ewen, to photography

These fellas were more interested in licking rocks, for salt or minerals or whatever, than flying away from my lens. A real treat for my walk this morning.

Western Courtier (Sephisa dichroa).

How cute are these guys???
Such a gorgeous rich black on the upper wings

ewen, to photography
ewen, to photography

I want to tell a little story about a stupa in Bhutan called Chendibji, a beautiful place I have visited many times but has a sad story.

It's a special place for Bhutanese, a spiritual place surrounded by wild forests. Recently they restored the stupa and chorten and installed immense flood lights to illuminate at night.

Moths flock to it.

1/x

#སྤྱན་སྡེབ་སྦྱིས་མཆོད་རྟེན།

Sleepy dog
One of the locals

ewen,

Not just a few moths. But thousands and thousands of moths.

When I first stepped through the archway I noticed a few moths on the timber, then I noticed a few more. And the more I looked, the more I noticed.

I started taking photos. I was in a rush and a little confused. Not much art to my snaps. I just kept taking shots.

2/x

#སྤྱན་སྡེབ་སྦྱིས་མཆོད་རྟེན།

The first archway leading down to Chendebji.
Another moth
More moths

ewen,

The sheer variety of moths in one tiny little space was amazing. But why?

I did notice that a lot of them were white. And one particular species far outnumbered the others. The doorway was awash with moths.

I know next to nothing about moths myself. I've only just tuned my brain into being more aware of butterflies.

3/x

#སྤྱན་སྡེབ་སྦྱིས་མཆོད་རྟེན།

Lots and lots of this moth
White but not. Amazing variations.
So stylish

ewen,

I can tell you the Chendebji is covered in white lime. The stupa and shorten at very very white.

But in recent times they repainted and added some super bright flood lights. When I stepped closer to these, I found literally thousands of dead moths.

Not to say they wouldn't have died somewhere in the forest anyway, but it seemed very sad.

4/x

#སྤྱན་སྡེབ་སྦྱིས་མཆོད་རྟེན།

White lime
The remains of a spectacular creature

ewen,

There was more than months too. Beetles were drawn in by the light, big ones! Many of these were still alive. One in particular was so feisty, even flipped upside-down.

I righted him up and he tried to murder me. Nature is dangerous people!

5/x

#སྤྱན་སྡེབ་སྦྱིས་མཆོད་རྟེན།

Check out those chompers
Stupa at Chendebji

ewen,

I was fascinated by this glimpse into the wild moths of Bhutan. Makes you wonder what else is hiding out there in the forests? You just need the right triggers to bring them "into the light".

I found one fluffy white moth with metallic teal spots. In the right light, the blue/green hues shine back at the lens.

6/x

#སྤྱན་སྡེབ་སྦྱིས་མཆོད་རྟེན།

Hiding in plain sight

ewen,

None of these guys were doing a great job of hiding I might add. Most were just clinging to grooves in the side of the chorten. Many were on their last legs too, barely able to fly.

A few had camouflage more suited to the forest than a white washed temple.

7/x

#སྤྱན་སྡེབ་སྦྱིས་མཆོད་རྟེན།

Green on top, red below
Mossy motif
Classic moth wear

ewen,

A hint of yellow in the colour range too. I can dig it.

8/x

#སྤྱན་སྡེབ་སྦྱིས་མཆོད་རྟེན།

Small and fluffy
Om mani padme hum
Art deco moth with a touch of Frank Lloyd Wright.

ewen,

I just can't express how much I love those 60s and 70s designs on some of these critters. Pure art. I couldn't paint something beautiful if I tried.

9/x

#སྤྱན་སྡེབ་སྦྱིས་མཆོད་རྟེན།

Chorten carvings
Sooooo many of this moth

ewen,

I'll wrap it up there. I could have spent hours at the site observing all the moths and trying to capture them with a little more art. Bhutan throws all manner of surprises at me, but rarely something so impressive and unexpected.

Hope you enjoyed getting a glimpse into this world too.

10/10

#སྤྱན་སྡེབ་སྦྱིས་མཆོད་རྟེན།

Green on top, red down below
Flat as a pancake. Same colour too.
Stunning blend of nature, art, camouflage and chutzpah.

ewen, to photography

Some days you just see the same species over and over, as though somebody cleaned your glasses and suddenly the things that were right in front of you are clear to see.

That's a very small butterfly
Common copper
Common copper having a ball in a meadow

ewen,

At first I thought they only liked yellow flowers but then... plot twist!

Copper on purple. Bhutan style.

ewen, to photography
ewen, to photography

One of those teeny tiny little butterflies that might be a sapphire or might not and my only reference for Bhutanese blues doesn't actually show the upper wings for most of the species.

I do love how every flash of blue fluttering by could be something totally new to my eyes.

close up

ewen,

Seconds later I got a cheeky glimpse of a Heliophorus (Sapphire).

I feel I've wasted my life when instead I could be sitting in a cow paddock at 2900m looking for little flappy blues.

ewen,

What an amazing day! It was coolish and very damp this morning in Trongsa. I spotted one of these fellas just posing, next to the female. Then saw another. And as the morning progressed I realised they were everywhere :)

I was too slow to capture the female. They flitter off quickly. But the boys just hang about and show off their colours.

Azure Sapphire
(Heliophorus moorei)

Profile of lower wings
I loooooove bokeh + butterflies
That shade of Azure

ewen,

I really wish I didn't have to make a living and instead could just wander the Himalayas looking for meadows where butterflies enjoy the morning light.

Azure Sapphire here, male.

Lower wings

ewen, to photography

Saw a little Grass Dart and until today I did not know they existed. The wings look like they were designed in Sweden, so elegant and sleek.

Wings look like they're designed in Sweden
Elegant and sleek

ewen, to photography

Saw a little Grass Dart and until today I did not know they existed. The winds look like they were designed in Sweden, so elegant and sleek.

Wings look like they're designed in Sweden
Elegant and sleek

ewen, to photography

Did see a few butterflies today as well. This teeny little fella never gave me a look at the upper wing artwork, but was amazed to zoom in close and discover a thin little edging of blue scales.

The detail in butterflies is just astounding to me. I had no idea that was happening right before our eyes.

All these butterfly shots taken with the Sigma 105mm F2.8 Macro, pushed to F2.8 because I love the shallow depth of field.

Soooooo amazing

ewen,
ewen,

Just a little update to the Emerald Tiger Moth (Callindra principalis) seen zipping about Bhutan at 2900m.

I first saw one two days ago, and posted those pics above. But then yesterday while visiting Gangtey Gonpa another one landed right in front of me while walking the grounds of the gonpa!

That spiderman mask is wild
Just an amazing creature

ewen, (edited )

These guys have been our constant companions while staying in this patch of forest near Paro. Rain or sunshine, they are flitting about and adding a touch of joy to the landscape.

I wish I'd spent a little more time capturing them now. Instead, I let the fancy ones distract me too often! I have the same problem with donuts.

@photography

ewen, to photography

Found a bunch of these guys right next to the highway when I stopped to shoot a rice field. Peachy! Was pretty excited to get a chance to get close. Always amazed how some butterflies are indifferent to a huge big camera lens.

Junonia orithya
(Blue Pansy)

Junonia orithya (Blue Pansy)
Junonia orithya (Blue Pansy)
Junonia orithya (Blue Pansy)

ewen,

Saw a heap of Junonia today, some of them in a romantic mood. Slightly different markings at this spot in Trongsa compared to the Thimphu or Nobding shots I got the other week.

Just adore these little gems.

look a little closer
Romance is not dead

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • megavids
  • mdbf
  • ngwrru68w68
  • modclub
  • magazineikmin
  • thenastyranch
  • rosin
  • khanakhh
  • InstantRegret
  • Youngstown
  • slotface
  • Durango
  • kavyap
  • DreamBathrooms
  • JUstTest
  • GTA5RPClips
  • tacticalgear
  • normalnudes
  • tester
  • osvaldo12
  • everett
  • cubers
  • ethstaker
  • anitta
  • provamag3
  • Leos
  • cisconetworking
  • lostlight
  • All magazines