This sign translates as No Complaining about Lunch to the Field Guide, No 1st Generation iPods Allowed and Do Not Feed Gummy Worms to the Birds
They prefer these instead
Himalayan Cutia
Ashy Drongo
Siberian Ruby Throat
White-browed Laughingthrush
White-bellied Redstart
White-gorgeted Flycatcher
Rufous-bellied Niltava
Slaty-backed Flycatcher
Spot-breasted Parrotbill
All this birding is exhausting, let's have a snack:
Pomelos are delicious
And, if the birding is slow, they provide entertainment
But enough of this tomfoolery, it's time for more birding:
Ultramarine Flycatcher
Vertider Flycatcher
Hume's Warbler
Bamboo Partridge
Rusty-cheeked Simitar Babbler
Daurian Redstart
Hodgson's Frogmouth
Crossing into no-man's land on the border with Burma, no passport or messy red tape but we did give the border guard our Pringles and Coke
I've included this blurry iPhone snap because as we were walking along this quiet road in Burma this group of prisoners appeared walking ahead of a guard with a machete. Interestingly, although the prisoners were shackled with wrist and leg chains, they were also carrying machetes. Never quite got the story straight on what they had done but in true Thai fashion as they passed us each one gave a little bow and was all smiles.
They used to grow opium here but now the local economy runs on strawberries, I'm guessing the profit margin is somewhat less
Streaked Wren-Babbler
Black-throated Laughingthrush
Puff-throated Bulbul
We had long birding days in the National Park and I was happy to retire in the evening to our comfortable bungalow and some evening refreshment.
Beer or elephant pee, hard to say for sure, the Thais have a keen sense of humor
After an overnight in Chang Mai, we had some early morning birding in the nearby rice paddies and then stopped at a Buddhist temple complex before our flight back to Bangkok
That white bag on the end of the pole is for collecting ant larvae
As far as larval food groups go these are considered quite tasty
Please can I see just one more lifer
Apparently Walt Disney was also a Buddhist
Fat Buddha, Skinny Buddha, Fat Elvis, Skinny Elvis which one you prefer to offer your fried banana fritters to probably says a lot about you
It can be a bit God-y
In one of the temples I found this painting of cardinals which, of course, are not found here so I don't know your guess is as good as mine.
Well campers, that concludes the birding portion of our adventures to Thailand. After our visit to the temples we caught our quick flight back to Bangkok and endured an evening of touristy dancing at a themed restaurant before calling it an early evening so we could catch a little shut eye before getting up at 4:00 a.m. for our flight home.
Here are a few photos that I've included for no other reason than I liked them:
Just pick one
I don't know, some lottery, good luck thing I think
More insects to worry about
Why won't this fit in my carry-on?
Fork-tailed Drongo
Asian pied Starling in the local dump
Snackies in the field
Stripe-throated Bulbul
Puff-throated Bulbul
Hoopoe
Vietnamese nuns
Burmese outpost
The original O-Cedar broom
Similar to the amulets I bought in the market, those clear tubes hold prayers
Yummy lunch menu....I think
Who puts stockings in the toilet?
Sugar cane snacks
Puff-throated Babbler
These look like tissue paper flowers but, nope, they are real
This temple was beautiful but too far away for a decent shot
Myna munching on ticks
Baya weaver
These hold the monk's cremated remains
We snaked our way up these steps to a temple
Time for a fill-up
Picachu plant?
Saw these Blair witch looking things throughout the forest
This woman was carrying a load of heavy wood using her forehead for support, no male in sight
For perfectly skin!
Do not buy elephant pants in Thailand, it's the cultural equivalent of walking around with a sequined sombrero on your head in Mexico
You either encounter a hole in the ground or a toilet that can launch a satellite