Archive for October, 2009

SFGate covers “The Eyes of Thailand”

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

The San Francisco Chronicle covered The Eyes of Thailand Work-in-Progress Clip premiere on October 21, 2009.  Here is an excerpt:

Having shot movies on four continents, San Francisco filmmaker Windy Borman had seen it all – until she came across the world’s first elephant hospital in Thailand two years ago, where the enormous patients were being treated for everything from eye infections to gunshot wounds. In July, when she heard that some elephants at the hospital, victims of exploding land mines, were getting new legs, Borman raised some quick cash, jumped on a plane and finished shooting “The Eyes of Thailand,” a documentary about the hospital, to be released next year. We caught a clip of the film last week at a post-production fundraiser in North Beach. Trust us: You haven’t seen anything until you’ve watched an Asian elephant in the forest take its first steps on a prosthetic leg. Jaws hit the floor.

To read the rest of the article, add your comments and forward the link, please click here.

Thank you to everyone who came to the post-production fundraiser for The Eyes of Thailand on Oct 21, 2009! The documentary is timely, poignant, heartfelt and needs to be distributed in 2010 to tell the world about the plight of endangered Asian Elephants.

To make an online tax-deductible donation through the film’s fiscal sponsor, The San Francisco Film Society, please visit http://www.eyesofthailand.com and click “Donate Now”.

We are seeking post-production funds to edit and distribute The Eyes of Thailand in 2010. For more information, contact Producer/Director Windy Borman at: info@eyesofthailand.com

Thank you!

Windy Borman
Producer, Writer and Director, The Eyes of Thailand

Elephant Wishes and Chocolate Dreams

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

picture-12Thank you to everyone who attended The Eyes of Thailand Work-in-Progress Clip premiere at King of Thai Noodle, viewed the clip online, and participated in the 3-Day Buy Chocolate, Save Elephants online fundraiser through Choclatique.

The fundraising results are in and I’m happy to report we raised:

$615.00 from donations at the door

$115.95 through chocolate sales at Choclatique

All donations are tax-deductible through the film’s fiscal sponsor, the San Francisco Film Society, and go toward the post-production costs of editing and distributing The Eyes of Thailand documentary in 2010.

Based on the success of the fundraiser and requests from our Facebook group members, I will re-release the Work-in-Progress clip (with a new link and password) in November 2009.  In order to receive the password, please join The Eyes of Thailand Facebook Group. Please stay tuned for more details…

Thank you again for all your support!

Windy Borman

Producer, Writer and Director, The Eyes of Thailand

P.S. To learn more about the film, view the trailer (different from the work-in-progress clip), and make a tax-deductible donation to the film, please visit http://www.eyesofthailand.com

Elephant Nursing Home

Monday, October 26th, 2009

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Where do elephants go to retire?  No, that is not the start of a bad joke, it’s a legitimate question for an endangered species who was captured from the wild, domesticated (usually through brutal methods) and spent its life begging on the street, logging, performing at tourist camps or carrying back-fulls of tourists at trekking camps.

Starting on 21 November 2009, Thailand will send its “retired” elephants to The Pang-La Nursery Home for Aged Elephant, according to the Bangkok Post article published 10 Oct 2009.

I asked Soraida Salwala, founder of Friends of the Asian Elephant (FAE) and the World’s First Elephant Hospital, about her thoughts about a government-run Nursing Home for aging and “retired” elephants.  She wrote:

The Last Home Project (for the unwanted elephants) has been the project of Friends of the Asian Elephant since our inception in 1993. It has also been known widely among the authorities and officials of the Ministry, especially of the FIO, since their staff used to work closely with FAE in the first few years.

FAE could not carry out many projects as we have planned due to lack of funds and obstacles that never cease. However, our Last Home Project has been taken and the name (in Thai: BAAN LUNG SOUD TAIE) is used by the government sector, which I find it quite strange. Even though it is our initiative we are also happy that our many projects are being done by many government and private groups (in and outside Thailand). At the very least, the elephants will have a place to stay, being fed properly and with veterinary care. The only thing that troubles me is “will they be really taken care of properly?” and not being put for show and for other purposes.

How I wish that there are no more elephant politics in Thailand so the elephants management will be for the good of the elephants and those who truly care for them.

For the elephants,

Soraida Salwala

When asked if an Elephant Nursing Home is a good or a bad thing, Soraida wrote:

It is a good thing, it is from FAE’s projects, so how could it not be good! But I am concerned as to the hidden agendas. Government sectors are not supposed to receive donation money for their own gain, but they (FIO) do even though they receive over 100 million Baht Budget a year.

To read more about Thailand’s plan for an Elephant Nursing Home, please visit The Bangkok Post.

To learn more about The Eyes of Thailand documentary, which features Soraida Salwala and FAE, please visit the film’s webpage.

-Windy Borman

Producer, Writer and Director, The Eyes of Thailand

Elephant Landmine Survivor Walks with Confidence

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

Thai TV news features Motala, an elephant landmine survivor at the Friends of the Asian Elephant hospital in Lampang, Thailand, walking and putting a significant amount of her body weight onto her new prosthetic limb.

Motala puts weight on her prosthesis, as shown on Thai TV news.

Motala puts weight on her prosthesis, as shown on Thai TV news.

This is a wonderful sign after a few issues with her previous prostheses: one crumpled as she tried to stand up, and the “ankle joint” of another fell off while she walked.  It appears the Prostheses Foundation has made the necessary adjustments and Motala is trusting the device to hold her as she walks.

If you’d like to witness Motala’s first steps, please join me for the premiere of the new work-in-progress clip of The Eyes of Thailand on Wednesday, October 21, 2009 in San Francisco, CA.  For details, click here.

Please note that the production phase of the film is complete and we’re actively raising the “finishing funds” to edit and distribute the documentary in 2010. All donations made at the event, or online through our fiscal sponsor, the San Francisco Film Society, are tax-deductible.

If you cannot attend the event—or wish to make a tax-deductible donation ahead of time—please visit The Eyes of Thailand web page and Click the “Donate Now” link. It will connect you to the secure online donation page for the SFFS.

You can also follow our progress on Facebook, Indiegogo and Twitter.

Thank you for all your continued support and I hope to see you there!

Best,

Windy Borman
Producer, Writer and Director, The Eyes of Thailand

P.S. For those of you outside the San Francisco Bay Area, I will post the new clip on Vimeo for 24 Hours and release the password after the October 21st event. Please stay tuned!

Buy Chocolate, Save Elephants!

Sunday, October 4th, 2009

Add some Good Karma to your Halloween with a 3-Day Online Fundraiser by The Eyes of Thailand and Choclatique!

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The Eyes of Thailand is hosting our 2nd Buy Chocolate, Save Elephants online fundraiser October 22-24, 2009.

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Choclatique will donate 25% of the sale price for their 30-piece Elephant Chocolates—and 15% on all other items—purchased between October 22-24 using the The Eyes of Thailand Event Code: EOT092410.

To order:

  1. Visit Choclatique’s web page
  2. Select “30-piece Chocolate Box” or another box size on the left side.
  3. Select “Elephant Chocolate—Seriously Strong Dark Chocolate” or the Halloween treat of your choice.
  4. Select the quantity and ribbon color, then click “Add to cart”.
  5. Click “Continue Shopping” to add more goodies to your cart—the more you buy, the more Choclatique donates to save the Asian Elephants!
  6. When finished ordering, click “Checkout”.
  7. Enter EOT092410 as the Event Code (different than the “Promotional Code”).
  8. Finish your order and savor the sweet taste of philanthropy!

Our chocolate fundraiser in April 2009, netted a $57.60 donation. I know we have a bigger sweet tooth than that, so mark your calendars NOW to Buy Chocolate, Save Elephants∫!

For more information about The Eyes of Thailand documentary film, to view the trailer or to read the production blog, please visit http://www.eyesofthailand.com

Elephant Wishes and Chocolate Dreams,

Windy Borman

Producer, Writer and Director, The Eyes of Thailand

“If you don’t give up, suddenly the future seems more rosy”.

Saturday, October 3rd, 2009

SAN FRANCISCO, CA: Today was the 8th Annual Wildlife Conservation Expo, hosted by the Wildlife Conservation Network. The Wildlife Conservation Network is dedicated to protecting endangered species and preserving their natural habitats by supporting innovative strategies for people and wildlife to co-exist and thrive and fostering the entrepreneurial spirit in the field of conservation.

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What got me out of bed and onto the Mission Bay campus of UCSF by 10:00am on a Saturday was a chance to hear Dr. Iain Douglas-Hamilton and Dr. Jane Goodall.

Dr. Iain Douglas-Hamilton, author of Among the Elephants and star of the BBC film Secret Life of Elephants: Elephant choices and survival, spoke about the compound problems African elephants are facing: a temporary lift on the 20-year ban on ivory poaching in Africa and drought. As a result, some elephants have turned to crop raiding, which Dr. Douglas-Hamilton insists “is not good for the elephant’s political image”.

Through use of cellular technology, Dr. Douglas-Hamilton’s team is able to track the wild African elephants’ movements to learn their migration patterns, which can help alleviate the elephant-human conflict for resources and also tell them when an elephant stops moving—perhaps due to poachers—so they can alert the authorities quickly.

“The key to all conservation efforts are local people,” Dr. Douglas-Hamilton said. “Ecotourism provides a participatory relationship in conservation.”

For more information on Dr. Iain Douglas-Hamilton, visit Save the Elephants.

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picture-21 According to Charlie Knowles, Co-Founder of the Wildlife Conservation Network, 1 in 1,000 species go extinct every year and we are rapidly approaching loosing 1 in every 100.

Dr. Jane Goodall announced we are “in the midst of the Sixth Great Extinction” and yet, she remains hopeful. In her new book, Hope for Animals and Their World, she recounts tales of how plants and animals on the brink of extinction—some even thought to be extinct for a century—are thriving again, thanks to the resiliency of Mother Nature and the perseverance of field biologists and conservationists.

Dr. Goodall is an enthralling speaker and storyteller, so I cannot possibly do her justice by quoting all her great sound bytes here, but I will leave you with a few choice take-aways:

  • “Huge problems lie ahead, but as we raise awareness, passion and money, it is going to get easier.”
  • “If you don’t give up, suddenly the future seems more rosy.”
  • “It’s no good breeding a species if you can’t re-introduce it [to the wild]. Then it becomes a ‘museum species’, only in zoos.”
  • “We can never hope to save the chimps if people are struggling and the chimps live in lush, protected forests…we ask the villagers what they need.”
  • “If a chimpanzee who’s been abused by people can reach out and help a human in need, then surely we can reach out and help the animals now, in their time of need.”
  • “Some give money, some volunteer, some take photos, sing songs. We can all do something and what a great world we’d live in if we all did”.

For more information on Dr. Jane Goodall or to purchase her book, please visit Hope for Animals and Roots and Shoots.

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You can continue to support Asian Elephant conservation by:

  1. Making a tax-deductible donation to The Eyes of Thailand documentary film, through the film’s fiscal sponsor, the San Francisco Film Society. Please visit http://www.eyesofthailand.com and click “Donate Now” to be directed to the secure online donation page.
  2. Attending the world premiere of the new work-in-progress clip on October 21, 2009 at King of Thai Noodle (click here for details) or online at Vimeo (password will be released on Oct 21).
  3. Following us on Facebook, Indiegogo and Twitter.

Sincerely,

Windy Borman

Producer, Writer and Director, The Eyes of Thailand

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