PHOTOS: Elephants lumber across Bangkok polo field

Players take part in a match during the annual King’s Cup Elephant Polo Tournament at a riverside resort in Bangkok, Thailand March 9, 2017. Photo: Jorge Silva/ Reuters
Players take part in a match during the annual King’s Cup Elephant Polo Tournament at a riverside resort in Bangkok, Thailand March 9, 2017. Photo: Jorge Silva/ Reuters

About 30 elephants took part in the opening of Thailand’s annual elephant polo tournament in Bangkok on Thursday.

The King’s Cup Elephant Polo Tournament, now in its 15th year, is a charity event to raise money to help wild and domesticated elephants. It brings polo players from around the world looking for a different challenge.

Asian elephants can weigh more than five tons and move at more than 25 kilometers an hour.

Mahouts handle the elephants while the players try to strike the ball with a stick that is much longer than the one used when playing on a pony. The ball is the same size as a regular polo ball.

“A lot of my experience lately has been rodeo,” said Canadian Adam Janikowski, one of the players. “I don’t think I ever want to do rodeo events with any of the elephants.”

Elephant polo divides conservationists.

Some say it is cruel. Others say it has helped to raise funds to protect the animals and has highlighted the problems they face through habitat loss, poaching and abuse.

Organizers said the King’s Cup has raised more than USD1.3 million (THB46 million) over 15 years.

The elephants are treated to a buffet of fruits and vegetables.




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