Watch: Hungry elephant raids grocery store in Thailand, stuns shopkeeper with surprise visit
A hungry elephant, casually strolling through a nearby national park in search of food, entered a grocery store in Thailand and began eating the snacks. The viral incident was recorded and shared across multiple social media platforms.
As per the video, a huge male elephant, named Plai Biang Lek stopped in front of a convenience store located near Khao Yai National Park. He entered the store and casually grabbed the snacks with his trunk and started eating them without any fear. Even when park workers tried to make him leave, the elephant wasn’t scared and he didn’t move.
The elephant didn’t cause any major damage, except for leaving muddy footprints on the floor and slightly damaging the store’s ceiling. He simply walked out of the store, holding a bag of snacks with his trunk.
Kamploy Kakaew, the shop owner was amused with the entire incident as she described her encounter with the elephant. She said he ate about nine bags of sweet rice crackers, a sandwich and some dried bananas she had bought that morning.
He left without hurting anyone after getting his snacks.
Danai Sookkanthachat, a volunteer park worker familiar with Plai Biang Lek, said the elephant is about 30 years old. Lek has previously entered people’s houses in search of food, but this was the first time he was seen in a grocery store.
“After he left the shop, he went on to open a bedroom window of another house,” he told The AP.
Danai said wild elephants in the Khao Yai National Park have been coming out of the woods to raid people’s kitchens for many years, but this year he has started seeing them going into random places to find food.
According to the Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation, there are approximately 4,000 wild elephants in Thailand as of 2024.
As farmers expand agricultural activities into forest areas, elephants are being driven out of their shrinking habitats in search of food, increasing the risk of dangerous encounters with humans.
The elephant didn’t cause any major damage, except for leaving muddy footprints on the floor and slightly damaging the store’s ceiling. He simply walked out of the store, holding a bag of snacks with his trunk.
Kamploy Kakaew, the shop owner was amused with the entire incident as she described her encounter with the elephant. She said he ate about nine bags of sweet rice crackers, a sandwich and some dried bananas she had bought that morning.
He left without hurting anyone after getting his snacks.
“After he left the shop, he went on to open a bedroom window of another house,” he told The AP.
Danai said wild elephants in the Khao Yai National Park have been coming out of the woods to raid people’s kitchens for many years, but this year he has started seeing them going into random places to find food.
According to the Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation, there are approximately 4,000 wild elephants in Thailand as of 2024.
As farmers expand agricultural activities into forest areas, elephants are being driven out of their shrinking habitats in search of food, increasing the risk of dangerous encounters with humans.
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