Eli's

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richard
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Post by richard »

I find this sick

Wish I could adopt one but no room in my sparse garden



The lure of high pay for hauling logs has exposed the elephants to this life-threatening danger. Each mahout receives 30,000-40,000 baht per elephant per month for hauling the logs. But they must find food for the elephants themselves.

Vets measure the artificial leg being made for Motala, a female elephant. She drew public sympathy after she was maimed by a landmine in the jungle of neighbouring Burma in 1999. Public donations of over four million baht are kept in a bank to look after her. — SOMSAK SUKSAI

"Over the past five years, more and more elephants have been wounded by landmines," said veterinarian Preecha Puangkham, director of the medical section at the Elephant Hospital in Lampang's Hang Chat district.

One of the hospital's patients, a female named Motala, captured the hearts of the nation after its struggle for life after treading on a mine in 1999. Its leg was mutilated and a prosthetic leg was made for it.

Since the hospital was opened in 1993, it has provided treatment to 2,825 elephants, said Dr Preecha.

At present, 447 elephants have been admitted to the in-patient wards and 20 need special treatment. The out-patients number almost 400.

The hospital said most elephants were treated for wounds sustained while hauling logs. A source said medical check-ups also revealed traces of narcotics in some elephants. Some mahouts admitted they mixed methamphetamines with bananas, which they gave to the elephants so they would work longer hours.

Dr Preecha said some elephants "decommissioned" from the job of log-hauling were taken to resorts to entertain tourists.



Image


Lovely animals :( :( :(
RICHARD OF LOXLEY

It’s none of my business what people say and think of me. I am what I am and do what I do. I expect nothing and accept everything. It makes life so much easier.
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margaretcarnes
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Post by margaretcarnes »

Yes Richard, Motala was big news for a long time, and the vets did some groundbreaking work. At the time there was a lot of talk and promises about stopping the use of elephants in logging. The risk of injury to them was already well known, but many people hoped that Matalas' plight, and the ensuing publicity, would help to end it, (not to mention the illegal logging as well.)
But around the same time the Thais started to crack down on elephants in the cities, like Bangkok and Pattaya. There had been road accidents involving elephants, and as Bernard Trink once observed, an elephant in the dark in Bangkok could easily be mistaken for a parking space!
As I understand it a Mahout and his elephant are together for life. If this is correct, and assuming that eli's can't easily be released back to the wild, I guess the restrictions in the cities drove some back to logging for a living. There is certainly IMO no excuse for feeding drugs to the poor creatures, and no excuse for the baby eli's still seen on the streets after the new 'policies' had apparently taken effect.
I would be interested to hear more informed views on the whole issue.
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richard
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Post by richard »

Maggie

They were banned from the streets of BK but are now back. Even seen seen them in HH. Down Bintaban during Songkran
RICHARD OF LOXLEY

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margaretcarnes
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Post by margaretcarnes »

Right thanks Richard. Had actually noticed one on the Songran pics posted on HHAD, but thought it had been imported just for the occasion.
BTW - while we wait for other comments (and I'm suprised there haven't been any so far) - what about the drugging of tigers?
Most ex-pats must have seen them lying docile while tourists have pics taken with them. We all know that tiggers are wonderful things, but I don't think that's normal behaviour!
A sprout is for life - not just for Christmas.
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