Posts Tagged ‘Eyes of Thailand’

Elephant landmine survivor, Motala, to receive new prosthesis

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

In preparation for Thailand’s National Elephant Day on March 13, the Prostheses Foundation began molding a new prosthetic leg for elephant landmine survivor, Motala.

Staff from the Prostheses Foundation prepare to take a mold of Motala's amputated leg.

Staff from the Prostheses Foundation prepare to take a mold of Motala's amputated leg.

Motala stepped on a landmine on August 15, 1999.  She received her first prosthetic limb 10 years later, on August 16, 2009, a historic event we filmed for The Eyes of Thailand documentary film.

Elephant landmine survivor, Motala, waits patiently as the Prostheses Foundation staff make a mold of her amputated leg in order to build her a new prosthetic limb.

Elephant landmine survivor, Motala, waits patiently as the Prostheses Foundation staff make a mold of her amputated leg in order to build her a new prosthetic limb.

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, and on March 10, 2010 the Prostheses Foundation began to build her a new prosthetic limb, which they will present to her on March 13, 2010 at the Friends of the Asian Elephant (FAE) Elephant Hospital outside of Lampang, Thailand.

After filling the mold with plaster and letting it set, the Prostheses Foundation begins to smooth and sand the mold so that it matches Motala's measurements.  They will use this mold to create a cushioned liner and the prosthesis.

After filling the mold with plaster and letting it set, the Prostheses Foundation begins to smooth and sand the mold so that it matches Motala's measurements. They will use this mold to create a cushioned liner and the prosthesis.

We will post more pictures as we receive them from Soriada Salwala, the Founder of the Friends of the Asian Elephant (FAE) Elephant Hospital and featured in the elephant conservation documentary, The Eyes of Thailand. Stay tuned!

Sincerely,

Windy Borman

Director, Producer and Writer, The Eyes of Thailand

Baby Elephant Update

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

In addition to building prosthetic limbs for elephants (like Mosha and Motala) that step on landmines, the Friends of the Asian Elephant (FAE) Elephant Hospital also treats elephants for everything from illness to injuries.

Elephant Kamnoi pets Baby "Dante" at FAE.

Elephant Kamnoi pets Baby "Dante" at FAE.

On February 18, 2010 we announced that  Soraida Salwala, Founder of the FAE Elephant Hospital and featured in the elephant conservation documentary, The Eyes of Thailand, shared the successful birth of a new baby elephant on February 15.  One day later, Kamnoi and her healthy baby boy, whom they’ve since named Dante, arrived at FAE. To read the blog post, click here.

Baby elephant Dante attempts to nurse at FAE's Elephant Hospital.

Baby Elephant Dante attempts to nurse at FAE's Elephant Hospital.

I am happy to report that Kamnoi and Dante are continuing to bond, although he sometimes needs to get a boost to reach his mother to nurse!

Baby Dante gets a boost from FAE staff to nurse.

Baby Dante gets a boost from FAE staff to nurse.

Dr. Preecha and the staff at FAE are also supplementing his mother’s milk with goat’s milk.  Soriada wrote to explain:

Mother of Baby “Dante” does not have enough milk. She is feeding him but the milk is not enough. So, when he is still hungry, we feed him with goat milk.

Kamnoi watches as Dr. Preecha feeds Baby Dante at FAE.

Kamnoi watches as Dr. Preecha feeds Baby Dante at FAE.

Please send good thoughts for Dante to continue to grow to Soraida and her staff at FAE’s Elephant Hospital.  We’ll send updates as they come!

Sincerely,

Windy Borman

Director, Producer and Writer, The Eyes of Thailand

Dr. Preecha feeds Baby Dante at FAE.

Dr. Preecha feeds Baby Dante at FAE.

Elephant landmine survivors will receive new prostheses

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

On February 26, 2010, Soraida Salwala, Founder of the Friends of the Asian Elephant (FAE) Elephant Hospital and featured in the elephant conservation documentary, The Eyes of Thailand, wrote to share:

Motala and Mosha are the same. Mosha is not happy since she could not wear the prosthetic leg last week. We are looking forward to the new ones being made on The National Elephant Day (13 March).

We look forward to sharing the new pictures of Mosha and Motala, two elephant landmine survivors also featured in The Eyes of Thailand, walking on their new prostheses next week.  Please check back after March 13, 2010.

-Windy Borman

Director, Producer and Writer, The Eyes of Thailand

New Photos of Mosha

Friday, February 19th, 2010

Please enjoy the new photos of Mosha, taken on February 12, 2010 by a member of Collecting Smiles Club.

Mosha. (photo credit: Collecting Smiles Club)

Mosha (photo credit: Collecting Smiles Club)

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.

Mosha, with chalk on her amputated leg, which helps reduce the irritation of wearing her prosthetic leg. (photo credit: Collecting Smile Club)

Mosha, with chalk on her amputated leg, which helps reduce the irritation of wearing her prosthetic leg. (photo credit: Collecting Smile Club)

When we first met Mosha in 2007, she was a curious 2-year old, who wobbled on three legs.  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 with a member of the FAE staff at the Elephant Hospital. (photo credit: Collecting Smiles Club).

Mosha with a member of the FAE staff at the Elephant Hospital. (photo credit: Collecting Smiles Club).

To see Mosha’s progression over the years, please click here.

Sincerely,

Windy Borman

Producer, Director and Writer, The Eyes of Thailand

Elephant Poem #2

Friday, February 19th, 2010

Corinne Morton taught her 6th Grade Science classes in Ithaca, NY (USA) about the plight of elephants in the wild and captivity. Inspired by The Eyes of Thailand trailer, three students wrote poems about Thai elephants.  Below is the second poem:

A Thailand Elephant

by Jaina Swanhart age 11, Boynton Middle School

This elephant here
Was taken from his mother
Never got to roam free
And feel secure as elephants do with one another

Dreaming, hoping to find a way home
Away from his mom, it is so severe
Whips, chains and illegal logging
From a small soulful eye drops a swift tear

Shredded leg, what now?
Stepping on explosive mines
Standing on three feeling despair
It is only a matter of time

In his captivity a lady looks
Kids around him, he’s being teased
Runs and runs to fine Mahout
She thinks, can I buy him please?

She’s rescues him, finally free
Knowing where to take him
He follows her lead
To the elephant hospital, to a new limb

Eating with other elephants
Here he finds his mother
Walking, talking, catching up
A feeling like no other

There’s a devoted vet
He loves and cherishes her
Giving him a new hope in life
He wishes others fate were similar

Please tune in next week for the third poem…

-Windy Borman

Producer, Director and Writer, The Eyes of Thailand

FAE welcomes Baby Elephant

Thursday, February 18th, 2010

In addition to building prosthetic limbs for elephants (like Mosha and Motala) that step on landmines, the Friends of the Asian Elephant (FAE) Elephant Hospital also treats elephants for everything from illness to injuries.

On February 15, 2010, Soraida Salwala, Founder of the FAE Elephant Hospital and featured in the elephant conservation documentary, The Eyes of Thailand, announced the successful birth of a new baby elephant:

A new baby was born at Mae Ping Camp in Chiang Mai last night. The baby weighs only 30 k.m. (same as Tiny). Dr. Preecha reached Pung Noi and her baby before noon. Preparation to transport both the mother and her male baby is being carefully carried out.

On February 16, 2010, Pung Kamnoi and her healthy baby boy arrived at FAE:

Dr. Preecha says the baby looks good. We have the soy milk ready in case his mother is not ready to feed him.

The first photos of the happy mother and baby appear below.

Kamnoi arrives at FAE by truck.

Kamnoi arrives at FAE by truck.

The staff at FAE encourage the wobbly newborn elephant to walk off the truck.

The staff at FAE encourage the wobbly newborn elephant to walk off the truck.

Kamnoi and her healthy baby boy.

Kamnoi and her healthy baby boy.

Kamnoi and her baby are bonding well.  She allows her baby to nurse.

Kamnoi and Baby Boy.

We are happy to see Kamnoi and her baby bonding and will share more news and photos as we get them.  Please stay tuned!

Sincerely,

Windy Borman

Producer, Director and Writer, The Eyes of Thailand

P.S. The Eyes of Thailand is currently fundraising to edit and distribute the film so we can tell the world about the plight of the Asian Elephants and share the great work that Soraida and her staff do at FAE.  To make a tax-deductible donation to the film, please visit our website and click “Donate Now“.  It will take you to the secure online donation page for our fiscal sponsor, The San Francisco Film Society. Thank you!

China’s demand for ivory influences CITIES’s ban

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

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Last week I found a link to an article about China’s ivory trade written by James Pomfret and Tom Kirkwood, dated November 9, 2009.  The authors write:

A passion for ivory ornaments such as these is what helped decimate African and Asian elephant populations until a 1989 ban on ivory trade. Today, China’s economic rise, and along with it a seemingly insatiable appetite for status symbols by its nouveau riche, has spurred demand for African ivory…

In a 2007 report, the U.N.-backed CITES, the global wildlife trade watchdog, said China faced a “major challenge” as it continues to be the “most important country globally as a destination for illicit ivory,” exacerbated in part by China’s spreading influence and ties in Africa.

Chinese nationals have been arrested and convicted for ivory smuggling in Africa and organized crime gangs are also involved in bringing large quantities of illicit ivory into China, according to the London-based Environmental Investigation Agency.

In a controversial bid to stem illegal poaching, CITES allowed a 62-tonne batch of elephant tusks to be imported legally into China last year. The ivory stockpiles were bought by Chinese traders at auctions.

At the time, Allan Thornton, of the Environmental Investigation Agency, expressed concern the sale would fuel a massive appetite for ivory in China. “In a country of 1.3 billion people, demand for ivory from just a fraction of one per cent of the population is colossal,” he told the Telegraph newspaper.

Ivory has been banned since 1989 after decades of poaching in which Africa’s elephant population was halved with only around 600,000 remaining by 1997, according to conservation groups.  Nonetheless, as the 20-year ban is about to expire, there is a growing sentiment within CITIES that, “The elephant as a species is no way in danger.”

“If the demand is supplied by legal origin ivory, then that should begin to close the doors for the criminals,” said John Sellar, a senior enforcement officer for CITES in Geneva.

He added the two-decade long ivory ban had helped stabilize overall elephant numbers, with only scattered local populations under any real serious threat from poachers in countries such as Chad and the Democratic Republic of Congo.

While only around 4,000 wild tigers remain worldwide, he noted, in Botswana alone there are more than 130,000 wild elephants.

Read more: http://www.nationalpost.com/story.html?id=2203750#ixzz0eudfURBI

ElephantVoices wrote on its Facebook Page “Any sensible person would ask CITIES what is going to happen to Botswana’s elephant population once China finishes off of Central Africa?”

I would add: What will happen to Thailand’s elephants–or those of other Southeast Asian countries–if the ivory ban is lifted?

-Windy Borman

Producer, Director and Writer, The Eyes of Thailand

9 Ways to Help Elephants

Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

Dr. Joyce Poole, the Co-Founder of ElephantVoices, has compiled a list of 8 things everyone can do to help elephants:

  1. Spread the Word
  2. Don’t Visit Circuses that Exhibit Elephants
  3. Don’t go on an Elephant-Back Safari or Trek
  4. Be an Eco-tourist
  5. Don’t Wear Ivory
  6. Support Elephant Conservation Efforts
  7. Support Efforts to Improve the Lives of Elephants in Zoos
  8. Ensure that your Local Zoo does not Import Elephants from the Wild

And I’ll add #9: Support the elephant conservation documentary, The Eyes of Thailand, with a tax-deductible donation to the film by clicking here.  It will take you to the secure online donation page for the film’s fiscal sponsor, the San Francisco Film Society.

For more information, please visit the ElephantVoices website.

ElephantVoices‘ mission is to inspire wonder in the intelligence, complexity and voices of elephants, and to secure a kinder future for them through research and the sharing of knowledge.  Their goals are to advance the study of elephant cognition, communication and social behavior, and to promote the scientifically sound and ethical management and care of elephants.

Dr. Joyce Poole.  Photo by ElephantVoices.

Dr. Joyce Poole. Photo by ElephantVoices.

Joyce Poole has a Ph.D. in elephant behavior from Cambridge University, and has studied the social behavior and communication of elephants for over thirty years, dedicating her life to their conservation and welfare. Her contributions to science include the discovery of musth in male African elephants, the description of the contextual use of elephant vocalizations, including those below the level of human hearing, and the discovery of vocal imitation.

-Windy Borman

Producer, Writer and Director, The Eyes of Thailand

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!