Thailand: Hui kha kaeng & mae wong 2007 Jon Hall

Similar documents
Javan Rhino tour 4 th to 25 th June 2011 Phil Telfer

Aston s Eyot Mammal, Reptile & Amphibian list (includes the Kidneys and Long Meadow)

Sulawesi Bunaken National Marine Park Nantu Forest

South East Poland 1st - 6th April 2018

Photo Safari: Pilanesberg National Park, South Africa by Noella Ballenger All text & photos: 2013 Noella Ballenger. All rights reserved.

Qinghai/Sichuan Mammal Report - 18 th June to 9 th July 2016

Instructions, Points & Marks

KENYA BIG 5 & CONSERVATION 8 DAYS: KENYA BIG 5 & CONSERVATION NAIROBI, OL PEJETA CONSERVANCY, MARA NABOISHO CONSERVANCY

Southern Tanzania Safari and beach itinerary

SOUTH AFRICA MALAMALA AND MARRICK September 2018 Mattia Altieri

Majestic Tigers 29th November to 10th December 2016 Photographic tour with tour leaders Danny Green and Paul Hobson

Central African Republic: April 2012 and 28 species

Newsletter Winter 2017

Costa Rica, from January 31 st February 15 th 2014

WILDLIFE REPORT SINGITA GRUMETI, TANZANIA For the month of February, Two Thousand and Sixteen

Sri Lanka Travel Photos

YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK, UNITED STATES

First Grade Spelling Lists

Boulder Mountain Fly Fishing: Rick s Fishing Blog:

Explore the Congo. Safari Itinerary to Odzala-Kokoua National Park

2018 Kenya Study Tour via Dubai

Poland s Mammals: In Search of the Eurasian Lynx!

Koh Phayam, Thailand. 18 S.E.A Backpacker

Wildlife Report. For the month of February, Two Thousand and Fifteen. Samaki 33 mm Risiriba 152 mm

Welcome. In this issue

The magic of the South Luangwa and Luambe National Parks in one very special deal 8 nights for the price of 6½

MAMMALS. Cannizaro Park is a haven for a large variety OF CANNIZARO PARK

Buffalo Hunt in Australia

WILDLIFE REPORT SINGITA GRUMETI, TANZANIA For the month of November, Two Thousand and Eighteen

Cascadia Wild Wolverine Tracking Project Season Report

10 TO 4 WITH GOWILD AFRICA

SAFARI ADVENTURES KRUGER NATIONAL PARK

Tso Kar extension. Ladakh Pika close to the summit, and sure enough one ran across the road just a few hundred meters beyond the summit pass.

Finland s Mammals. Naturetrek Tour Itinerary. Outline itinerary. Fly Helsinki. Day 1

Who is Out at Night in the Kuse Nature Preserve, a Nearby Woods or Maybe in Your Backyard?

Morocco Travel Photos

Gozo College Boys Secondary Victoria - Gozo, Malta Ninu Cremona

Posted by Global Wildlife Conservation in Voices for Wildlife on February 8, More»

Black Hills, South Dakota, June 2017

Unit 1. Animals: Two Big Cats

Joanne Boyd. Cover Art by Teodora Velica

Sri Lanka. Blue Whale & Leopard Experience

Date Time Location Weather Fish Species Size Range Fish Caught Flies Used Techniques Comments

Care for Rescued Wildlife. Principal Achievements December 2008 December 2009

Bella Coola, BC Trip August 26-28, 2017

Scotland 12th - 16th March 2018

Elephant The African elephant is the largest living land animal. It has large ears and a long trunk. Elephants eat up to 260 kilos of plants each day.

As you explore the walk around area think about the animals and their adaptations.

Amur Leopard - Diet. Learn more online conservewildcats.org

Botswana: Of Legends and Giants Trip dates: 3 12 September 2020

Collaborating to Conserve Large Mammals in South East Asia

Instructions: CLASSIFY ANIMALS AS BLOOD FEEDERS OR NON-BLOODFEEDERS 1. Take out the ADULT CARDS, and place them on the correct boxes 2.

KENYA S RARE SPECIES PHOTO SAFARI

Track & Trail River Camp. South Luangwa National Park, Zambia

The Day Time Stood Still

DO NOT PROGRESS. Seasonal Activity Trail Series Winter. Sssssssssssssssh! FACT

September 1 We will be waiting for you when your flight arrives at Nairobi International Airport, and we will head to our hotel in Nairobi.

British Mammal Tour Trip Itinerary

African Safari Newsletter

Downeast Lakes Water Trail and Reading Room

Mammal Only flying mammal Small. Nocturnal Live in caves Eat insects and fruit Live in caves. wildirdarden.inc.

the little boy 1 a good boy 1 then you give 1 is about me 1 was to come 1 old and new 1 that old man 1 what we know 1 not up here 1 in and out 1

Local Pillow Travel (1-2 April 2017)

Follow the Birds By Tom Tripi and Jeff Sympson

Summer Visitors Play in Martha's Vineyard and Nantucket

Getting there! Getting to Entabeni

ZAMBIA HOME OF THE WALKING SAFARI A Walk On The Wild Side

Supplementary Material for the Paper: A Bayesian Network Model for Interesting Itemsets

SKILL: LEARN LION F MORGAN-CAIN & ASSOCIATES

Night Life By Joanne Ghio

SAFARI CHOBE NATIONAL PARK APRIL 2017

Wolverine Tracking Project Scat Surveys

WILDLIFE REPORT SINGITA LAMAI, TANZANIA For the month of October, Two Thousand and Sixteen

Primary Education Kit

Welcome to Nepal. //

The Lion's Roar. Photo Safari Newsletter December 2015

Reader s Theater: A Caterpillar s Voice. To Read Aloud in Class or to Perform

GUIDED IMAGERY. Young children imagine the life of a salmon in the wild. LEARNING OBJECTIVES WHAT TO DO

Reader s Theater: A Caterpillar s Voice. To Read Aloud in Class or to Perform

Zambia Walking Safari. 7 Days

SIGNING TIME THEME. There s singing time and dancing time And laughing time and playing time And now it is our favorite time SIGNING TIME!

COMPANY PROFILE. Bringing Man Closer To Nature

From VOA Learning English, this is SCIENCE IN THE NEWS. I m June Simms.

Geography. Reading Passage. Unit

2018 PRICELIST NORTH AMERICAN AND EXOTICS. Species Shoulder $US Lifesize $US. Armadillo N/A $600. Antelope: Blackbuck $550 $2,700

Gospel Hump Wilderness Date Late August 2012 Time Location Twin, Moores, Slate & Gospel Lakes Grangeville, ID

Sumatra Report. Progress Report Camera Traps and New Proposal

READING AND LISTENING. A beach. By John Russell

Forest Animal Traps. WPT Điểm k. thúc. WPT End point. Write information in one row if you find traps in one place.

Podcast 58 - Perth, Western Australia - A Life in the Sun

BETWEEN SEA AND MOUNTAINS. UNSPOILED NATURE.

The World's Largest Deer by Guy Belleranti

Buddy Bison Goes to the Park. Rob Cohen

Lakes up Lake Creek drainage in the White Knob Mountains: Golden (Golden), Big (Cut, RB), Rough (Cut, RB), Long (RB), Round (Grayling).

WILDLIFE REPORT SINGITA GRUMETI, TANZANIA For the month of November, Two Thousand and Seventeen

These jackal are part of 6 that came in together to a distress call, using sounds not heard before brings curiosity and predators make mistakes.

Animal Atlas: Meet the animals of Asia and the Middle East

Sunrise. Sunset. On your next inhale, Stretch your arms above your head. Push your feet and legs to the ground. Reach your waist and spine to the sky.

Balule & Conservation News

The Chair on the Top of the World. Written by Stuart Baum Illustrated by Camilla Baum

Transcription:

Thailand: Hui kha kaeng & mae wong 2007 Jon Hall Loy Kra Thong Full Moon I was in Bangkok for work and had a free weekend in December 2007. This was my fifth visit to Thailand and it was getting progressively harder to see new mammals, especially within a day's drive of Bangkok. But my mate Tu, who has recently set up his own guiding business, is well connected and he thought a return trip to Hui Kha Kaeng (HKK) National Park could be productive. I'd visited HKK in 2004 and was disappointed because the park (actually a wildlife sanctuary) was very strictly controlled and we were not allowed to drive anywhere. But now Tu knew 'someone'. Hui Kha Kaeng HKK is a world heritage site. It's part of complex of protected areas that cover a massive tract of Thailand's western forest and boasts just about all of Thailand's larger mammals, including Tapirs, Clouded Leopards, Golden Cats, Wild Water Buffalo and Banteng. And it was the Banteng I particularly wanted to see because they are relatively common in HKK and very hard to find elsewhere. We arrived late at the Thong Phak substation at one of the park entrances. We weren't allowed to drive into the park after sunset so set up camp and went for a pre-dawn walk along the road into the park. The only mammals were a Variable Squirrel and Long-tailed Macaque, both post-

dawn and back at the substation. Some tracks on the road were, the gate guard said, from Banteng. They were huge. The park HQ is 10km down the road and there Tu had arranged us a research bungalow and a guide; privileges not usually granted to tourists. We spent the afternoon in a hide that we set up overlooking a bend in the river a few kms from the HQ, where there was a chance both for Banteng and Short-clawed Otters. We had a bit of lunch before moving into the tent, during which three Dholes popped up about 20 metres from us. Needless to say they didn't hang around. The next four hours were spent sitting in the tent. No mammals. Mr Hua, our guide, went off to spend the afternoon at a different bit of the river and saw 4 Banteng. Bugger. The Hide (which is what the animals did when we were in it) As a special favour, the rangers allowed us to take a night drive along the road from the HQ to the Thong Plak substation. It was a full moon so we weren't sure whether it would be any good. It was. Sightings included a couple of Siamese Hares (common in HKK), four separate groups of Sambar Deer, a Northern Red Muntjac and a couple of Golden Jackals (the Jackals were rather more attractive than this animal usually looks in India or North Africa). The road passes a saltlick and a massive male Banteng was in residence. Judging by the number of tracks we saw, these animals must be quite common, though sightings are by no means guaranteed.

Banteng Bull (Photo Rattapon Kaichid) We spent the next day back in our tent hide, this time overlooking a natural salt lick a couple of kilometres north of the HQ. It was riddled with tracks and during the walk in, at about 8am, we saw an Elephant just off the trail. Elephant

Salt Lick with a stack of tracks But that was the only mammal for the next 8 hours. In HKK there is always a chance at a salt lick of seeing one of the park's 170 Tigers, or Tapirs, Sun Bears and other commoner stuff. But we weren't lucky, perhaps because the wind shifted and was blowing from our tent towards the salt lick. As we were packing up I wandered off for a few minutes to investigate a woodpecker. I got back to find an Elephant about 10 metres from where the tent had been and coming closer. Tu and Mr Hua were in a state of quiet panic (this is about as close as the karma-filled Thais ever come to panic) because: a) I had disappeared and was in danger of getting squashed; and b) more importantly all our bags were a few metres from the Elephant and in even more danger of getting squashed. Elephants killed a ranger a year ago. After some discussion about the risks we made a dash for our bags and cameras. The Elephant let out a trumpet and I thought we were going to get charged. But he decided to bolt in the other direction. I saw a Grey-bellied Squirrel on the adrenalin-charged walk back. The night drive had been a one night only favour and so we took a walk around the headquarters. The moon was at its fullest and exceptionally bright. Indeed tonight was the night of Thailand's Loy Kra Thong full moon festival, the biggest full moon festival of the year. It was Saturday night and the park was busy with tourists, many of whom were floating small candles down the river. Some of the rafts were made of lotus flowers. Others of bread. But not the kind of bread that floats. No, I have no idea... The moon was bright enough to read a book by (the picture at the top of this page was taken through a telephoto lens without using a tripod). But despite this, a small tree near the car park was alive with small flying squirrels that appeared to be White-bellied (Temminck's) Flying Squirrels (Petinomys stetosus). Field guides show this species as being confined to two discrete populations in the very north and south of the country but this was a species I had also seen, or so I thought, in Pang Sida NP, to the north-east of Bangkok. The tree was quite small and so we

got prolonged views of some of the animals: their grey cheeks and white bellies were quite obvious. White-bellied Flying Squirrel (Petinomys stetosus) Apart from another Siamese Hare we didn't see anything else. The next morning we set up the tent again at dawn on the river bank near camp. A Sambar Deer made a brief appearance, some White-handed Gibbons were calling and a Burmese Striped Tree Squirrel was directly above us. By 9am we gave up. I got a good look at a Northern Tree Shrew on the walk back and a Northern Red Muntjac was by the river near the restaurant when we got back for a late breakfast. Small-clawed Otters are occasionally seen from the restaurant though we were not lucky. We decided to leave HKK and head for a quieter and less restrictive park for our final night. Mae Wong, a couple of hours north seemed like the best bet. I'd visited there before in 2004 and seen quite a lot. Hui Kha Kaeng is a fabulous park. With time and connections it offers a better than usual chance of seeing some really nice stuff including Banteng, Tapirs, Tigers (we saw tracks near camp), Dholes and Leopards. Other species seen occasionally include Clouded Leopards, Golden Cats, Hog and Ferret Badgers and Pangolins. But unless you can pull some well connected strings to arrange to drive at night or visit the salt lick it is, I reckon, unlikely that you are going to see a great deal.

Mae Wong National Park Mae Wong Mae Wong and HKK are parts of the same forest complex. The park is based around a mountain, and a 47km stretch of road runs up the hill from the gates to the summit camp site. We didn't camp at the top because the site was unusually busy so stopped instead about 30km up at the Khun Nam Yen campsite. On the drive in a Red-cheeked Ground Squirrel ran in front of the car and a dusk walk along the road found a Northern Tree-Shrew and Grey-bellied Squirrels. It was a full moon again but there were some clouds that were clearing so we set off just after sunset for a long night drive down to the main gate and back. After a few kilometres some bright red eyeshine eventually revealed itself as belong to a Bengal Slow Loris (it would have been difficult to ID without Tu's spotting scope). There was a small flying squirrel in the same tree. A few kilometers further on we picked up a Common Palm Civet and a few kilometers further some bright eyeshine in the fork of a smallish tree turned into a white face and then a white face with a large brown body and long tail attached. A Binturong! This has been on my top 5 animals to see in Thailand since I first visited. Although not uncommon they are quite hard to find unless you stake out a fruiting fig tree and get lucky. A fabulous animal. Mae Wong is a good spot to see a range of the smaller mammals, largely because of the long road through the park along which you are allowed to spotlight (rather than the animals being particularly numerous). During my first night here in 2004 I saw Yellow-throated Martens and Malayan Porcupines plus an enormous Bowers' White-tailed Rat. Highly recommended but pack some warm clothes. Full Moon - the likely success of spotlighting under a full moon has long been a moot point. I am increasingly convinced that it doesn't make a great deal of difference, at least not when you are

in a vehicle which the animals would see approaching, full moon or not. On foot it may be a different matter. But the activity of potential owl prey like the smaller flying squirrels over the two nights in HKK and then again in Mae Wong suggests that there might not be a great deal of correlation with the moon. But if you have a night when a full moon rises late, my guess is that the hours of darkness before it comes up might be better than later on. Rhesus Macaque, Khao No Temple Khao No On the way back to Bangkok we stopped at the small temple at Khao No (on route 1 directly east of Mae Wong). A nearby cave has Thailand's largest bat colony (presumably Wrinkle-lipped Bats). Access wasn't particularly easy. So instead we visited a couple of very accessible caves right behind the temple and though they weren't swarming with bats there were at least two species: Long-winged Tomb Bats (with their naked chins) and a few tiny Horsfield's Myotis (Myotis horsfieldii ), at least I think they were this species, given the colouration and way the wing membrane attached to the feet just above the toes (but as always I am ready to be corrected). The temple is home to a plague of Macaques.

Long-winged Tomb Bat (Photo Rattapon Kaichid) Tomb Bats Horsfield's Myotis Thanks to Tu and his partner Jan for a great trip. Tu's knowledge of the Thai fauna, and his willingness to stay up all night looking for it, are unparalleled. Trip List

1. Variable Squirrel, HKK 2. Long-tailed Macaque HKK 3. Grey-bellied Squirrel, HKK, MW 4. Burmese Striped Tree Squirrel HKK 5. Red-cheeked Ground Squirrel MW 6. Northern Tree Shrew HKK, MW 7. Siamese Hare HKK 8. White-bellied Flying Squirrel HKK, MW 9. Dhole HKK 10. Golden Jackal HKK 11. Binturong MW 12. Common Palm Civet MW 13. Slow Loris MW 14. Sambar HKK 15. Northern Red Muntjac HKK 16. Banteng HKK 17. Asian Elephant HKK 18. Long-winged Tomb Bat, Khao No 19. Horsfield's Myotis, Khao No