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Ailing elephants find sanctuary in Tennessee

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Where the elephants roam By William Mullen Tribune

staff reporter

Sun May 29, 9:40 AM ET

 

 

 

In the rural hills of central Tennessee, workmen are

almost finished installing electrified double fences

around 2,700 acres of forest: an 8-foot-high,

chain-link barrier on the outside, and a much stronger

inner fence of tubular steel and cable.

 

 

The strong one keeps huge animals inside. The other

keeps the public out.

 

This is the Elephant Sanctuary, a 10-year-old hospice

for elderly, ailing elephants from circuses and zoos.

Here the animals spend their final years roaming,

dining on wild plants and cavorting with their own

kind.

 

Chicagoans began hearing a lot about it in October,

when an elephant died of a rare infection in Lincoln

Park Zoo and animal-rights activists demanded the

zoo's other two elephants be sent to Hohenwald. The

subsequent deaths of those elephants--one from old

age, one apparently from the same infection--ratcheted

up the fury over not moving them.

 

It is an ongoing fight that illuminates the tensions

between the sanctuary and zoos and circuses that once

voluntarily sent ailing elephants to the unusual

Tennessee facility. Now, with the sanctuary often

siding with animal-rights groups in their fierce

criticism of zoos, many resist sending animals there.

 

Still, some heartwarming success stories at the

sanctuary have made an impression on the North

American zoo community, which is considering building

spacious elephant " conservation centers. " Those

centers physically would resemble the Hohenwald

sanctuary, but the philosophical differences would be

vast.

 

Sanctuary founder Carol Buckley will not allow her

elephants to breed; she only takes females. By

definition, she says, a sanctuary is a non-breeding

facility where animals live out their lives. She also

won't let the public in to see the elephants, saying

they are not there to entertain visitors.

 

The very existence of zoos has always revolved around

giving people an up-close look at animals. Those

visceral encounters, the theory goes, generate

appreciation for the peril animals face in shrinking

wildernesses globally. Zoos also maintain their

captive populations through breeding and manage them

for genetic diversity, a skill now needed to maintain

wild populations.

 

Buckley, 51, and sanctuary co-founder Scott Blais, 32,

have long been outspoken in their feelings that nearly

all zoos give elephants inadequate, poorly designed

spaces to live in, contributing to chronic health

problems.

 

They are adamant that elephants shouldn't be made to

perform, or even be kept on public display. They say

no more should be brought in from the wild and prefer

that none be bred in captivity.

 

PETA praised

 

Buckley is forthright in her admiration and gratitude

for People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, an

animal-rights group that wants to eliminate elephants

from zoos. Some of the elephants at the sanctuary

arrived as a result of campaigns by PETA activists.

 

" If it is going to take an extremist group to make us

change, to make us do things differently with

elephants, I am in support of it, " Buckley said. " The

elephant stuff [PETA does] is right on. I support them

100 percent. If it wasn't for PETA, it wouldn't be

happening. "

 

That is a big change of heart, she concedes, from the

days when she hired out to circuses, performing with a

female Asian elephant named Tarra that she had taught

to roller skate.

 

In 1984, she said, a woman grabbed her after a show in

California and shouted: " That's abuse. You're abusing

your animal by making it skate like that. "

 

The accusation stunned her. " I knew it wasn't abusive,

but the perception of it was that it was abusive, " she

said. " It got me to look at the bigger picture of what

and how we are going to teach the public about these

animals. Eventually I stopped the act, because I

realized it was sending the wrong message. "

 

Over the next few years she began toying with the

sanctuary idea, especially after she and Tarra joined

the African Lion Safari in Ontario, where resident

elephants could roam off-view from the public,

responsible only for performing regularly in an arena.

 

There she met Blais, then a teenager working as a

part-time keeper and being trained, she said, by men

who controlled the elephants with hooks and clubs.

Blais was in awe when he saw Buckley work with

elephants.

 

" The guys would have a terrible struggle to get Rascha

[an elephant] to lay down for a bath. Carol showed me

how to pat her on the hind end and say, `OK, Rascha,

you're a good girl, and I'm going to ask you to lay

down for a bath.' And she would, with no fuss. "

 

Buckley moved on, but she and Blais kept in touch,

talking about a sanctuary plan. In 1995 they found 110

suitable acres 85 miles southwest of Nashville near

Hohenwald, an old hill town hit hard by its employers

fleeing to cheap overseas labor. Bringing Tarra along,

they put up a barn for four elephants.

 

For a year, no money or other elephants came their

way. Then early in 1996, a circus owner asked Buckley

to come to Florida and take a sick elephant named

Barbara. CNN also called, asking if they could do a

story on the move.

 

" The next thing you know, " said Buckley, " we got a

$10,000 check from somebody who saw the show and liked

the idea of what we were doing. That really started

things going. "

 

Problems in captivity

 

More journalists did stories on the sanctuary, telling

how Buckley started it on the premise that elephants

need access to large amounts of space. In the wild

they walk 30 to 50 miles daily, she said, and denying

captive elephants the ability to roam causes them

physical and psychic problems.

 

Many captive elephants die of bone disease, which she

charges comes from spending much of their lives

standing on concrete surfaces. Moreover, she contends

that disease is prone to spread among animals kept in

close quarters.

 

The zoo community disagrees, noting that life

expectancies for wild and captive elephants are about

the same and that wild elephants are prone to the same

foot injuries and diseases as captive ones. But as a

procession of ailing, older elephants arrived at the

sanctuary and seemed to thrive, Buckley found a

powerful megaphone in the media.

 

On July 6, 1999, National Geographic was at the

sanctuary to film the arrival of Shirley, a

52-year-old Asian elephant that had been living alone

in a Monroe, La., zoo for 22 years.

 

The TV crew had left for the day when Jenny, a

30-year-old gimpy with arthritis, wandered into the

barn from a day outdoors. Seeing Shirley in a barn

stall, Jenny began wailing with such passion that

Blais grabbed his own video recorder.

 

" Jenny knew right away who Shirley was and was wailing

and screaming, " Buckley said. " Shirley wasn't quite

sure how to take the attention; then all of a sudden

we saw her eyes got big, like there was a jolt of

recognition as she remembered who Jenny was. "

 

Buckley knew that in 1976, the two elephants had

briefly been owned by the same circus. It turned out

Shirley, an adult, had been housed with younger

elephants while recovering from a broken leg. Jenny,

then 7, was in that group and immediately solicited

mothering from Shirley. They were together only a few

weeks before each was leased to a different circus.

 

As the reunited elephants bellowed 23 years later,

keepers put them in adjoining stalls. They tenderly

entwined their trunks between the bars. The next day,

released into the outdoors, they were inseparable.

When they weren't using their trunks to caress each

other, they were raising them to trumpet their joy.

 

The moving reunion became the centerpiece of a

National Geographic documentary on captive elephants

that won an Emmy and brought international fame and

donations to the sanctuary. Generous, well-to-do

Tennesseans joined the sanctuary's board of directors.

 

 

Last year, Buckley said, 34,000 donor/members

contributed $4.5 million. The money is being used to

expand the original 110 acres to 2,700 acres and to

build bigger, better barns, she said.

 

They now house a herd of 11 Asian female elephants as

well as three African females that have their own

facility and separate range to roam. When construction

is complete, there will be room for 12 elephants the

sanctuary wants to bring from the Hawthorn Corp., a

troubled McHenry County circus animal training

facility.

 

Buckley said wild-elephant researchers visiting the

sanctuary say the elephants behave much as they would

in the wild, displaying identical social dynamics and

herd organization.

 

Shirley, for instance, took the role of matriarch of

the sanctuary's Asian females. In nature, elephant

herds are made up of adult females and their young,

with the males coming around only to mate. Each herd

is headed by an elder female on whose experience and

knowledge the rest rely.

 

Jenny, meanwhile, bosses others around as if she were

Shirley's daughter. In the wild, matriarchal

leadership is passed on through lineage.

 

The elephants can choose at all times to be in the

barn or out roaming the hills, but much of their diet

comes from browsing the grounds. They have learned

through the years which wild grasses and other plants

are tastiest in which season.

 

Three times a day the staff brings supplemental foods,

vitamins and medicines, wherever the animals may be.

Keepers are convinced the elephants seek out certain

plants for medicinal purposes, such as eating the bark

of slippery elm or poison ivy leaves for upset

stomachs.

 

With the relatively mild Tennessee winters, Buckley

said only in January do the animals generally spend

long periods in the heated barns.

 

`It's not about you, here'

 

As big as the property is, it remains a captive

enclosure, and with captivity come some eccentric

behaviors. The Tennessee hills, for example, provide

an endless stream of stray dogs, and a little white

one named Bella has become Tarra's pet.

 

" She lives and goes everywhere with Tarra, " said

Buckley. " Tarra pets her with her trunk and her foot.

Bella will roll over and solicit belly strokes from

Tarra. "

 

One natural behavior Buckley will not allow is

breeding.

 

" If they come here, we let them become extinct, " she

said, underlining the philosophy that elephants should

not be in captivity. " There is a big difference

between extinction in captivity and in the wild. "

 

Nor is the public permitted to see the elephants. The

sanctuary's electronically controlled gate swings open

only for visitors on prearranged business, though

exceptions are sometimes made for large donors.

 

" People go to zoos to be entertained, " said Buckley.

" We say that elephants shouldn't be on display. Here,

you don't get to come on our grounds. It's not about

you; here, it's about the animals. "

 

Instead, remote video cameras broadcast live footage

through " Elecam, " a feature on the sanctuary's Web

site, elephants.com. Buckley says hundreds of people

from all over the world regularly watch the elephants,

getting to know their lives in intimate detail. She

also uses Elecam as a teaching tool while lecturing in

classrooms via computer linkups.

 

Visitor center coming

 

Buckley expects tourism to increase after the

sanctuary builds a visitor center next year, though

people standing on an observation platform probably

will never be closer to an animal than 300 yards. The

best view will be via 30 remote video cameras visitors

will use to locate and zoom in on elephants with

handheld controls.

 

" There are alternative, more progressive ways to teach

and to not exploit the animals, " said Blais. " Even if

you don't see the elephants with your own eyes from

the visitor center, we think you'll have a more

powerful experience than if the elephant was standing

just 2 feet away from you.

 

" We hear from people in Hohenwald that the elephants

won't have an impact on them unless they can see the

animals, but people aren't going to get a true

appreciation for them unless they see them in a

natural setting. "

 

Stung by the campaigns against elephant captivity, the

American Zoo Association last week reported results

from a Harris poll showing that 95 percent of adult

Americans believe zoos give children greater

appreciation of elephants and 94 percent believe

children are more concerned about animals they learn

about in zoos.

 

In January, 78 zoos currently holding elephants in

North America announced long-range plans to expand

their elephant collections and to broaden research and

support of surviving wild populations.

 

Taking notice of the sanctuary idea, AZA executive

director Sydney Butler said the zoo industry is

considering trying something similar--not hospices,

but " conservation centers. "

 

" AZA institutions have considered species conservation

centers, leading to larger spaces for animals, " Butler

said during a recent Chicago visit.

 

The big difference would be that the zoo version would

be a breeding facility with bull elephants, resulting

in " true family herds, with infants. " The centers

probably would permit public access and might shift

family herds in and out of zoos.

 

" It has to be carefully considered for the future, "

said Butler, stressing that plans for such centers are

only preliminary.

 

Townspeople critical

 

In the town of Hohenwald, Buckley has garnered support

from civic leaders and has been enthusiastically

received at schools, where she volunteers to lecture.

 

Still, many residents are surprisingly sour about her

and her enterprise.

 

" You hear all about the elephants out there on

television, but as far as we're concerned, they're not

here, because we never see them, " said Carolyn Bell,

manager of Hohenwald's only motel, which gets some

business from occasional sanctuary visitors.

 

" I don't think bad about it; I just don't think it

benefits the town. I think they started it to give

themselves a job. That's my opinion, and a lot of

other people around here think so, too.

 

" If it would let people in, maybe they'd think better

of it. Some kids around here will never see an

elephant in their whole life. "

 

Buckley said she is aware of the negative

undercurrents in the area but believes those will

disappear once the sanctuary visitor center opens and

begins to attract tourists.

 

She also insists the sanctuary is merely a bystander

caught in the struggle between the zoo industry and

the animal rightists, but she makes it clear that she

thinks zoos need to pay attention to her operation and

change how they care for elephants.

 

" I don't see zoos ever becoming extinct, " Buckley

said. " I see them getting managers who have a vision

to change their facilities to meet the needs of the

animals. Instead of a business mind, you need a

visionary to run the zoos. "

 

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wmullen

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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