WA WAnderings

That evening, I contemplated continuing NE to Cue as the lure of a superb Cue Burger and a bottle of Far Cue (😜) red, previously documented several times, was in my mind.

However, on reflection, I opted against that for a few reasons: the wildflowers further N were past their peak, I had been to, around and through Cue several times in the last few years and the bush flies were in extreme abundance and a very aggressive nuisance (that, in itself, is a good biological indicator that the season was 'turning'.)

Instead, I opted to head SE from Yalgoo to Paynes Find and then into the N part of the wheatbelt agricultural region to overnight before the run home.

First stop, not far SE of Yalgoo was Jokers Tunnel, a bit of a gold-mining legend in the area (Jokers Tunnel, an outback gold mining mystery). Reputedly originating as a rich gold strike, it's 100m long and cuts through a hill, but its alleged richness didn't live up to spruikers' claims.
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Awesome photos! Amazing flora! Are there many bugs on the windscreen? Have read many things online saying how insects are dying out :( Are the remote areas still ok??
 
Awesome photos! Amazing flora! Are there many bugs on the windscreen? Have read many things online saying how insects are dying out :( Are the remote areas still ok??

Plenty of insects on the windscreen, and - as I mentioned - the bush flies were in great abundance and with particularly persistent nuisance behaviour. It is, incidentally, an insect the biology and ecology of which I happen to know a great deal about.

I see no overt difference now after c. 50 years travelling around rural and remote WA professionally as an agricultural research scientist specialising in entomology and as a tourer.

But of course that doesn't mean some narrower specific measurements may support what you have read.
 
Plenty of insects on the windscreen, and - as I mentioned - the bush flies were in great abundance and with particularly persistent nuisance behaviour. It is, incidentally, an insect the biology and ecology of which I happen to know a great deal about.

I see no overt difference now after c. 50 years travelling around rural and remote WA professionally as an agricultural research scientist specialising in entomology and as a tourer.

But of course that doesn't mean some narrower specific measurements may support what you have read.
That is very reassuring, I feel sometimes I have witnessed the reduction, but perhaps that is just my own new cosmopolitan surrounds that skew my observations. My own entomological focus is on glow beetles, specifically the dual-glow variety that are present in northern Colombia. Beautiful things.
 
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That is very reassuring, I feel sometimes I have witnessed the reduction, but perhaps that is just my own new cosmopolitan surrounds that skew my observations. My own entomological focus is on glow beetles, specifically the dual-glow variety that are present in northern Colombia. Beautiful things.

Tell me more by PM, if you wish.
 

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