Archive for 2009

New Prostheses for Elephants Motala & Mosha

Tuesday, December 29th, 2009

Motala and Baby Mosha each received their new prostheses from the Prostheses Foundation.  Both Asian Elephants are survivors of landmine accidents and star in the feature-length elephant conservation documentary, The Eyes of Thailand.

Motala stepped on a landmine on August 15, 1999.  She received her first prosthetic limb 10 years later, on August 16, 2009.  After a brief set-back, she slowly began to put more and more weight on the prosthetic limb as she learned to walk with it.  On December 25, 2009, she received a new foot pad for the prosthesis.

The Prostheses Foundation gave Motala's prosthesis a new foot pad.

The Prostheses Foundation gave Motala's prosthesis a new foot pad.

Mosha stepped on a landmine in June 2006.  Because she was younger (only 7 months old), her wounds healed faster and the Prostheses Foundation built a prototype for a prosthetic elephant’s leg for her in June 2008.  This is Mosha’s fourth prosthesis and she will need more throughout her lifetime as she continues to grow.

Mosha's new prosthesis, January 2, 2010.

Mosha's new prosthesis, January 2, 2010.

The Prostheses Foundation checked on Mosha’s and Motala’s prostheses on December 22, 2009.  Soraida Salwala, founder of the Friends of the Asian Elephant (FAE) Elephant Hospital outside of Lampang, Thailand, expected them to receive their new prostheses on January 2, 2010.

Happy Holidays!

-Windy Borman

Producer, Writer and Director, The Eyes of Thailand

P.S. The Eyes of Thailand is currently accepting donations to edit and distribute the film in 2010.  You can make a tax-deductible donation through the film’s fiscal sponsor, the San Francisco Film Society, by clicking here. Thank you for your support!


Meet the Patients: Mosha

Monday, December 28th, 2009

Mosha (which means Star in the Karin language) is a 3-year old Asian Elephant at the Friends of the Asian Elephant (FAE) Elephant Hospital.

When she was 7-months old, Mosha stepped on a landmine along the Thai-Burma border. Her owner donated her to FAE, where Soraida Salwala and her staff could rehabilitate and care for her.

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Image provided by Jody's Jungle

When we first met Mosha in 2007, she was a curious 2-year old, who wobbled on three legs.

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Image provided by Jody's Jungle

When we returned in August 2009, Producer/Director Windy Borman filmed Mosha receiving a prosthetic limb from the Prostheses Foundation for the documentary, The Eyes of Thailand.

Mosha and Windy greet each other.

Mosha and Windy reunite in August 2009.

On December 22, 2009, the Prostheses Foundation visited Mosha and made a mold of her leg to create her fourth prosthesis, which they will present to her on January 2, 2010 as a New Year present.

Prostheses Foundation staff take a mold of Mosha's leg.

Prostheses Foundation staff take a mold of Mosha's leg.

As a permanent resident of FAE, Mosha will continue to receive prosthetic limbs throughout her lifetime, which can be as long as 60-80 years.

-Windy Borman

Producer, Writer and Director, The Eyes of Thailand

P.S. The Eyes of Thailand is currently accepting donations to edit and distribute the film in 2010.  You can make a tax-deductible donation through the film’s fiscal sponsor, the San Francisco Film Society, by clicking here. Thank you for your support!

Action Alert: Protect Baby Circus Elephants

Saturday, December 26th, 2009

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PETA has acquired shocking photos from a former Ringling Brothers Circus trainer that show frightened baby elephants at Ringling’s breeding center undergoing barbaric training methods to make them perform in the circus.

Please sign this email to conduct an immediate investigation and initiate criminal action against Ringling and all other culpable parties.

PETA is also calling on: parents to stop taking their kids to the circus, and Ringling’s sponsors not to support elephant abuse. For more information, visit PETA’s anti-Ringling Brother’s website.

Action Alert: Sign Petition to Save Thai Elephants

Thursday, December 24th, 2009

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ACTION ALERT: With elephant logging now illegal in Thailand, many owners look to the tourism industry for income.  There are now over 2,000 elephants working in tourist treks, as street beggars, or performing in elephant circus shows in Thailand.  While some tourists think it is fun and exciting to see an elephant up close, feed her bananas, or walk through the jungle on her back, the reality is much different.

The elephants are not only overworked, but they also suffer injuries from performances or car accidents, water poisoning from dirty city water, starvation, and the list goes on… But tourist awareness and education will decrease the demand for working elephants.

The Lonely Planet Guides are printed in 8 languages and are one of the most popular traveler’s guides. This petition demands the addition of the dark side of the elephants tourism industry in the company’s books, so that travelers may make conscious decisions before unknowingly supporting any abuse.

Baby Mosha’s New Leg

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009

December 22, 2009– Baby Mosha, a 3-year old Asian Elephant who stepped on a landmine when she was 7-months old, will receive a new prosthetic limb from the Prostheses Foundation at FAE’s Elephant Hospital on January 2, 2010.

Prostheses Foundation measures Mosha's leg before creating the mold.

Prostheses Foundation measures Mosha's leg before creating the mold.

On August 15, 2009, I filmed her receiving a prosthesis for The Eyes of Thailand documentary film, featuring Soraida Salwala and the Friends of the Asian Elephant (FAE) Elephant Hospital in Lampang, Thailand.

Getting a mold of Mosha's leg.

Mosha has grown so much since August that the Prostheses Foundation returned today to make a mold of Mosha’s leg in order to build a new prosthesis, which they will present to her as a New Year present.

As a permanent resident of FAE, Mosha will continue to receive prosthetic limbs throughout her lifetime, which can be as long as 60-80 years.

The Prostheses Foundation will use the plaster mold to build a new prosthesis for Mosha.

The Prostheses Foundation unpacks the new prosthesis foot pad for Motala.

While the Prostheses Foundation was at the Elephant Hospital, they checked on Motala and will change her prosthesis’ foot pad on January 2, 2009, also.

-Windy Borman

Producer, Writer and Director, The Eyes of Thailand

P.S. The Eyes of Thailand is currently accepting donations to edit and distribute the film in 2010.  You can make a tax-deductible donation through the film’s fiscal sponsor, the San Francisco Film Society, by clicking here.

Update on Baby Namfon

Monday, December 21st, 2009

I have some sad news to share.  On December 18, 2009, Soraida wrote:

At 8.55 p.m. Baby Namfon fell on the sand and we helped her up, trying to walk her to the mattresses but she resisted. Now she is standing but shaking, urinated what we think has blood in it but will check for certain.

The owner has been contacted for final decision. He puts it in our hands. We shall do all we can to take good care of the Baby until the final moment comes.

Bless her,

Soraida

Within hours, Soraida wrote:

I am sorry to share with you this sad news. Baby Namfon could not make it, she died early this morning at 2.50 a.m.

We shall bury her next to Baby Dumbo, Tiny and Toansai.

We are all very sad but there are many more lives to be saved. MaeNoi who is expecting the baby needs our care, Somsri, Jok and other elephants are waiting to be tended too. Even though our hearts are heavy… we shall move on with our strong determination to help the elephants in need.

Thanks to you all for the support.

Soraida and all at FAE

I met Baby Namfon, an Asian Elephant who was rejected by her mother shortly after birth, while filming The Eyes of Thailand at FAE in August 2009.  At that time she was 5-months old, and, though slow to put on weight, still very curious about new people.

Baby Namfon and Julia in August 2009

Baby Namfon and Julia in August 2009

On December 14, 2009, Namfon was featured in the “Meet the Patients: Namfon” blog post.

Soraida, and all her staff and supporters at FAE, are in our thoughts.

-Windy Borman

Producer, Writer and Director, The Eyes of Thailand

Meet the Patients: Tahnee

Monday, December 14th, 2009

Unfortunately, Soraida and the vets at FAE cannot save every elephant that visits their hospital.  Tahnee was a 70+-year old elephant Asian Elephant and a permanent resident at FAE.  (Elephants can live for 60-80 years).  On December 5, 2009, Tahnee’s health began to deteriorate. Soraida reported:

Tahnee has saliva dripping from her mouth, does not eat grass just bananas. Has not drank water this morning. She eats and chews very slowly. Sign of old age, Dr. Preecha says.

Dr. Preecha starts an IV drip on Tahnne (December 5, 2009).

Dr. Preecha starts an IV drip on Tahnne (December 5, 2009).

By December 6 the situation was worse:

Tahnee’s hind legs are shaking and she does not want to lie down.  We are afraid she might hurt herself if she collapsed, so dried grass has been scattered around since last night.  Staff is putting up support railing at the Nursery, which has soft sand.

We will continue the [IV] drip, since she has not eaten nor drank.  It’s 12noon.  Her chance of survival is slim.

With tears, Soraida

Soraida with Tahnee on December 6, 2009.

Soraida with Tahnee on December 6, 2009.

On December 7, 2009, Tahnee collapsed. Soraida wrote:

Tahnee collapsed at 1:49 am and left in peace at 2:09am. No words could express how we all are feeling. She was a daughter, a sister, a friend and wherever she might be now, she remains in our hearts.

She will wake no more, Oh never more… Soraida

Tahnee's grave, December 8, 2009.

Tahnee's grave, December 8, 2009.

Meet the Patients: MaeNoi

Sunday, December 13th, 2009
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MaeNoi is helped off the truck after arriving at FAE.

December 12, 2009–New patient who arrived yesterday, MaeNoi, an eleven year old pregnant elephant, has been relieved from bloat. MaeNoi is already 15 months pregnant which means she was pregnant when she was only less than 10 years old. [According to Wikipedia, female elephants usually reach estrus around age 13 and carry the fetus for 22 months.  For more information, click here.]

Last night MaeNoi cried for her friends. They work at the hotel in Chiang Rai but  she managed to sleep for over an hour. Mosha is so interested in MaeNoi since they are both young, she climbed her fenced enclosure to have a look.

-Soriada
Founder, FAE

Meet the Patients: Namfon

Sunday, December 13th, 2009

Namfon is the youngest elephant at FAE.  Earlier in 2009, we reported that:

Namfon was disowned by her mother, Boonpan, shorty after she was born on April 27, 2009.  Because elephants are social creatures, they learn parenting skills from the matriarchs in their herd.  Namfon’s mother never learned how to be a mother and therefore tried to trample Namfon when she attempted to nurse.   Soraida writes, “We tried to persuade Boonpan to recognize her own baby but her behaviour this morning was the intention to kill. They have to stay in different Infirmaries away from each other… Boonpan killed her first offspring and Namfon, which means “rain water”, is her second. We would not risk the baby’s life and shall do our best to make the two happy.”  After several unsuccessful atempts, FAE found an elephant from a nearby elephant camp who just weaned a baby to be Namfon’s wet nurse.  Several weeks later, she is beginning to gain some weight.

In August 2009, I met Namfon while filming the The Eyes of Thailand at FAE.  Here she is saying hello to Production Coordinator Julia.

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Namfon gives Julia a Hello sniff at FAE in August 2009.

Since then, Namfon has become more active, but still struggles with eating and putting on weight.  FAE is experiencing an usually cold winter, so they’ve given Namfon a blanket, which she wears as a “coat” on her walks.

Namfon walks with Dr. Kay at FAE.

Namfon walks with Dr. Kay at FAE.

On December 12, 2009, Soraida reported, “Baby Namfon has 13.1 Litres of milk yesterday and 2.5 litres this morning. Now she is having a walk with blanket over her body.”

We hope that her health continues to improve into 2010.

-Windy Borman

Producer, Writer and Director, The Eyes of Thailand

P.S. December 14, 2009–Soraida wrote: “Baby Namfon has fever, we are trying to do our best. I do not know what else to say, but she is standing, having slight difficulty in  breathing. Dr. Preecha and Dr. Kay are treating her.”

Coco Hall’s “Elephant Girl”, Part 3

Monday, November 23rd, 2009

Coco Hall has been an animal activist since 1991 cocohall_picture1when she spent six weeks on the Sea Shepard crew. She has been focused on elephants for seven years, working to release the seven elephants at Six Flags Discovery Kingdom, supporting elephant sanctuaries such as PAWS in San Andreas CA, and as a Board Member of Joyce Poole’s ElephantVoices. She has been a political artist for twenty years, covering environmental and animal rights themes with her multi-media sculptures. She coauthored and drew her first graphic novel, Ignoring Binky, published in 2001 by Checkmate Press under the nome de plume Beverly Red.

Elephant Girl is a graphic novel based on the life of Calle the elephant, who was euthanized by the San Francisco Zoo in 2004. Intertwined with her story is that of a young girl who lives a parallel life. Both kidnapped in India as children, smuggled to the United States, they find themselves prey of an unimaginably foreign world. The tale rises upon the girl’s determination to break both their chains and return to India.

The Eyes of Thailand blog posted Parts 1 and 2 on November 9 and 16, respectively.  Part 3 of 3 appears below…

Elephant Girl AFTERWORD (cont.)

By Coco Hall

The 1980s witnessed the price of ivory reach $100 per pound. Rural farmers and herders could make more selling the tusks of one elephant than by 12 years of hard labor. And that is not to mention the numerous wars supported by the ivory spoils of fallen elephants. The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) in 1990 slowed the decimation of elephants, but since all countries have not supported the ivory ban, the killing continues.

Except for most Asian females, elephants’ incisor teeth are tusks, which grow throughout their lives. Poachers target the elephant with the largest tusks, i.e. the mature leaders. Without the guidance and accumulated knowledge of such elders, both female and male herds become leaderless juveniles.

The fabric of both human and elephant societies depends on parents teaching their offspring how to behave, modeling proper behavior, and handing down knowledge necessary for survival. Studies of animals and human genocide survivors show that early trauma can have permanent psycho-physiological effects on brain and behavior including a susceptibility to PTSD and a tendency to violence in adulthood. Elephant groups or individuals become “rogue”, destroying farms, settlements, and even killing people.

“Elephant Breakdown”, G.A. Bradshaw, Allan N. Schore, Janine L. Brown, Joyce H. Poole, Cynthia J. Moss, Nature. Vol. 433, 2/24/05

These escalating conflicts with humans in both Asia and Africa are one of the main adversities we face in saving the species.

Most of the 500 captive elephants currently in North America live in zoos, circuses, wildlife parks (which are essentially zoos), and breeding farms. As few as thirty (30) live in true sanctuaries where they are not publicly exhibited or coerced in any way. Unlike zoos, even with well meaning and kind keepers, sanctuaries provide the space and autonomy elephants need to enjoy a healthy life. For an elephant, with its vast natural habitat and complex social network, life in a circus is no different than imprisonment. Daily physical and verbal abuse is the norm. Trainers in circuses routinely beat elephants with a bullhook, a metal instrument similar to a fireplace poker. Ringling Brothers circus forces their elephants to perform daily for 48 to 50 weeks a year. When not performing, they are kept chained as many as 22 hours a day, standing in their own excrement on wet floors, similar to those which cut short Calle’s life. They go without bathing, mud wallowing, socializing, and every other normal elephant activity so that we may sit in the bleachers cheering their forced participation, completing the same unnatural tricks which are the whole of their repeated days.

Ringling Brothers’ elephant-breeding farm in Florida claims it raises its performers, yet the industry resource on elephant births, deaths, and captures, shows that the majority of Ringling’s elephants were captured in the wild. In either case, babies are separated from their mothers causing physical, emotional, and psychological harm. Circuses claim that their performing elephants will motivate the protection of this endangered species, yet in 2000 alone, poachers killed 60 wild female elephants so that their babies could be captured and sold to the entertainment industry. Between the early 1960s and late 1980s, 368 baby African elephants were imported to the USA for zoos. One hundred and fifty-eight of those elephants are already dead.

Of those who have survived many are solitary—a life of torture to an elephant. For them, their wild ranging Asian or African landscapes are gone, replaced by what the American Zoo and Aquarium Association (AZA) permits for elephant enclosures: as little as 40 by 45 feet—about the size of a three-car garage.

elephantgirlcover3Elephants and other captive animals are not the only prisoners and slaves on earth. There are 27 million human slaves in the world today, more than all the people stolen from Africa in the time of the transatlantic slave trace. In the 21st century, slaves cost so little they are utterly disposable. In Thailand, poor, rural parents commonly sell a little girl into prostitution or servitude for the price of a TV. Sound like a third world phenomenon? It is not. Slave prostitutes have been found in NYC, Seattle, LA, and even Berkeley.

Other slaves abound in sweatshops and third world agriculture. In India, the children of bonded farmers are born into “bondage”, inheriting their father’s insurmountable debt. It is on this tragic but common ground that the characters of Elephant Girl meet. Our protagonists were stolen from their homes, their families, their lives. Unfortunately our own telling cannot alter Calle’s history, but we hold out hope for those who remain enslaved.

Coco Hall

2009

To purchase Elephant Girl, visit Amazon.com

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