AMAZING THAILAND’S AMAZING ANIMALS
Monkeys and snakes and elephants and bears, oh my!
By Dan McCrory
My third trip to Thailand was the most memorable because I’m
an animal lover.
We started our trip by flying into Bangkok, arriving at four
in the morning. Our friend and guide Sombat picked us up at the airport and
drove us an hour and a half south to the beachside city of Pattaya, The sun
wasn’t up yet when we hit town and our hotel wasn’t ready for us. We found an
open restaurant and gorged ourselves on local delicacies while the restaurant’s five waiters swiftly
attended to our needs. After breakfast/dinner we drove around the beach area
till daybreak. Remarkably, we stumbled upon a Starbucks. The coffee was the same,
but the tops of the muffins had been sheered off to accommodate the locals’
preference.
With the morning mists still swirling around us, we stumbled
onto a live snake show. We sat there bleary-eyed, watching grown men take
unnecessary risks as they teased cobras and other venomous snakes. (The
reptiles obviously didn’t like all the attention; they hissed and swayed
threateningly.) After the show we
discovered their mini-zoo. We patted and photographed a baby Asian elephant,
standing chest-high in all its wiry, wrinkled glory, and cooed at a six foot
declawed sun bear, or Mee-Mah, meaning “dog-bear” that barely resembles
its American cousins and does look like a large dog.
One night was enough of Pattaya; the local wildlife was, for
the most part, of the human variety. We drove back to Bangkok and flew out of
Suvarnabhumi Airport north to Chiang Mai.
For $20 US per person, we booked a trip to a local elephant
sanctuary. We gazed up in awe, overwhelmed by their sheer size. They lifted
tourists with their trunks and patiently put up with us as we patted and rubbed
their wiry hides. We watched while their handlers bathed them in the river that
flowed next to the compound. Then, two by two, we “boarded” our elephants,
forded the river, and climbed into the jungle on a narrow path into the hills
then back down and across the river. On their backs we swayed in the sedan
chair as the elephant lumbered along. Looking over the side of the massive
pachyderm it looked like a 10 foot drop to the path. If the elephant tumbled
off the path, and managed to NOT roll over on us and squash us like bugs, the
drop off the steep hillside alone would probably finish us. I tried to relax
and enjoy the view. After the hike, we were treated to a demonstration of their
other skills: they tossed around utility poles to illustrate their original use
in heavy lifting, painted pictures, played soccer, and danced. (We have since
discovered that not all elephant camps are the same. This most holy of animals
in Thailand is often mistreated.)
Two days later, we flew back to Bangkok and drove just north
of the city to the town of Lopburi, home to seemingly thousands of long-tailed
macaque monkeys. All the windows of shops and houses in Lopburi are barred to
keep the little thieves out. They outnumber the local citizenry and are just
barely tolerated because they draw tourists.
We bought a bag of peanuts and headed to the ruins of a
Buddhist temple across the street where, we were told, the monkeys congregated.
We needn’t have bothered. Within minutes we were surrounded. We looked up and
they were everywhere: walking down the street, hanging from the power
lines, standing in front of us, staring wistfully at my girlfriend’s bag of
peanuts.
One monkey swiped at the bag. It split open and suddenly a
sea of monkeys swarmed over and around our feet until every peanut was gone. We
bought more.
On the drive up, our friend Carla told us about a childhood
incident that had scarred her for life and generated a fear of monkeys: One of
her friends had owned a little spider monkey and Spanky had been either
attracted to, or appalled by, Carla’s red hair. He had hopped onto her back and
pulled it out in little fistfuls.
We laughed about it as we entered the temple ruins with
monkeys gazing down at us from every vantage point. There was absolutely no way
history was going to repeat that episode! We happily doled out peanuts to
grateful primates until one of them spotted Carla’s red hair and jumped onto
her shoulders. We fought him off pretty quickly, before she was fully
traumatized. In fact, she laughed off the episode. I really think it cured her
aversion to monkeys. Of course, I’m the one who was bitten by an
orangutan, but that’s a story from another trip.