In the city and elsewhere you find lot of boards advertising ‘massage’ especially the Thai message; you see many Vietnamese or people with similar looks ………. In different names - a deep, full-body massage progressing from the feet up, and focusing energy lines throughout the body, with the aim of clearing blockages in these lines, and thus stimulating the flow of blood and lymph throughout the body, is considered a healthy experience. Massage has been one of Thailand's calling cards ~ but this one at Chiang Mai offers to be much different and awesome in its pure sense.
Being
trampled on by a three-tonne elephant is not usually the first thing that
springs to mind when thinking about ways to relieve stress. But tourists are
flocking to a jungle camp in Thailand for just that. The spa treatment is being
offered in Chang Mai province, where a number of Asian elephants - that weigh
anywhere from 2.25 to 5.5 tonnes - administer the massage using their trunks
and feet ~ the gutsy among you can imagine about lying infront of an elephant
and getting trampled upon, though gently.
In the melee, TOI and other newspapers
reported that at Trivananthapuram, a tourist couple from Ahmedabad were trampled to
death by a wild elephant while on a trekking session in Gavi in Pathanamthitta
district. It was reported that Bhupendra
Raval (52), who works as a General manager in a private firm and his wife Jagruthy
Raval (50), an ISRO scientist, were on a two-hour trekking trip, accompanied by
a guide, and organized by the state forest department.
Another guide who
was 300 metres away from the incident said there was a loud shriek from the
middle of the cardamom plantation [part of the trekking path] and when he
rushed to the spot the elephant had already mauled the middle-aged couple and
injured the guide who had accompanied them. It occurred at Gavi, an integral
part of the Periyar Tiger Reserve. Although this is for the first time such a
gruesome incident has occurred in this area, it is a fact that trekking into
the buffer zones of the Tiger Reserve poses a huge risk to life as elephants
routinely stray into these areas. During
peak tourist season over 1,000 visitors reach Gavi every day putting great
strain on the rich wildlife habitat of the area.
The Periyar Tiger
Reserve has a healthy elephant population which has been increasing due to
conservation activities of the forest department but ironically the Kerala
Forest Development Corporation wants to cash in on its huge tourist potential
by pushing for one-day trekking expeditions which seem to have boomeranged on
them. At times, the flash of the camera is stated to irk the elephants.
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
16th Feb 2015.
