Animals
and People in Thailand
March
24th, 2010 by Isabella
My family and I just visited
Thailand for two weeks. It was a lot different from India because they treat
animals a lot differently. Thais keep many different kinds of animals as pets.
Some of them are captured from the wild and some of them are bred just to be
sold as pets. Thai people kill and eat almost every type of animal. But animals
also eat people and give them diseases. There are lots of different
relationships between people and animals in Thailand.
Thai people eat the meat from all
kinds of animals. The first night we were in Bangkok, we ate at a street
kitchen with plastic chairs and tables for people to sit on. They served us
steaming bowls of rice noodle soup with slices of pork and fish balls. There
were cockroaches under our feet eating the rice noodles that fell from our
bowls. A few days later we walked down the same block where we ate the first
night, and we saw a man selling fried cockroaches, frogs, grasshoppers, and
maggots. People grill meat on skewers like chicken, beef, pork, and shrimp.
(Fact: Thailand is the country that exports the most farm-raised shrimp in the
world!) They even grill chicken livers and chicken tails. When I went to the
beach in Ko Samet, I saw a vendor selling flat squid
with writing on it. The man had a grill to cook the squid. He also had a
machine to flatten the squid. When he flattened the squid, it looked like
cardboard because of the ridges in it. All of the squid he flattened was
hanging from a cart that he was pushing. As I walked down the beach I saw a
restaurant with a display table out front. It was full of shrimp, squid, crab,
fish, horseshoe crab, cockles, and clams. The people in Thailand eat
everything!
In Thailand, many animals carry
sicknesses. Many dogs in Thailand have rabies. If there are 1000 dogs, about
100 of them will have rabies. If a dog with rabies bites a person, then the
person could get rabies. Then they would have to get shots in their belly.
Ouch! My mom and dad were very scared about the rabies, and did not let us get
near any animals that lived on the streets. Every time the sun went down, we
had to put mosquito repellent on because there are diseases that mosquitoes
carry such as Japanese encephalitis and malaria. Luckily there are geckos on
the walls of every single home. The geckoes eat insects (and maybe even
mosquitoes). People are very glad to share their homes with the geckoes.
We went to a market called Chatuchak Market, and we saw a lot of different animals for
sale as pets. Some of them were endangered. The pet market was huge. It could
have taken up 10 city blocks! People shoved their way through aisles full of
squawking parakeets in wire cages, lizards climbing fake branches, crocodiles
in glass tanks, fish in coral filled aquariums,
monkeys in plastic pens, and flying squirrels with collars and leashes to
prevent them from escaping. There were kittens mewing, puppies yapping,
hamsters sniffing, and rabbits eating pellets. Many of the animals were for
feeding other animals. Tiny mice were food for snakes, crickets were for the
tarantulas, and beetle larva was for the lizards. There was a clothing store
for pets. It sold teeny little skirts for Chihuahuas. Thais are crazy for their
pets.
I enjoyed going to the pet market
because there were lots of different animals that I had never seen. It was like
going to a zoo. Some of the animals were captured from the wild, but most of
the animals were bred to be sold as pets. It is a good thing when a person buys
a pet and takes care of it, but if you buy an endangered animal, the person who
sells it will be more eager to catch more and put them in the market to sell.
If this happens the endangered species cannot breed, and if more are caught
from the wild, they will go extinct. People should not buy endangered animals
like jungle birds.
Visiting Thailand was fun. There was
lots of good food to eat. There were also a lot of animals to see, mostly pets
in the market and on the street.