View allAll Photos Tagged Elephant
This elephant walked right passed us in the back of the vehicle. The elephant was so close we could have reached out and touched it.
From a 2004 one month Study Abroad in Kenya. An elephant before Mt. Kilimanjaro in Amboseli National Park.
we went on a safari/elephant ride in the national park. not sure how i feel about this though it was fun at the time. one elephant was crazy, they tied it to a stake in the middle of a field and you could hear it howling all night.
This was the closest we got to the Elephants ,Each day they have a walk around the zoo at the time we didnt know why people where all looking in one direction we just turned around to see them coming towards us .Great to see them up close.
A lone elephant walking across the dried dirt plain in Kruger National Park, South Africa.
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One of about 5-6 elephants at the San Diego zoo. This one walked up to the wall to schmooze with one of the zoo attendants that had come over.
It is tragic that elephants (and tigers) continue to be ruthlessly poached to the point that many Asian species are now nearing complete extinction.
My flickr friend Kam Hong Leung sent me this link at which anyone who feels about poaching can sign an online petition at this link:
www.flickr.com/photos/16999050@N00/4611174057/
Mrs. Kam took the 4 photos used for this photo-poster at the famous "Green Park" of London. The link to the online petition is below the photo poster.
Please also see this site by elephant enthusiast Petra Prager, and support it any way you can:
www.elefanten-fotolexikon.eu/index.php?seite=startseite
Nikon D700 + AF-S Nikkor 70-300mm VR
_ND75629
Asian Elephants play next to each other in the dirt. Elephants are the largest living land mammals and can reach a height of 10 feet and weigh up to 12,000 pounds. Their life span is 60 to 70 years.
Based on the Elephant Trainer image by Charles Gesmar. Calendar panel from SeptemberHouse on etsy.
Blogged at mscleaverchronicles.wordpress.com/2010/01/06/stitching-in...
Pinnawala Elephant Orphanage is an orphanage, nursery and captive breeding ground for wild Asian elephants located at Pinnawala village, 13 km (8.1 mi) northwest of Kegalle town in Sabaragamuwa Province of Sri Lanka. Pinnawalla is notable for having the largest herd of captive elephants in the world. In 2011, there were 88 elephants, including 37 males and 51 females from 3 generations, living in Pinnawala.
The orphanage was originally founded in order to afford care and protection to many of the orphaned unweaned wild elephants found wandering in and near the forests of Sri Lanka. It was established in 1975 by the Sri Lanka Department of Wildlife Conservation (DWC).
Elephants crossing a river.
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© All rights reserved. Use or reproduction of this image without the prior written consent of the copyright holder Trish Aleve, is in violation of the copyright law.
Elephant Orphanage was established in 16th February 1975 in a beautiful greenish land with fruitful coconut trees and having grasses over the underground, in Pinnawala, Rambukkana, Kegalle, Sri Lanka, by the Department of Wild Life Conservation. At the beginning of orphanage there were only five orphan baby elephants those who brought from different places of the island. From the inceptions to date, Neela, Wijaya, Kadira, Mathali and Kumari are some of babies that were brought to the facility still living in the orphanage. Since then orphan elephants brought to the orphanage from different parts of the island and brought up at the orphanage. They were fed with milk as well as array of fodder.
Due to loss of habitats and fragmentation of forests, due to various activities such as development of agricultural projects, human encroachment to the forest for settlement and cultivation, construction of roads and railways. Elephants are in threat for their survival. Elephants are poached for their tusks and illegal trading are some of the causes for declining of population these giants in Sri Lanka. Baby elephants are being fallen into agricultural wells, drains and pits. The resultant Human Elephant Conflicts, which records the deaths of both the humans and elephants, is the greatest threat to Sri Lanka’s wild elephant population. As a result of anthropogenic activities young animals were become orphans in the wild and for the conservation of such animals an institution was formed in 1975 under the Department of Wildlife Conservation.
Since 1983 the elephant orphanage has being governing by the Department of National Zoological Gardens. First captive birth of the orphanage had taken place on 05th July 1984. There are 78 elephants in orphanage now and there are 69 births in the orphanage and increase the number of elephants in the herd.
VSL Travel & Tours International (Pvt) Ltd
VSL Travels & Tours Int'l (Pvt) Ltd is a registered Tour Operator (Reg No: PV 99322) in Sri Lanka. We specialize in Inbound and Outbound Tours,Money Exchange, Ticketing, and Ground Handling. The Inbound division organizes local sightseeing tours, adventurous tours, Eco and Agro-tourism; catering to a wide target audience. The Agency also caters to specialized incentive trips to all parts of Sri Lanka. VSL Travels & Tours Int'l (Pvt) Ltd Ltd has been in operation since 2014. Led by a team of dynamic individuals with vast experience in the tourism industry, the company has flourished to its present status.
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