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Elephant at Terminal 21 Pattaya: Immediate Action Taken

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5 minutes ago, carlyai said:

How come they can quickly manage 1 elephant but can't manage lady boys?  

 

Elephants are normal 

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  • When I first arrived to Thailand, it was not uncommon to see a small elephant being used as a beast of burden dragging logs on Thepprasit Road in Pattaya. Since then, Thailand has lost over 90% of all

  • I saw several working, drinking with customers in a couple of the Soi 6 bars 

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Elephant at Terminal 21 Pattaya: Immediate Action Taken

 

Oh, there was a real elephant there!  I thought it was some wiseacre making a comment about my mother-in-law.

 

21 hours ago, snoop1130 said:

An elephant wandering near Terminal 21 Pattaya

 

No problem, perhaps it was after a jumbo sized meal!

 

 

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5 hours ago, Yellowtail said:

I had a good friend (RIP Steve) that was an Elephant trainer and whose wife (RIP Irish) had a live pony ride. They loved the animals, and the animals loved (such as they can) them.

 

Animals do tricks and work and whatnot because they want to. 

No they don’t!

Only shared to, hopefully, bring a smile. Fourteen years ago I was a newby in Chiang Mai. While I had made 4 previous monthlong trips in 2009 and 2010, this was my retirement break-in period. Out to the bars in the eve, really enjoyed joking with the girls while buying them “Lady drinks” and flirting great entertainment. Elephant …  oh, right. So, one eve here in Chiang Mai, I get on the motorbike to go back to the house … carefully! I am on the Superhighway … wait, what? Ahead in the motorbike left shoulder I see this red light swinging left, right, left, right. Whoa, just how much did I drink?! Slowing down my vision focuses on the rear of an elephant whose Mahout had attached a red light to its tail! Whew … for a moment I thought I would have to give up drinking!

20 hours ago, damian said:

I remember them in Bangkok walking along the roads at night. I thought it was clever that they attached red reflectors to their tails for visibility. 

Yeah, they aren't as visible from behind as zebras!

Before 2010, I sometimes witnessed some mobile attraction.

A man dressed like a farmer walking a (baby) elephant in the touristy streets of CNX.

 

Often carrying a few bags  of cucumbers, each  priced 10-20b(for curious visitors to hand feed his  animal for their fun/photo shoot).

 

image.jpeg.b85c32bdd3059bbdedf15389f928a9f8.jpeg

On 9/15/2025 at 6:01 PM, HappyExpat57 said:

When I first arrived to Thailand, it was not uncommon to see a small elephant being used as a beast of burden dragging logs on Thepprasit Road in Pattaya. 

 

Was it in 1970s?

19 yrs ago, one expat said he often saw elephants working at construction sites  carrying building materials as you mentioned.

 

I heard it on the border run van from CNX to Maesai.

1 hour ago, black tabby12345 said:

 

Was it in 1970s?

19 yrs ago, one expat said he often saw elephants working at construction sites  carrying building materials as you mentioned.

 

I heard it on the border run van from CNX to Maesai.

Early 2000's.

4 hours ago, HappyExpat57 said:

Early 2000's.

Hi, thank you for the additional information.

Was it in rural area, or in any big city?

 

 

8 minutes ago, black tabby12345 said:

Hi, thank you for the additional information.

Was it in rural area, or in any big city?

 

 

As I previously posted:
 

"When I first arrived to Thailand, it was not uncommon to see a small elephant being used as a beast of burden dragging logs on Thepprasit Road in Pattaya."

On 9/16/2025 at 3:39 AM, Grumpy one said:

Some of those Jumbo's drink like fish

Smell like them too :whistling:

When I lived in Kata beach on soi kok’Tanode, a mahout and elephant stopped in front of my small Thai house. He asked for water, well, I didn’t realize back then how much an elephant drank ! I was running back and foré to the bathroom with a bucket for 30 mins. It was wonderful to see though, I gave the mahout a beer and biscuits but didn’t have any bananas for jumbo. Tho I’m quite sure in those days there were plenty growing on our soi.

These days of course, we are wiser, and to see the majestic beasts in cities and towns breaks my heart. The elephant camps though are good, apparently well looked after and tourists can feed them,  bathe the babies and make donations. No riding .

On 9/15/2025 at 1:12 PM, simon43 said:

As a TPV, I remember running after an elephant in downtown Patong after it sat on a parked car.

What means TPV. I guess it is the same as BAH

On 9/15/2025 at 11:24 AM, snoop1130 said:

An elephant wandering near Terminal 21 Pattaya with its mahout caused a stir this week, drawing crowds and prompting immediate action from city officials.

 

Something for TAT to concider.

17 hours ago, HappyExpat57 said:

As I previously posted:
 

"When I first arrived to Thailand, it was not uncommon to see a small elephant being used as a beast of burden dragging logs on Thepprasit Road in Pattaya."

 

Thank you for your reply post.

A kind of amazing that big animal was  working in a city area in the 21st century, not just half  a century ago...

20 hours ago, black tabby12345 said:

 

Thank you for your reply post.

A kind of amazing that big animal was  working in a city area in the 21st century, not just half  a century ago...

It isn't long ago that a large restaurant near where I live had elephants as an attraction. Many eating places here have large gardens, stocked with  fish, ducks, chickens, maybe larger stock like goats, similar to a petting zoo. But I always felt so saddened to see these great beasts tethered on short chains, their frustration evident. I stopped going to the place. 

Thankfully they seem to no longer have them.

I remember back around 2005 seeing a young elephant on Soi 7 and Soi 8.  Really not a good idea to have them there.  Yes a tourist and even somewhat a locals attraction, but dangerous for the animal and people

4 hours ago, jacko45k said:

It isn't long ago that a large restaurant near where I live had elephants as an attraction. Many eating places here have large gardens, stocked with  fish, ducks, chickens, maybe larger stock like goats, similar to a petting zoo. But I always felt so saddened to see these great beasts tethered on short chains, their frustration evident. I stopped going to the place. 

Thankfully they seem to no longer have them.

 

There used to be several zoo diners in Pattaya, not in the distant past?

Not very nice in hygienic term, as well  for safety to workers and clients.

Being chained means these animals are under constant stress.

Once they accidentally break free, can cause quite a mess and danger to the people.there.

 

Thank you again for your repeat reply post.

Wish you have a good day.

 

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