Penticton Herald

Caring for elephants means no free rides

- By ROSS FREAKE & HOLLY WANLIN

Holly Wanlin thinks about elephants often, especially on World Elephant Day.

It’s Aug. 12 this year. Wanlin, owner of Shawanda Rocks Crystals and Gems Wellness Centre in Kelowna, volunteere­d for two weeks at an elephant sanctuary at Surin, a small Thai village near the Cambodian border.

She also volunteere­d at elephant sanctuarie­s in Northern Thailand, and in India.

This is Holly’s story.

There was an attempt to pull the elephants out of tourism, so the mahouts (elephant tenders) were built a house, the elephants a structure. The queen of Thailand outlawed logging to gain incentives for the mahouts to bring their elephants here where the tourists would pay them to help with their elephants.

The queen also gave them a monthly subsidy to develop this program.

I was assigned an elephant named Kumsun, a 33-year-old pregnant grandma. I walked her to the river and bathed her three times a week.

I became quite attached to my elephant and planned to return the following year for the birth of the baby.

We also cut bamboo stalks and cleared fields for replanting. Cleaned up elephant dung and made sure Kumsun had fresh water.

The mahout was always present and never spoke English. The program paid him a portion of the proceeds and the volunteers were placed in a guesthouse and lived communally with shared rooms and bathrooms and all meals and transporta­tion were provided for.

The elephants were super friendly and safe. No riding is permitted except by the mahout who rides bareback.

As a group, we helped with other jobs in the village as time permitted. We painted the tombstones at the elephant cemetery and helped women pick chili crops, so they could get them to market. We saw how elephant poo can be made into paper and had a chance to make some at a small factory.

My trip was booked for the following year only to find that the elephants were taken from Surin by their mahouts and trucked without warning back to Phuket where they could earn more money giving rides to tourists, which is extremely harmful to the elephants.

Long days carrying heavy loads and inadequate nutrition leads to many problems.

I never saw Kumsun again. Instead, I flew to Chiang Mai where I was trucked high into the mountains where 12 camps consisting of more than 70 elephants were being developed. The elephants are completely free to roam here.

Some mahouts are still around but most surrendere­d their elephants because they are expensive to keep and their owners fell into hard times.

This was an amazing experience. The elephants approached and looking for sugar cane or bamboo would be motivated to just hang around while we worked. We packed sand from the river chain gang style to build cement foundation­s for elephant shelters.

There were numerous mud holes where the elephants came together for mud baths. The camps were a fair distance apart and accessed by 4x4 truck.

There is a vet centre and regular check-ups for all the elephants. The males were on separate groups from the females. The elephants loved Reiki, a form of energy medicine, and I always had a group following me around.

I have been goosed by and kissed by an elephant. I also learned some mahout language to speak to the elephants.

These camps are probably more developed now. Structures were being built for tourists to come in and work. I bathed in the river and slept on a simple mat on the floor.

In India, I worked for SOS at an elephant sanctuary in Agra. It was completely different. These elephants were traumatize­d by their life experience so we were only allowed to spend time with them unpenned when they were on walks with their trainers. They were in large enclosures and we prepared and weighed their daily food.

One elephant was completely blind and a few had killed their previous owners. We barely had any hands on. It was very hard work, painting structures and upkeep.

We stayed in a gated compound for safety reasons and were transporte­d 30 minutes each day to the sanctuary. The elephants were very well cared for and monitored closely.

I also worked for the Sloth bear rescue. The dancing bear. It was an amazing experience although heart breaking, so sad what they endured.

Big moral: never ride an elephant and never support a hotel where an elephant is their featured guest.

 ?? Special to ONG ?? RIGHT: While Holly Wankin volunteere­d at an elephant sanctuary in Thailand, she looked after Kumsun, a 33-year-old elephant that was pregnant. ABOVE: Some elephants like to hug.
Special to ONG RIGHT: While Holly Wankin volunteere­d at an elephant sanctuary in Thailand, she looked after Kumsun, a 33-year-old elephant that was pregnant. ABOVE: Some elephants like to hug.

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