Maeng Da – Giant Water Bug (Lethocerus indicus)

This big guy was attracted to the lights we leave on at night in our pavilion. I found him in a weakened state under our Japanese-style table in the morning. This is an extremely important food source in many Asian countries because of its strong odor, which it uses to attract mates and is used as a potent flavoring in various dipping sauces. This insect is also eaten whole in Thailand, usually deep fried and then stripped of legs and carapace.

Because of the perceived sexual behavior of this bug (just sitting around attracting females with its scent), the term maeng da has been adapted in Thai slang to mean something like a pimp or useless man who mooches off of women.

No, I did not eat it.

Fish references for Thailand

Fish and Fish Dishes of Laos is my go-to book on any freshwater creatures I see/catch/cook/eat here in SE Asia. It was written by famed British diplomat and historian, Alan Davidson, who included recipes used by the royal cook for the king of Laos. I only have a reprint of this book, which suits me just fine, since I’d feel guilty carrying around an original in the trunk of my car with a short bush pole and a battered old tackle box. I will find the original someday in a used book store in downtown Vientiane, I can just feel it.

I recently found a link to a related e-book (free) that might turn out to be interesting: The Fresh-Water Fishes of Siam, or Thailand. It was published posthumously by Hugh M. Smith, an American ichthyologist and powerful administrator in the Bureau of Fisheries, who spent time in Thailand as adviser to the Thailand fishery service from 1923-1935. I’ve only read a few random pages so far, and it’s pretty interesting.

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There are a couple more items I wanted to write about here, but my daughter is insisting that giving her my full attention is more important than going full fish nerd here at this particular time… Ah, well, it is her birthday, after all.

How to root and upgrade an HTC Desire HD running Gingerbread to a custom Android ROM

There are basically two methods and I tried both: You can create a “gold card” and turn S-OFF, then root manually, which will entail a lot of futzing around with your phone and an extra mini SD card, or you can do the heavy lifting by booting into a Linux Live CD (choose the latest 32-bit LTS version) and automating most of the process with a slick software package called Advanced Ace Hack Kit. I recommend using the latter technique, even if you’ve never used Linux before.

It’s not easy if you’re totally new to it, but if you’ve enough confidence to try installing a custom ROM on your phone, you can probably work it all out: Download Ubuntu, burn the .iso file to a CD, choose to try out Ubuntu from the CD instead of installing it when the option appears. Figure out how to open the Terminal application, and you’re ready to go. Follow the instructions in this handy guide, keeping a couple of things in mind: Although the guide states, “no ROM downgrade is needed prior to attempting to root,” I did in fact need to downgrade my ROM (Advanced Ace Hack Kit told me I had to) first. Also, “any 32 bit computer running Linux” probably means “any computer booted into a 32-bit version of Linux.” The important links in that document that have changed, I have linked to in this post. Lastly, I ran into a problem after downgrading the ROM, deleting the downgraded ROM, and trying to install CyanogenMod ROM with ClockworkMod Recovery: The automated installation stopped with an error, leaving me with no bootable ROM and the phone showing the white HTC loading screen in perpetuity. I solved this by holding down the Volume Down key and pressing the Power key to boot into ClockworkMod Recovery, then using it to choose the .zip file to flash (CyanogenMod 7 ROM in zip archive had already been downloaded to the mini SD card in a previous automated step). That was it.

Some other problems I encountered, such as the Hack Kit prompting for a password, were solved by RTFM (reading the effin manual for the kit).

The only backup I performed beforehand was my phone contacts, which I saved to my mini SD card (the SD card contents were not noticeably affected by any of these procedures), because I wanted to start totally fresh.

A Visit to Wat Nongwang

For the past year, we’ve been relying on a Cefiro specialist in Khon Kaen for repair of our Cefiro A33 (Infiniti I30), and we had noticed a huge pagoda just down the street several times. A few weeks ago, we took the kids along with us and decided to visit the pagoda after dropping off our car to fix leaky power steering hoses. It was a great trip to a temple truly rich in history, Wat Nongwang (aka Wat Kaen Nakorn)

Welcome home

I was greeted with the following exchange upon returning home to bring my sick kids (who choose to play hooky in unison) lunch:

MAX: Daddy, are you going to work again?
DADDY: Hello, Max. I brought you some noodles.
MAX: DADDY, ARE YOU GOING TO WORK AGAIN, DADDY?
DADDY: Why?
MAX: I want you to go make a lot of money! GO TO WORK AGAIN, PLEASE, DADDY!
MINA: YEAH DADDY, GO TO WORK!

The monsters have grown too powerful to control.