The effect of full moon party on environment in Thailand
The disreputable occasion in Thailand that attracts millions of tourists around the globe is known as the Full Moon Party. The party is renowned as one of the biggest Thailand events that occur once-a-month since the fiscal 1985.
In fact, more than fourteen thousand tourists all over the world stopover at Koh Pangan where the full moon party takes place every month. The full moon festivity takes place at the Thailand’s Haad Rin beach. The seashore hosting the full moon party is packed up with a number of merchants dealing in Thai rum (Sang som).
Equally, the beach has bantam taverns and structures for liquor such as red bull and whisky. The blend of trance, top forty, and christen step melodies offered by several disk jokers who contest for the ill-mannered sound at the event is evident. The merrymaking covers the entire nighttime and at times it overlays until the following day. Based on the events that occur during the full moon party, various activities tend to affect the Thai environs (Rittichainuwat, Qu & Brown, 2011).
The full moon celebration does not bring into mind what Thailand accepts socially as it is not regarded as a practice in Thailand. According to Hoare (2004), Haad Rin beach was initially a prehistoric site prior to the initiation of the full moon event.
The party has now turned Haad Rin coastline into one of the Thailand’s filthiest strands. This affects the aquatic life owing to the litter and garbage thrown haphazardly into the oceanic bodies by thousands of tourists. Besides, the scholar asserts that the Thai event is unethical and is considered to be hazardous to human lives.
In order to retail drugs like MDMA, crazy drug, magic burgeon, and bhang, the hotel as well as pub dealers bribe the police at a high rate (Campbell, 2013). This encourages rampant smoking that in turn pollutes the environment and affects human lives passively (Hoare, 2004). The blends of trance, top forty, and christen step melodies by the ‘Dee jays’ in addition to the uproar coming from the party tend to cause ecological imbalance due to excessive noise.
The full moon celebration has turned out to be a trashy degradation in Thailand’s milieu. According to Hampton (2013), the environment faces many challenges arising from the full moon party. The marine life gets affected by the pliable pails full of liquor thrown into the ocean by teenagers (Bashan, 2011). The dissipation on the environment at the island results from the predicament of lack of fresh water to accommodate large crowds visiting the party.
Similarly, Hampton (2013) proclaims that the milieu is debauched by massive masses of scattered plastic and cracked glass on the soil. The usage of heroine, ecstasy, and mineral meth drugs besides intoxicating mushrooms and bhang changes the atmospheric condition (Hampton, 2013). Otherwise, cases such as corrupt activities, rapes, prompted ailments, drunkenness, and drowning at the party directly or indirectly have impacts on the surroundings.
According to Uysal and Williams (2013), the full moon party has shocking and direct effects on the environment. The deficiency in sub-structure encourages skeptical and useless waste dumping during the full moon celebrations. The scholars emphasizes that visitors of the full moon celebrations places their individual needs beyond that of the environment notwithstanding the public knowledge that such gatherings instigate environmental destruction.
Dumping wastes at the party affects maritime environment since such left-overs are regarded as raw and untreated sewage (Uysal & Williams, 2013). The scholars estimate the daily disposed garbage during the party at twelve tons. The sewage is dumped in the terrestrial and into the aquatic bodies. On the other hand, environmental pollution is evident at Thailand’s full moon party as vast acres of seaside forest are cleared to pave way for building of the beach resorts, hotels, and bars.
All these ecological problems augment from the poor enactment of accessible Thailand’s conservational schemes and regulations. Presently, the party has extended to Ko Samet national park thus increasing mass fabrication of the needless and unlawful ventures that generate heaps of non-environmental garbage in the coastal woodlands (Hertzberg, 2012).
In regard to the Daily Telegraph, the full moon party has turned out to be the paradise of teenagers. The excessive invasion of the full moon party by teenagers has really denatured the environment. In fact, teenagers engage in activities that pollute the environment as there are no forces, parents, specialists, or guidelines that could govern them at the party (Morgan, 2010).
The adolescents contaminate water bodies with their wicked actions accruing from the unregulated drinking that moreover impose injury, harm, and death to them. For instance, the Daily Telegraph revealed the demise of a nineteen year old rugby participant from Sydney at the Full Moon Party. Besides, air pollution is obvious since the revelers engage in the consumption of magic mushroom and marijuana that lead to boundless debauchery of the atmosphere (Ehrhardt, 2014).
The Full Moon Party contains several events with many activities lined up in Sang som and bantam taverns including liquor (red bull and whiskey). Several activities including a combination of trance, top forty, and christen step tunes that produce vulgar sounds directly or indirectly affect the environment.
Besides, the usage of heroine, ecstasy, and mineral meth, intoxicating mushrooms, and bhang affects the atmosphere (Reynolds, 2000). Additionally, many cases such as corrupt activities, rapes, prompted ailments, drunkenness, and drowning at the party pose impact on the environment. The merrymaking event therefore has evidently affected the environment directly or indirectly as asserted by the scholars.
References
Bashan, Y. (2011). Thailand’s Full Moon parties are ‘schoolies on steroids’. Web.
Campbell, C. (2013). Thailand’s Full-Moon Parties Have Become a Trashy Disgrace. Web.
Ehrhardt, R. (2014). The Environmental Impact of Thailand’s Full Moon Parties. Web.
Hampton, P. (2013). Backpacker tourism and economic development: Perspectives from the less developed world. New York, NY: Routledge. Web.
Hertzberg, A. (2012). Responsible Travel: The Full Moon Party. Web.
Hoare, T. (2004). Thailand: A global studies handbook. New York, NY: ABC-CLIO. Web.
Morgan, R. (2010). The environmental impact of Thailand’s full moon parties. Web.
Reynolds, A. (2000). Utopia means nowhere: The film of the beach threatens to min Thailand forever. New Statesman. Web.
Rittichainuwat, B., Qu, H., & Brown, J. (2011). Thailand’s intemational travel image. Cornell Hotel and Restaurant Administration Quarterly, 42(2), pp.82-95. Web.
Uysal, M. & Williams, J. (2013). Current issues and development in hospitality and tourism satisfaction. New York, NY: Rutledge. Web.