Ayuthaya Tips & articles

Don't miss...Ayuthaya's elephants

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In an extract from Lonely Planet’s Discover Thailand guide, Laithongrien (Om) Meepan, the founder/director of Ayuthaya Elephant Palace and Royal Elephant Kraal Village, gives us his don’t-miss Ayuthaya list.

Ayuthaya was the capital of Siam for over 400 years and elephants helped build the city and the country into what it is today. I became aware of the problems elephants faced after buying an elephant for my daughter’s 7th birthday. Now I work on elephant conservation in the former royal city.

Royal Elephant Kraal

The Royal Elephant Kraal is the only one left in Thailand. It was here that elephants were rounded up and trained for war. We initially bought seven elephants. Now there are over 180. We provide a safe haven for them and support the mahout culture. That is where the knowledge is.

Elephant taxi through the Historic City

We set up this program to get a few elephants off the streets as beggars and give them safe, legal, easy work. The elephants carry tourists through the historic park and its World Heritage-listed ruins. It is a very beautiful city and in the past elephants were a common mode of transport.

elephant_taxi

Elephantstay Program

Creating a sustainable future for elephants is not easy and requires many solutions. Our non-profit Elephantstay program, started and operated by Michelle Reedy and Ewa Narkiewicz, supports retired elephants through tourism. Visitors stay in the elephant village and learn about mahout life and get to bond with elephants. We love to see young children in the program because elephants need their help in the future. The elephants get a very high standard of care.

Elephant Conservation

The history of elephants and people living and working together spans 5000 years. We work to preserve this history by training the elephants in the old tradition (as military machines) and the mahouts as proud elite warriors. Elephants need to work and be productive to keep them stimulated in captivity. Many of our elephants went to work in the tsunami-devastated area of Khao Lak in 2004. If it was not for the tourists supporting elephants, there would not be any left in Thailand.

Things you need to know

Getting started: Check out the Elephantstay website for program details

Top Tip: Hire an elephant taxi to take you to the famous Ayuthaya ruins

Top Souvenir: Elephant art created by artistic elephants putting trunk and brush to paper

Comments

  1. 10 July 2010 3:39PM funsurprises Report this comment

    "If it was not for the tourists supporting elephants, there would not be any left in Thailand." Thats interesting, I thought it was the tourist business exploiting them, and the main reason they are not free and wild today. ... "Elephants need to work and be productive to keep them stimulated in captivity." Yes, because if i was held prisoner, i think i might feel better after some slave labour, carrying people around allday. Interesting. Actually, as well meaning as these places may seem, look at the bigger picture. Do you think painting a picture is what elephants do in the wild? Or just for the entertainment of us humans?

  2. 10 July 2010 3:41PM funsurprises Report this comment

    Please take a look at some real conservationists in Thailand... wfft.org bring-the-elephant-home.org

  3. 10 July 2010 3:41PM funsurprises Report this comment

    Please take a look at some real conservationists in Thailand... wfft.org bring-the-elephant-home.org

  4. 20 November 2010 5:02PM b500 Report this comment

    Let me know if you would you like to help buy more land for these elephants? Elephants have been domesticated for hundreds of years ... how would they survive if let free in the wild? Not that there is much wild left in Thailand.

    Its funny how we never go on about dogs that wear harnesses to lead blind people around and do things to help them ... is it "natural" for that dog to do that work?

    No human is making a profit from these elephants that paint, the income goes directly for food for the elephants. Contact me if you would you like to help raise money?

    Have you been to Elephantstay at the Royal Elephant Kraal and seen for yourself what goes on there?

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