|
Thailand kicks off elephant polo
tournament
Chiang Rai -
Buddhist monks sprinkled holy water and draped garlands over the
necks of 28 elephants at the start of a week-long polo tournament on
Monday.
After the blessing, the elephants
were treated to a sprawling buffet of fruit and vegetables ahead of
the first match in a tournament to raise money for conservation
projects to protect the beasts.
Seven teams from 15 countries are
competing in the tournament. The elephants are actually handled by
professional trainers, who guide the animals by kicking and prodding
their heads with metal hooks.
The players, who ride on the back
behind the trainer, wield a long mallet to whack the ball across a
100 metre-long (330-foot) field.
Each team has three players, and
the games consist of two seven-minute chukkas of playing time, with
a 15-minute break.
The seventh annual tournament is
taking place at the luxury Anantara Golden Triangle resort, on a
ridge overlooking the misty hills of neighbouring Laos and Myanmar.
"The elephant polo tournament is a
charity event to help elephants," an organiser at the hotel said.
Proceeds from the event benefit the
National Elephant Institute, which promotes elephant conservation.
Thailand has an estimated 4,000
elephants -- 2,500 domesticated and 1,500 in the wild -- sharply
down from about 50,000 in 1950, according to polo organisers. --
AFP
Click
Here To Have Your Say On This Story
Brudirect.com News
|