There is a troop about 20-odd kms south of here. TTL's sister was up from Bangkok and she and her daughter wanted to visit a particular temple and, as I'm the one with a car, drove them there. On th way back there were a dozen or so on the road (this isn't the highway, it'd be a C-road) so we stopped. There were probably another two dozen off the side of the verge in th trees and on the grass. Pretty cool. But around this area specifically? No. TLL said when she was about four (she's mid fifties now) her father was off in the field and saw her sitting under the tamarind tree (under which I am now typing - it's about 60 feet tall, now) and he came over to her to get some water. It wasn't her. It was a bear! So, with expansion of cultivation and infrastructure, it's all farmland now with tree borders. Pla ra? TLL boils it every now and then - which is quite a noisome surprise sometimes as my bedroom window opens out to the kitchen - to keep it from turning into something sentient. But I don't eat it at home. My only exposure is if I buy somtam from a streetside stall and forget to ask for fish sauce instead. I also take a prophylactic for various intestinal worms each June, and each December I take the anti- Asian-fluke one. I don't eat raw anything. I grew up in a developing country having to take malaria tablets more often than I had cereal for breakfast. My body is literally flooded with anti-parasitics and anti-virals. The far north east - I can't remember specifically which province so, for agument's sake, let's just say Skaon Nakhon - has the highest rate of liver cancer in the world. Sure, while we all love a lao khao now and then, some get a tad carried away insofar as they need a shot in he morning to stop the shakes so they can go off and use power tools for twelve hours. But the other thing I read, and this leads into your comment, is that the laab pla and other raw fish dishes can be riddled with flukes which enter a human's liver. And that doesn't sound good. The most prevalent disease I've seen - and you've been here a lot longer than I - is diabetes. In the older population, not so much in the children, it seems. The local clinic on the highway often (I'd say at least monthly) has a reasonably sized crowd out front to get their diabetic medications and/or have their blood taken/tested.
Create an account or sign in to comment