A few months ago I got put in touch with a cousin whom I haven't met since we were young children. Among other things she asked me was why I decided to retire in Thailand. I gave the usual answers: when I was on active duty I was stationed in Thailand and married a Thai lady; the cost of living, including basic medical care, is much lower here; I love the food; I grew up in Ohio and Michigan, and I hate cold weather. But this morning as I was standing on my front porch, I realized there was another, more important reason. Butterflies.
Growing up in the United States, I basically knew only what we call the Middle West. I was a child of the suburbs, but spent time during summer vacations at my grandparents' farm in Iowa. My grandparents were interested in bird watching, and I learned a little about birds from them. But I don't recall ever seeing a butterfly that was any species other than the black and orange Monarch.
Back in 1973 I was reassigned from Thailand back to Washington, D.C. For the next several years I used my annual leave to come back and visit my wife in Thailand for 30 days at a time. On one of those visits, Lek decided one day to go fishing. We packed up a lunch to take along, with a couple of bottles of beer for me (it was before I quit drinking alcohol). Walking through the uncultivated meadows to the stand of woods where her fishing spot was, we passed a small tree. I guess it was only about fifteen feet high, and the foliage formed almost a sphere, maybe seven or eight feet in diameter. When I first noticed it I couldn't understand at first why it seemed to be covered with jewels. After I got a little closer I could see the whole tree was covered with butterflies! Certainly hundreds, maybe thousands of them! The glittering effect was caused by their wings opening and closing. It was breathtakingly beautiful. I have never seen anything before or since that struck me more.
I can't tell now whether the butterflies on that tree were all of one species or not, but I am sure they were not all Monarchs. This morning as I look out from my porch I can see eight or ten butterflies. Three are fairly small, a bright yellow. One or two are a little larger, very pale yellow, almost white. There are a couple of small, dark blue ones. And there's even one with the same black and orange coloring of a Monarch, but smaller than the ones I remember from the states.
There are also a variety of birds living nearby. We've got a flock of a dozen or so pigeons. They're the traditional grey and black, less variation that pigeons I've seen in cities. There is also a flock or doves that comes around from time to time, and a flock or two of sparrows, maybe thirty or forty altogether. There are also some swifts that come around in the morning and evening. I can tell they're swifts because of the distinctive shape of their wings and the lack of the swallow tail.
But it's the butterflies that really warm my heart.
Friday, January 23, 2009
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