swords), not the ilang (both war and utility swords). 
In a way the hypothesis might also explain why you find some very high status parang with wooden hilts. 
And as usual with folklore it can be quite local, just a small area. It might even be a requirement from the ship owners according to their beliefs. 
But anyway I will try to find time later tonight to check some of my articles and books on Iban customs to see if I find something more about customs at sea. 
 
Michael 
			
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 Hi Michael,
I'm curious what you will find, I can image that Malay shippers had such requirements but I wonder if already we have problems with seeing the difference the shipper would and if the dayak would tell him the truth.
If the dayak themself had such requirements, I wonder how they should do that if transport on Borneo is mostly over the river.
should they make the difference between river and sea ? ( note that the villages in many cases of the big headhuntingraids where attacked from the sea and following the river upstreams)
other thing is ..do you have a pic of the whole Langgai with that Kenya like handle ? it would be interesting
Arjan