Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Choose kindness on vacation

- JENNIFER O’CONNOR Jennifer O’Connor is a senior writer for the PETA Foundation.

School is out, and the open road beckons. Summer vacations are what memories are made of, and with so many choices, it’s hard to narrow down the right destinatio­n. But whether you decide to stay close to home or travel to far-flung destinatio­ns, please don’t spend any time or money in places where animals are forced to entertain the public.

You’ll spot the billboards on every highway— appeals to pull over to see every novelty from live alligators to dancing bears. It may be tempting to take a break and check things out, but tourists who buy tickets are unwittingl­y keeping animals in servitude until the day those animals die.

Just about anybody—whether or not they have any qualificat­ions—can apply for and receive a U.S. Department of Agricultur­e animal exhibitor’s license. Roadside zoos are typically privately owned and on precarious financial footing. At these facilities, naturally far-ranging animals like lions, bears, tigers and primates are usually housed in cramped cages consisting of chain-link fencing and concrete floors. Their comfort is an afterthoug­ht.

Since most of these places operate with little staff or money, cages are often poorly maintained and filled with urine and feces. The animals might not be provided with any kind of enrichment beyond an old tire or a dead tree branch to help them pass the seemingly interminab­le days.

These kinds of operations aren’t only here in the U.S. Throughout Asia, tourists find appeals to visit elephant “sanctuarie­s” for up-close encounters. But no legitimate elephant sanctuary allows hands-on interactio­ns with the public, and that includes letting tourists ride the elephants or give them baths.

When not being forced to labor, the elephants at these sham sanctuarie­s are chained, and always live in fear of being beaten with a bullhook—a heavy baton with a sharp steel hook on the end. TRAFFIC, a leading internatio­nal wildlife-trade monitoring network, released an exposé showing how tourism actually drives the suffering of elephants, including when they’re captured in their natural forest homes.

“Swim with dolphins” programs are another common tourist draw. In nature, dolphins swim vast distances every day in extended family pods. They are keenly intelligen­t, have complex social ties, and use echolocati­on to navigate and judge distances. In captivity, even the largest tank feels like a prison to them.

Animals are suffering even at well-known, popular tourist destinatio­ns, including the Grand Canyon; Santorini, Greece; the pyramids of Giza in Egypt; and Petra in Jordan, where horses, donkeys and camels are forced to haul sightseers around on their backs or in carriages. They are worked to exhaustion, often in the scorching heat, with no access to water. If they collapse, they’re beaten until they get back up.

Return home from your vacation with photos and happy anecdotes, not memories of despairing dolphins, stressed bears or battered horses. Their mistreatme­nt should be condemned by all compassion­ate people. Every traveler must pledge not to spend a dime on businesses that exploit animals.

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