• Photo
This Tuesday Oct. 9 2012 photo made available by the Amboseli Trust for Elephants shows a baby elephant resting in mud

This Tuesday Oct. 9 2012 photo made available by the Amboseli Trust for Elephants shows a baby elephant resting in mud while stuck in a 5-foot (1.5-meter) hole on in Ambolseli National Park in Kenya. (AP Photo/Amboseli Elephant Trust-HO)

  • More Featured Content
Oklahoma tornado death toll expected to rise
Oklahoma tornado toll expected to rise

Spotlights bore down on massive piles of shredded cinder block,…

Obama declares major disaster in Okla.
Obama declares major disaster in Okla.

President Barack Obama has declared a major disaster in …

Oklahoma twister tracked path of 1999 tornado
OK twister tracked path of 1999 tornado

Monday's powerful tornado in suburban Oklahoma City loosely …

Video: Witnesses reflect on OKC tornado
Video: Witnesses reflect on OKC tornado

Witnesses give a first-hand account of the tornado that ripped …

Twister season starts late, but starts nonetheless
2013 twister season starts late

This is the longest the U.S. has gone into May without …

Advertisement

How to rescue a baby elephant? Rope, Land Rover

'Reunions always bring a tear to my eye'

Updated: Friday, 19 Oct 2012, 5:52 AM MDT
Published : Friday, 19 Oct 2012, 5:39 AM MDT

NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — How do you pull a baby elephant out of a deep, muddy hole? A rope and a Land Rover. Then the payoff: A frantic baby elephant sprint to mom.

A heartwarming video of the rescue of a baby elephant in a Kenyan national park that lies in the shadow of Mount Kilimanjaro gained a mass of viewers on Thursday. The video shows the rescuers' potentially dangerous faceoff with the mother elephant and their struggle to get her calf out of a 5-foot (1.5-meter) hole.

Vicki Fishlock of the Amboseli Trust for Elephants faced down the mother with her Land Rover, and made a high-pitched aye-aye-aye call to help drive the mother off. Thirty muddy minutes later, after two men struggle to get a rope around the 8-month-old calf, Fishlock put her SUV in reverse and pulled the animal out.

"Relief! Rescues where family members are around are stressful, and I'm always happy when everyone is safely back in the cars. And I have to admit that the reunions always bring a tear to my eye. The intensity of their affection for each other is one of the things that makes elephants so special," Fishlock said.

The hole was a man-made well with a foot (.3 meter) of water in it was dug by the Masai tribesmen who live around Amboseli National Park, and the trapped elephant underscores the increasing problem of human-animal conflict. The baby elephant was too small to crawl out on its own and would have died without the help of rescuers. If the elephant dies, it ruins the well, angering the Masai who live nearby.

The rescue took place on Oct. 8. The very next day, another elephant calf fell in the same well. That baby's family was driven off by the Masai, so when the Amboseli Trust for Elephants rescued the second calf, it sent the baby to an elephant orphanage in Nairobi, The David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust. The video of the rescue was posted on YouTube last week but on the website LiveLeak on Thursday.

Elephants across Africa are fighting for survival as expanding human settlements increase the number of human-animal conflicts. Worse, elephants are being slaughtered by the thousands for their ivory tusks, which are shipped to Asia, particularly China, to satisfy a demand for ivory trinkets.

The Amboseli Trust for Elephants has been studying elephant families since 1972, and Fishlock immediately recognized the mother in the Oct. 8 well incident — Zombe — from a mark near her ear. Zombe appeared to almost sit on Fishlock's Land Rover as the vehicles tried to push the mother away from her trapped baby.

The uplifting conclusion to the rescue video shows the baby sprinting to the tune of Coldplay's Paradise, a song whose video opens with scenes of the African savannah, and then tells a story of a human dressed as an elephant fleeing a zoo to reunite with its family.

Despite the confrontation at the beginning, Fishlock thinks Zombe understood in the end that humans were only trying to help.

"After the video we cut the engines. She didn't charge us, she didn't run away. Eventually after five minutes they just walked out. I think she did understand," Fishlock said. "I certainly felt like she had forgiven us for our very impolite behavior."

___

Elephant rescue video:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JOHw7lX3Gu4

http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=704_1350489947

Comment With KASA.com's commenting system, you don't need to register. You can login with an existing Facebook, Yahoo!, Google, or Twitter account and more. 
 

comments powered by Disqus

Win a hand made Native American pot

Register to win a beautiful, hand made Native American pot by Santa Clara potter…

Enter the Hole-in-One Golf Contest

Just pick the golfers you think will finish 1st through 10th for each of the …

Advertisement
  • Current Conditions - Statewide
Advertisement