Elephant Calf Learns the Ropes
Posted at 3:05 pm June 22, 2009 by Laurie Amador and Mindy Albright(more…)
Hi, everyone.
We are starting to see how fabulous Elephant Odyssey at the San Diego Zoo really is. The elephants are doing pretty well (see previous post, Elephants: A New Beginning). Tembo hasn’t lain down at night yet, but Devi and Sumithi are doing so, and I am guessing they are getting some sleep. We know this because when we go out to clean the yard in the mornings, we find elephant body prints in the dirt. We are even able to tell the prints apart: which one was made by Sumithi and which one by Devi. I am sure it won’t be too much longer before a Tembo print appears.
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After an amazingly busy seven days last week talking to radio stations and television news crews and answering countless questions about Elephant Odyssey at the San Diego Zoo, IT IS OPEN!
Friday morning we hosted an official “unveiling” for our distinguished guests and donors. With everyone looking on, the curtain was pulled to reveal the unmatched view across Mammoth Plaza and on into the rest of Elephant Odyssey. Shortly after the curtain was opened, Ranchipur and the rest of the elephants made their way across the open exhibit to see what all the fanfare was about.
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How does one write about moving elephants you’ve taken care of from a home they have known for over 25 years and one that I have worked in for almost 18 years? There are so many cliches that fit this situation, but none of them feels right.
On Thursday, May 7, the elephant keepers for the Zoo started work at 5 a.m. We did our normal routine that we have been doing for years. We put the girls in their barn and cleaned their yard. We readied their crates, and at around 6 a.m. we started to load them. By 6:45 they were all secure in their crates and the cranes were called to lift them onto their trucks for the quick trip to Elephant Odyssey.
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Rick is sharing his adventures in Africa with staff from our conservation partner, Elephants Without Borders. Read his previous post, Botswana: Chobe River.
May 9, 2009 (Saturday)
Yesterday, Friday, we did our last bit of filming and said our goodbyes to Chobe National Park. After we got the shots we needed, Shea Johnson, the San Diego Zoo’s videographer, and I had a great time just watching several herds of elephants come down to the river from the surrounding area. I’d have to say one of my favorite things to watch was the littlest babies rolling and playing in the mud. It was also very interesting to watch the mothers, aunts, and older siblings stand protectively around and over the youngsters while they played.
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Rick is sharing his adventures in Africa with staff from our conservation partner, Elephants Without Borders. Read his previous post, Botswana: Lions.
May 7, 2009 (Thursday)
In the morning we met up with Dr. Mike Chase and Kelly Landen to do some interviews with them about Elephants Without Borders (EWB). It was a beautiful morning, so we decided to do the interviews along the shore of the Chobe River near the offices of EWB.
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Rick is currently in Africa to see elephants. Read his previous blog, Botswana: Still Tracking Elephants.
May 6, 2009 (Wednesday)
Today we woke up before sunrise to gather some gear and head out to see if we could find the lions we had been hearing the night before. The air was cool and thick with moisture, dew had settled across the Chobe National Park, and it was just a gorgeous scene as we drove away from camp in the early twilight. Many bird species were starting in with their morning calls and scattered groups of impala were grazing along the way.
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Rick is currently in Africa to see elephants. Read his previous blog, Botswana: Tracking Elephants.
May 5, 2009 (Tuesday afternoon)
After lunch, we headed back the way we came, checking a side trail off of the firebreak trail for elephants, but still no luck and no sign of the elephants we were looking for. We turned back toward the river, some 60 miles (100 kilometers) away and decided we would meet up with the river at the point where the Chobe National Park starts and then drive in to the park from there.
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