Perhaps it’s because so many of us grew up watching Disney’s Dumbo as a child that we all have a soft spot for elephants, particularly infant ones.
From the Amboseli Trust for Elephants elephant research and conservation organization – which has rescued a baby elephant.
An eight-month-old calf became trapped in a shallow well in Kenya’s parched grounds of Amboseli national park while its increasingly frantic mother, Zombie watched on, useless to assist. Fortunately, the Trust was informed of the situation in Kenya’s Rift Valley Province earlier this week, and two jeeps were dispatched to assist.
The rescue operation began before the mother would have been driven away by herders who would come to water their cattle early in the morning. The team initially struggled to tie a rope around the calf in the 5ft-deep hole because the low-lying water caused the line to float to the surface.
Finally, they managed to attach it and, with the other end of the rope secured to a jeep, hauled the animal to safety. What came next was absolutely tear-jerking. The calf thundered across the empty field, leaving a trail of dust behind it. The cries of Zombie could be heard in the distance as she ran in the opposite direction.
There are a lot of news stories about elephants getting stuck in the mud and well. So why they can fall down in there. Elephants will often “bathe” in mud or dirt, and they drink and find water and this helps them to cool off. They can’t sweat, so the evaporative cooling of the mud has the same function, allowing the heat from their bodies to be dissipated. It also helps them protect against sunburns. When there’s enough water available an elephant will squirt it over his back to help to him stay cool. If water is in short supply, he may take a dust bath instead.