Posts Tagged ‘Zoo’

Elephant Poem #3

Friday, February 26th, 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 final poem:

Thailand Elephants Cry for Help!

by Sequoia Kay-Hill age 11 Boynton Middle School

Thailand Elephants are from crying for help
With a Voice that must be heard
From being beaten, starved, maimed and distraught
From wandering earth with only one purpose
To be in a circus, zoo or working at a logging station
To make money and entertain tourists
From all over the world
To walking the streets begging for food
From elephants taking people on rides
Doing gymnastics in the streets
From little baby elephants being taken away from their parents
To be starved for days on end, broken into submission

Thailand elephants are from crying for help
With a voice that must be heard
Elephants are from emotions
From shedding one solitary tear from their eyes
From happy moments
To sad and depressing ones

Thailand elephants are from crying for help
With a voice that must be heard
Thailand Elephants are from the joy of seeing friends again
From being cared for by smiling faces and friendly hands
From comfortable sanctuary instead of a life of torture
From seeing that someone cares for them
From spraying themselves with water from a pond
To roaming free

Thailand elephants are from crying for help
With a voice that must be heard
From stepping on land mines
To having loving people make prosthetic legs for them
From having a broken leg, yet still having to work
From elephant hospitals starting to arise
From people caring for these fascinating beings

Thailand elephants are from crying for help
With a voice that must be heard
People this cruelty must stop
Ring out with your voices
Think with your hearts
How could this go on for so long
Our fellow creatures are in trouble
And need our help
Always remember
Speak with your heart
The voice for elephants

Thank you to Ms. Morton and all her students who continue to fight to save elephants!

Sincerely,

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

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

To recommend other Guest Bloggers, please email info@eyesofthailand.com

India Bans Elephants in Zoos, Circuses

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

In Defense of Animals (IDA) announced that India has banned elephants from zoos and circuses, citing the abusive treatment and confinement:

San Rafael, Calif. (November 12, 2009)–In Defense of Animals (IDA) today hailed the recent ruling by India’s Central Zoo Authority (CZA) to completely ban the keeping of elephants in zoos, circuses and private collections throughout the country and ordering of the release of 140 such elephants, who will be “rehabilitated” to live in semi-free ranging conditions in forest camps and facilities near national parks, and other protected wildlife reserves.

IDA adds:

If a country such as India, which has thousands of years’ experience managing elephants in captivity, can make such a forward-thinking decision, then certainly the United States can take a stand against circuses that exploit elephants and sub-optimal zoo exhibits that cause elephants to suffer and die prematurely…

Please visit IDA’s Elephant Task Force webpage to read more.

Sincerely,

Windy Borman

Producer, Writer and Director, The Eyes of Thailand

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Production Day 10: Thai Elephant Conservation Center

Friday, August 21st, 2009

In order to round out my elephant sightings, I visited the Thai Elephant Conservation Center, the government-sponsored elephant center that neighbors the FAE Elephant Hospital. I had received some mixed reviews about it prior to my visit, but seeing it with my own eyes (and camera), I found it to be very similar to a zoo or animal park in the United States.  They feature an Elephant Show, Elephant Riding, Day-long or Month-long Mahout Training, an Elephant Hospital and an Elephant Dung Papermaking facility.

In the afternoon, I interviewed Richard Lair, a San Francisco native who has lived in Thailand for several decades and works as an international adviser to the TECC.  He told me that the key to the Thai Asian Elephant’s future is tourism.  Because logging was outlawed in Thailand in 1989, there are few viable jobs left for the captive elephants, which are expensive to keep.  It then comes down to what kinds of “work” or activities tourists want to see and what kinds of camps they support.

All the more reason for tourists to educate themselves about the different types of camps and atrtactions they can see in Thailand, if elephants are on their wish lists.

I’m in Thailand for 2 more days, so please continue to stay tuned.  For now I’ll leave you with two pictures from FAE.  We were so close, I had to stop by and see Motala, Mosha and Namfom before I depart for the states.

Sincerely,

Windy Borman

Producer, Writer and Director, The Eyes of Thailand

Mosha and Windy at FAE.

Mosha and Windy at FAE.

Namfom says hello to Julia at FAE.

Namfom says hello to Julia at FAE.

Production Day 3: Elephant Sighting

Friday, August 14th, 2009

Today, I decided to put my extra day in Chiang Mai to good use.  First, I visited the Elephant Nature Park office near Thapae Gate.  The Founder and Director, Sangduen “Lek” Chailert, is well known in the international elephant conservation and animal rights world and has appeared in several TV shows and documentaries.  I wanted to round out my interviews for The Eyes of Thailand by interviewing her, so I visited the office.  I met Lek and she agreed to let me film at the ENP on August 19-20.

Filming at the Chiang Mai Zoo.

Filming at the Chiang Mai Zoo.

Because it’s foggy in Chiang Mai today, Julia and I decided to postpone our trip to Doi Suthep because we would not be able to see much of Chiang Mai there.  Instead, we went on an elephant hunt at the Chiang Mai Zoo.  A few notes on the Zoo: it’s very clean, has well-kept grounds, and if you were a fan of zoos, you might think it was nice.  Animals were kept in cement enclosures, not unlike the zoos in the US, and in the center of the park, there is a large “Presentation Stage” where handlers have animals do tricks for school kids.

Julia and I followed the signs to the Elephants, but instead found a large Elephant Sanctuary, so to speak, that was under construction.  Julia pointed out that the ground is grass and mud, which is much better for the elephants’ feet than the concrete used elsewhere, but this enclosure had an odd ramp that lead to none other than the… Presentation Stage.  That’s when we remembered that there was a drawing on a poster at the Presentation Stage that showed an elephant painting…

Still searching for the elephants at the zoo, we wandered toward the panda exhibit.  I am not exaggerating when I say, Chiang Mai is crazy about its pandas!  They successfully breed a panda cub recently and panda fever is everywhere (in and out of the zoo): signs, posters, advertisements, painted umbrellas, stuffed animals, a person dressed up in a Panda suit bowing and waving as people enter the exhibit.  It’s an amazing spectacle.

As I filmed this from a distance, Julia noticed an elephant behind a fence.  What we originally thought was an exhibit turned out to be a separate gated area where a group of 4 individuals (who did not appear to work for the zoo), were selling small baskets of fruit to tourists for them to feed the elephant.  The irony of a working elephant at a zoo that is building a “sanctuary” near the “Presentation Stage” did not escape me, so I filmed this  while Julia took pictures.  Julia called him a “tusker” because he had beautiful, long tusks.  I noticed: his sweet, wise eyes; the chain he had on his front foot; and, the slight head swaying that is common among captive elephants. Nonetheless, the tourists paid to feed him, took pictures, and talked animatedly about getting the chance to feed an elephant.

It’s sort of a Catch-22: if the elephant owners have an elephant, they need to have enough money to care for it; but in order to care for it, they need to exploit it by giving tourists a novel experience.

We wrapped up filming at the zoo and then joined my friends Peter and Apple, who I met in Chiang Mai in 2007, for lunch at Suan Paak.  They have the best salads–well, the only salad I’ve found that is safe enough to eat–and the dressing is amazing!

After lunch, I filmed some elephant statues and fountains around Chiang Mai, before returning to the Uniserv to blog while sipping a cha yen and nibbling on Macadamia Pie at Doi Chang.

Tonight is the Night Market, where we hope to spot some street elephants for the documentary, and tomorrow at 7:30am we depart for Friends of the Asian Elephant.

-Windy Borman

Producer, Writer and Director, The Eyes of Thailand

P.S. Production in Thailand is scheduled until August 24, 2009.  If you’d like to make a tax-deductible contribution to help fund the production, please click here to donate through the film’s fiscal sponsor, The San Francisco Film Society.  Thank you!

This is how I roll in Chiang Mai: Aviators, Bike Helmet, I think I look like a '70s Cop from "Chips".

This is how I roll in Chiang Mai: Aviators, Bike Helmet, I think I look like a '70s Cop from "Chips".

Feds Slap Los Angeles Zoo with Fine in Death of Elephant

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

Below is the press release from Catherine Doyle, the elephant Campaign Director at In Defense of Animals:

Feds Slap Los Angeles Zoo with Fine in Death of Elephant
http://www.savezooelephants.com/news_releases_10.html

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

July 20, 2009

USDA cites failure to provide veterinary care

Los Angeles, Calif.–The U.S. Department of Agriculture has hit the Los Angeles Zoo with a stipulated penalty of $3,281 for failure to provide veterinary care in the 2006 death of the elephant Gita, according to information just provided to In Defense of Animals (IDA) by the USDA.

“It’s outrageous that the USDA took so long to come to this pathetic conclusion, especially when the L.A. Zoo’s negligence caused Gita to suffer a slow and agonizing death,” said Catherine Doyle, IDA campaign director. “The paltry fine is nothing more than a slap on the wrist for the L.A. Zoo. It’s a sad reflection on how little value is placed on the life of an endangered species like the Asian elephant.”

Gita’s death on June 10, 2006, made headlines after IDA exposed the zoo’s

photo from LA Unleashed

photo from LA Unleashed

failure to provide veterinary care to her after she collapsed and was unable to rise. Despite being observed down on the ground overnight, zoo personnel took no action to help the elephant, who died soon after keepers discovered the ailing elephant in the morning. It was estimated that Gita lay suffering for as long as 17 hours.

For decades Gita suffered from painful chronic foot disease and arthritis caused by inadequate conditions for elephants at L.A. Zoo. Her necropsy report noted that her severe arthritis or an extremely infected abscess on her back (caused by Gita leaning against her pen to take pressure off her painful front feet and joints) may have triggered a blood clotting disorder that caused her collapse and subsequent heart failure.

Last month, celebrities and animal protection leaders blasted the USDA for its failure to effectively protect captive-held elephants. In separate letters, Bob Barker and Lilly Tomlin, joined by leading animal protection organizations, criticized the USDA’s lack of timely action on a number of egregious cases involving elephants in zoos and circuses, including Gita’s. Read the letter here

“There simply is no excuse for the USDA’s foot dragging, especially in cases like Gita’s, where the facts are undeniably clear,” said Doyle. “Elephants are suffering and dying prematurely in zoos and circuses. It’s time for the USDA to start seriously enforcing the law and protecting these elephants now, rather than waiting until it’s too late.”

Gita is the fourteenth elephant to die at the Los Angeles Zoo. The zoo currently holds one solitary elephant, Billy.

For more information, please visit www.HelpElephants.com

Please read the news articles by the Associated Press and LA Times based on the above press release.

Soraida testifies against illegal elephant trading

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

elephantexport

Soraida Salwala, founder of the Friends of the Asian Elephant, continues her fight to protect Thai Elephants, this time by testifying against the President of Wildlife Fund Thailand.  In an email to Windy Borman, Soriada writes:

The wildlife merchant is the president of Wildlife Fund Thailand who used to be Secretary General and later became the Director of the Zoological Organization. He later opened a company, private zoo, [and] restaurant dealing with wildlife trade. We, about ten organizations working for the conservation of wildlife[,] opposed [he behavior] and sent our open letter.  He laid off over forty staff and closed the office temporarily, claiming there is no money to run it.

I cannot talk much about the case since it is in court but our aim is to remove  him from the role in WFT, [but] the Board is on his side. If he wants to do business in trading wildlife, he should have left WFT [a] long time ago and not [sit] there knowing where and when we were about to alert the authorities to arrest the illegal trade and all. He asked the staff to withdraw attacking many projects which have wildlife in their aquarium or zoos or whatever.

So, we have asked the court to remove him from his post.

I am the member of this WFT, it was founded by my family doctor, the late DR. Boonsong Lekagul.

Soraida

Soraida is featured in the upcoming documentary The Eyes of Thailand, set to release in 2010 and Produced/Directed by Windy Borman and D.V.A. Productions.

Elephant Activists at the Animal Rights 2009 Conference

Saturday, July 18th, 2009

picture-3

The Animal Rights 2009 National Conference is in LA from July 16-20.  So far, I’ve met some amazing animal activists and supporters and am pleased with the content I’ve seen and heard about elephants.  Two of the projects I’d like to highlight are:

  • War on Animals, a documentary by Courtney Scott and Beyond Pictures, which “provides an overview of animal rights throughout history and illustrates the many ways activists are working to alleviate the animals’ suffering, including the refuges and sanctuaries that offer a new lease on life to old or disabled farm, lab, zoo and circus animals.” http://www.beyond-productions.com/
Image from "War on Animals"

Image from "War on Animals"

Producer & Director, "Elephants on the Edge"

Producer & Director, "Elephants on the Edge"

Tomorrow, I’m looking forward to brunch at Real Food Daily and meeting with Catherine Doyle from In Defense of Animals about her work with elephants involved in Amusement Campaigns (i.e. zoos and circuses).  To learn more about IDA’s Help Elephants campaigns, click here.

Please stay tuned for more updates on the conference!

Best,

Windy Borman

Producer, Writer and Director, The Eyes of Thailand

P.S. If you’re looking for a conference in Asia, consider Asia for Animals Conference 2010 in Singapore.  Who knows, maybe The Eyes of Thailand will be there, too!

picture-4

International Day of Action for Elephants in Zoos (IDAEZ) June 20, 2009

Friday, June 19th, 2009

Please join Lily Tomlin and In Defense of Animals for the International Day of Action for Elephants in Zoos (IDAEZ).  This is a global event, with events scheduled in the U.S., Europe, and Asia, so please find one near you: http://www.helpelephants.com/idaez_find_an_event.html

Additionally, you can read a recent Associate Press article about elephants’ confinement at: http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hF65mpAnNUvxYrKkfYW7CmROcmXwD98SVL281

Momentum for IDA’s Elephant Task Force and “The Eyes of Thailand” documentary is building.  Thank you for your continued support!

Best,

Windy Borman

Producer, Writer and Director, “The Eyes of Thailand”

Thank you for your tax-deductible contributions!

http://eyesofthailand.com/support.html