Location: Doi Suthep, Chiang Mai
Date: Thursday, 17
October 2013
Areas visited:
Several areas up the mountain, including Hauy Kaeo Waterfall and Wang Bua Ban Waterfall, plus smaller streams.
Well, I can finally add another page to my blog ... seems like it's been about two years since I last contributed. Anyway, a girlfriend holiday / grabbing a bit of dragonfly hunting started off perfectly and then turned rather sour. (There seems to be a thread running through my trips this season.) A nice trip to Chiang Mai was planned for the October holidays. The break with my girlfriend went swimmingly, taking in lots of culture, cuisine and the odd beer or two - even a pint of Guinness (though one was all I could afford). I even tempted Beau into a short trip to Huay Kaeo waterfall and I managed to get a few decent photos of more common dragonflies while I was there. On the dragonfly front, though, that's when things started to go wrong. It had been blazing sunshine all week and I had noticed dragonflies were buzzing around everywhere at the waterfall and I knew that ascending to the top of Doi Suthep (along with infor from Noppadon) could yield one or two new records for my species list. Everything felt perfect. That was on the Tuesday and I planned to go up the mountain on the Thursday, with Beau going shopping (and not annoying me). On the Wednesday morning I awoke and there was something wrong with my right eye. My eyelid and underneath my eye had become inflamed and was bright red. I didn't think much of it at first but became extremely noticeable by lunchtime. I think people looked at me as though I had been punched. It was only in the afternoon that I realised what had happened. I had burnt that area! How? Well, hanging over the water's edge at Huay Kaeo seemed harmless enough, but attempting to get good photos and not moving for long periods (with one eye looking through the camera the other closed), left a sensitive area of skin exposed and by the end of the following day, it looked like I had stapled a rasher of bacon to the underside of my eye. Unperturbed and with Wednesday daylight drawing to a hasty close, I wandered into a bike shop with my bacon accessory to rent a scooter for the next day. Literally, the second I paid for the damn thing, the heavens opened, though only for a short burst. It's OK, I thought. It's been sunny all week. Just a blip! Everything was sorted for my trip ... and keep in mind I had waited three and a half years to return to Doi Suthep. I was really excited. So much so, I didn't sleep at all. I rolled out of bed at 5.30 a.m. and got ready. Everything was hunky dory (probably as I hadn't looked out of the gloomy little window where we were staying). I almost skipped down the 4 flights of stairs. Only to be greeted by drizzle. No problem, it will let up as the sun warms the day. Hmmm.... I couldn't be more wrong. The drizzle turned into rain. The rain into a heavy thunderstorm. My defence ... a t-shirt and shorts. Brilliant. I still drove almost 20 kms to the top and was beaten there by heavy mist which shrouded the mountain. I was now freezing, wet and in danger of becoming sick. The temperature was extremely low at the top. I still had a look around the stream, but nothing and I mean NOTHING presented itself. I decided that my only option was to work my way down the mountain which was much warmer and drier and would probably increase my chances of seeing something. I saw a few common species and it was almost a washout until - for some reason - I decided to look under a small wooden footbridge. And there, sitting in the gloom, was a male Matrona nigripectus! He was happy to let me shoot away. So a new species after all and one I was desperate to see! As the day warmed with a little sun at times and I managed to see a few more species, though M. nigripectus was the only new addition to my list! I would have gone out again on the Friday, but rain rain rain all the way. Saturday, too. Still, I'm going back there in March so WILL find something then ... unless my bad luck continues!
My best photos of the day:
Matrona nigripectus, a beautiful northern species, but the female eluded me.
Stunning wings when opened (I will add a nice opening sequence later):
More commonly sighted species:
Lots of species in the end, but I really want to add to my list!
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