Elephant Polo: The Biggest, Weirdest, Slowest, and Most Expensive Game in Thailand
My first experience with polo was with the granddaddy of all opulence, elephant polo. And yes, before you ask, elephant polo is played on the back of an elephant. The price tags associated with elephant polo are massive as the elephants themselves. The only thing small about elephant polo is the circuit on which it is played. It includes only three countries, Thailand, Sri Lanka, and Nepal.
The theory by most have-nots, of which I am one, is that the rich are bored, and that they invent unusual sports to entertain themselves, such as croquet, yachting, and sailing. Cricket is perhaps the greatest example of what happens when you have too much money, and nothing to occupy your free
time. A single game could last for three days, and end in a tie score. Any
person of normal means would fall asleep in the interim. But the rich
fortify themselves with expensive drinks, and conversations related to other
sports of the opulent, such as car racing and fox hunting.
Polo has all of the markings of a rich man's game. The horses cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. The players must be clad, head-to-toe, in an outfit, which costs as much as most normal people earn in a year, but which can only be worn while playing. You tend to get strange looks if you show up at the food court at your local mall, sporting a leather riding-whip, and wearing a helmet and knee-high jackboots. If not for the skin tight ridding britches, which clearly accentuate if you are circumcised or not, you could be the wayward soldier of some invading army. Instead, you just look like a leather-boy, who got lost on the way to the Pride Parade. Most people could afford the purchase of a horse and uniform, if they raided their retirement fund, and if they convinced their children to quit school, and go to work in a poorly-lit garment factory in Indonesia. But, the expenses, which keep the sport exclusive only begin there. Next, you have to actually play polo. Since my one bedroom flat is too small for polo, I found that I would have to join a polo club, which costs thousands of dollars per year. Next, since you don't just want to play in your hometown, you have to join the polo touring circuit. This entails paying entrance fees to the games, and purchasing plane tickets, not only for yourself, but for your steed as well. And finally, the tournaments, tremendous events, played over a period of days, tend not to be sponsored by low-budget guesthouses. Instead, they are hosted by luxury resorts, which cost big money.
This year, I was introduced to elephant polo. Specifically, the King's Cup Elephant Polo Tournament, in Huahin, Thailand, sponsored by the Anantara Hotel and Chivas. Thanks to the sponsors, all of the players, and some lucky members of the press were housed in deluxe accommodations, and kept well plied with Whisky. The teams were heavily represented by Britain and Commonwealth Countries, with the exceptions of the all Thai ladyboy team, the Screwless Tuskers, and the Mercedes, who were all German. Each team is composed of four members. No more than three members may play at a time, leaving one player in reserve. The game is divided into two chuckas, or halves, each lasting seven minutes, with a fifteen minute break in between. The playing field is similar to a football pitch, with one goal post at either end. Just as in regular polo, the objective is to drive a small ball into the goal of the opponent, scoring one point. To drive the ball, the players use a mallet, which given the size of the elephants, is considerably larger than the one used in horse polo, generally 2.5 meters long. The elephants are driven by Mahouts, one of Thailand's ethnic minorities, whose job, for century immemorial, has been to handle elephants. The Mahouts were small men, who perched, barefooted, on the neck of the elephant, steering the mighty beast with a combination of secret words and physical gestures. The Mahouts used a metal hook to get the attention of the willful, if lazy, creatures, who apparently were less enthusiastic about elephant polo than the players were. The mahouts also kicked the backs of the elephant's ears to signal left and right hand turns. Since, I am told, an elephant's skin is several centimeters thick, one would have to believe that they hear, rather than feel the blows.
Often, even if a player manages to make the most brilliant shot of the day, a swing that would surly take the ball home, it is accidentally blocked by the impassable legs of an elephant, often from that players own team. Sometimes an elephant will step on the ball, burying it, impossibly, in the ground. In this instance, play must be suspended, and a restart called. Of course, any sport which involves elephants will also involve elephant dung. According to the officials at the polo grounds, an elephant consumes 80 kg of food per day. With six team elephants, and one referee elephant on the field, that gives the potential for 560 kg of excrement to be released, at will, by the elephants, often when the players are pressed close together, in a scrum for the ball. Only the rich would require you to wear white pants in a game where there was any chance at all of being shat upon by an elephant.
The elephant polo tournament is played only once a year in Huahin, but you can
visit the elephants at the elephant conservancy in Lampang, year round.
Since the end of logging in Thailand, the elephants have been unemployed. So,
many wonderful people have pooled their resources and creative energies to
find some positive way of supporting the elephants. At the elephant
conservancy you can find out about the elephant art project, where elephants
paint pictures. There is also an elephant orchestra, where elephants play
music. Rides and treks on elephants are always available. And who knows?
Maybe if you bring your own mallet, they may just let you hit a ball.
Born to Italian parents, Antonio Graceffo is originally from New York City. He is fluent in German, Spanish, Italian, and Mandarin Chinese and speaks Thai and Khmer conversationally. Antonio has studied and competed in martial arts and boxing for over twenty-five years, and has studied at the Shaolin Temple, in Mainland China and a Muay Thai (boxing) temple, in Thailand. He works as a full time adventurer, writer, and film star. He currently lives in Cambodia, where he is staring in Kung Fu films, and boxing professionally.
Antonio Graceffo's writing has appeared in publications too numerous to list including: Bangkok Post Escape Artist, Travel in Taiwan, Travelmag (UK), Good Morning Chiang Mai, Travellers Impressions, Marco Polo, Canoe (Canada), Views Unplugged, Kung Fu Magazine, Yellow Times, Bike China, The Rose and Thorn, Blueberry Press, Go Nomad, Close Quarters Combat, Go World, and Black Belt Magazine. His travel writing was featured in an anthology, published in the UK, Travellers Tales from Heaven and Hell Part Two. Antonio's book about his studies at the Shaolin Temple, The Monk From Brooklyn has been published by GOM Publishing, and is available at BarnesAndNoble.com and GOM Publishing. His book about his adventures in the Taklamakan Desert, The Desert of Death on Three Wheels is currently under review for publication, in 2004. Contact the author at: antonio_graceffo@hotmail.com and visit his website at SpeakingAdventure.com © 2004
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