July 4, 2026

15 thoughts on “Elephants eat their crops. Farmers strike back. It’s a war that’s only getting worse

  1. On one hand dAMBULLA, Sri Lanka –- On a break, farmer Gunasinghe Kapuga draws on a cigarette and describes relations between farmers and elephants that raid. But at the same time he’s referring to increasingly deadly encounters between farmers and pachyderms.

  2. Basically now Kapuga fears that the latest Mideast war will intensify that conflict — because the war is pushing up the price of fuel and fertilizer, so farmers are spending more to plant less. What matters is whether anything changes because of it.

  3. In other words he’s referring to increasingly deadly encounters between farmers and pachyderms. Curious to see how this develops.

  4. Now Kapuga fears that the latest Mideast war will intensify that conflict — because the war is pushing up the price of fuel and fertilizer, so farmers are spending more to plant less. Meanwhile already, the stakes are high. Kapuga nods to men digging mud out of shin-deep water, preparing the paddy fields for planting rice.

  5. What stands out is he’s referring to increasingly deadly encounters between farmers and pachyderms. That is the part worth paying attention to.

  6. The bigger issue here is now Kapuga fears that the latest Mideast war will intensify that conflict — because the war is pushing up the price of fuel and fertilizer, so farmers are spending more to plant less. That changes the calculation.

  7. The bigger issue here is he’s referring to increasingly deadly encounters between farmers and pachyderms. That changes the calculation.

  8. Think about it: now Kapuga fears that the latest Mideast war will intensify that conflict — because the war is pushing up the price of fuel and fertilizer, so farmers are spending more to plant less. That speaks volumes.

  9. The detail about dAMBULLA, Sri Lanka –- On a break, farmer Gunasinghe Kapuga draws on a cigarette and describes relations between farmers and elephants that raid is something people should sit with.

  10. Reading that already, the stakes are high. Kapuga nods to men digging mud out of shin-deep water, preparing the paddy fields for planting rice — hard to argue with the logic there.

  11. What stands out is now Kapuga fears that the latest Mideast war will intensify that conflict — because the war is pushing up the price of fuel and fertilizer, so farmers are spending more to plant less. That is the part worth paying attention to.

  12. Think about it: dAMBULLA, Sri Lanka –- On a break, farmer Gunasinghe Kapuga draws on a cigarette and describes relations between farmers and elephants that raid. That speaks volumes.

  13. So the bottom line is he’s referring to increasingly deadly encounters between farmers and pachyderms. Wonder how this will land.

  14. What stands out is a bull male elephant is seen meticulously dismantling an electric fence inside Yala National Park in Sri Lanka. That is the part worth paying attention to.

  15. On one hand he’s referring to increasingly deadly encounters between farmers and pachyderms. But at the same time now Kapuga fears that the latest Mideast war will intensify that conflict — because the war is pushing up the price of fuel and fertilizer, so farmers are spending more to plant less.

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