DAILY PHOTO: Flowers of Meghalaya

 

Taken in April of 2017 in Meghalaya

 

Baby Pineapple

 

Heart’s Ease

 

 

 


DAILY PHOTO: Big Ole Spider, Nameri National Park

 

Taken in April of 2017 at Nameri National Park Eco Camp

 

As near as I can tell from a Google search, and with no knowledge of arachnology, this is either a Giant Wood Spider, a Giant Golden Orb Weaver, or something related.

 

If you know better, feel free to correct me in the comments.

DAILY PHOTO: Mountain Slope with and without Trees

Taken in the Summer of 2015 at Great Himalayan National Park in Kullu District

DAILY PHOTO: River Near the India / Bangladesh Border

Taken in April of 2017 near Dawki (border town on the India – Bangladesh border)

 

 

DAILY PHOTO: Rhinoceros Unicornis: Or, The Great Indian One-horned Rhino

Taken on April 23, 2017 at Kaziranga NP in Assam

 

 

DAILY PHOTO: Root Bridges of Meghalaya

Living Root Bridge (both has plants growing in it and roots still growing); Taken in Riwai on April 19, 2017

 

One of the longer root bridges; Taken near Nongthymmai on April 18, 2017

 

Double Decker Root Bridge; Taken on April 18, 2017 near Nongthymmai

POEM: A Khasi Myth: or, Rodent, Lightening, and Sword

In a sacred forest

a Rodent roamed

who owned a sword

it freely loaned.

This was no hacking

machete blade,

but made of metal

of unmatched grade.

One day Lightening

made a request:

To borrow the blade

believed the best.

Lightening zigged,

sliced, and zagged.

Claiming ownership

 in its boastful brags.

The rightful owner

requested its return.

But the rodent’s

plea met only spurn.

So the critter devised

a clever, sensible plan

in order to bridge

the requisite span.

It needed to climb

from Earth to the sky

because it had no

wings with which to fly.

But it wasn’t just wings

which Rodent lacked.

It had only one item

 to be skyward stacked.

So it piled its poop

as high as it could,

from the base of a tree

past the top of the woods.

Stacking and piling, the

poop nearly touched cloud.

When a thunder crack

struck ear-splitting loud.

Lightening saw rodent

would reclaim the sword

that Lightening had come

to so ardently adore.

Down fell the Rodent

to a pile of fried dung

that had once been its

steps and its ladder rungs.

 You may think that

Lightening got its way.

But the Rodent piles

its poop to this very day.

Someday when Lightening

is momentarily distracted,

Rodent’s sword will be

surreptitiously extracted.

DAILY PHOTO: A Tree Seen Two Ways

Taken on April 23, 2017 at Kaziranga National Park in Assam

DAILY PHOTO: David Scott Trail, Meghalaya

 

 

 

Taken on April 17, 2017 on the David Scott Trail

 

This was the view were we came off the trail near Lad-Mawphlang

 

I’m back after three weeks traveling about the Indian Northeast, i.e. the states of Meghalaya, Assam, Nagaland, and Manipur. And I’ve got a pile of pics.

The David Scott Trail is a hiking trail that was built as a carriage trail from Burma into India at the behest of the British colonial leader whose name it bears. Since it was made for traffic by animal-drawn carriages, it makes for easy hiking. It’s a scenic trail. It should be noted that (like most trails in India) it isn’t well-marked, however, the fact that it is wider than most trails and has old paving stones along much of the route makes it fairly easy to avoid getting lost.

We hiked only the section from Mawphlang to Lad-Maphlang. It’s an easy day hike.

POEM: What’s the Secret to Tiger Fitness?

Taken at Bannerghatta Biological Park in Bangalore

 

What’s a tiger but a bright, orange cat

who naps all day but doesn’t get fat?

How does he stay muscled and lean

when he eats and eats and sleeps between?


Sure, now and again, he’ll chase a gazelle.

Unlike my cat, who’s trained me with a bell

to deliver food to a bowl right under her nose

lest I hear the pitiful yowl of hunger throes.


But when chasing prey, tigers never run long.

He picks slow and weak over fast and strong.

And you’ll never see him run in the mid-day sun,

and he’ll always be napping when his meal is done.


[National Poetry Month: Poem #14]