Special Pool Gives Injured Elephant Better Life

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Uploaded by on Dec 27, 2008

Special Pool Gives Injured Elephant Better Life

November 25, 2008

Originally Published by The Cambodia Daily

Little Chhouk probably hadn't had a swim - an important regular event for any elephant - in more than a year and a half.

Hobbled by an injury that cost him a foot, Chhouk - a willful but playful toddler of 3 - isn't able to join the other elephants at the Phnom Tamao Wildlife Rescue Center when they go for their daily swim.

But Saturday, he took to the water, rolliing and tumbling about for a good hour in a new pool constructed at the rescue center.

"They look very happy with the new pool," the center's director, Nhiek Rotannak Pich, said at the pool's grand opening Saturday where Chhouk and another elder elephant, Lucky, splashed about.

"For a long time we keep Chhouk at Phnom Tamao here, but he could not ever go in the water."

Nick Marx of the NGO Wildlife Alliance, which assists the Forestry Administration in caring for the center's elephants, said that trips to the swimming hole are an important part of an elephant's routine.

"It's good for their skin, and it's good for their psyche, if you will," he said.

At the age of 2, Chhouk had lost his mother in the forests of Mondolkiri province and had lost his left front foot, quite likely to a snare trap.

Alone and hampered with a crippling wound, he likely would have died had he not been found by a WWF patrol in March of last year.

The Forestry Administration decided to have the youngster brought to Phnom Tamao, and he has made tremendous progress since that time, but he is still not capable of walking all that far without getting exhausted.

Marx, who was part of the team that rescued Chhouk and brought him to the center, said that the pool, which has broad concrete steps to accommodate the elephant's disability, would be particularly good for the young bull becasue it would allow him to move about more freely and get some exercise.

The pool, which was constructed in a small, private forest clearing close to the elephant enclosure, was funded largely by donations collected by an Australian couple living in Phnom Penh.

Barb Braniff and Ash Eason, who own the Lazy Gecko restuaurant in Phnom Penh and run tours to Phnom Tamao through their tour company, collected the money for the pool over the course of a year, largely through raffle tickets sold at their restaurant during the weekly quiz night, and by selling paintings by Lucky the elephant - abstract, but curiously appealing blasts of color.

Wildlife Alliance also contributed $600 to make the $2,124 pool possible.

"We were worried about Chhouk - that he didn't have enough fun in his life for a baby elephant," Braniff said at Saturday's opening.

With Chhouk rolling under the water, trunk raised as a natural snorkel, Nhiek Rotannak Pich and Marx said that the next step is to get the young elephant a prosthetic foot.

Both said a hospital in Cambodia is already lined up to create the prosthetic and work is now being done to determine the cost.

"it depends on how much the specialists and the prostheses cost, and whatever it costs we'll do it," Marx said.

Nhiek Rotannak Pich said he suspected it would be easy to find sponsors willing to cover the cost of the artificial foot.

A number of zoo officials said that as Chhouk grows, it will be more and more important for him to have a prosthetic foot. He is currently putting a lot of strain on one side of his body, which could elad to serious bone deformities down the road, particularly to his spine.

"Getting a human to accept a prosthesis is hard enough, but get an elephant?" Marx said.

"But he is still young, so I think we have a good chance."

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  • They should have left him in there for as long as he wanted. Eles will spend hours playing in water, and the poor little boy deserves that. And no bullhooks. How I detest bullhooks. Carol Buckley has shown that elephants quickly learn VERBAL commands with positive reinforcement. That's all that is needed. Words.

  • @teddysmom1996 You are so right. They should not be allowed to use that in a place that is supposed to be caring for injured animals. That elephant would have gotten i n he water without being poked. They love the water. I don't think this caretaker is aware that their skin is very sensitive. Or he doesn't care. They might have thick skin, but they feel just as much pain as anyone who gets poked int he side with a hook!

  • I don't like that man using the bullhook at all.

  • I don't like the bullhook

  • The pool is not special, the elephant special because all elephants love bathing. Put any elephant in there and it would be happy. Its handicap is a non-issue.

  • aw omg so cute

  • aww im so happy for this elephant! too bad they cant make Billy happy...

  • yeah!

  • that's it i'm gettin an elephant!

  • The eyes tell it all

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