bwanamich:
Yea! I knew if we talked enough I'd find things I could agree with you on!!
Your statement about "my bull" acting differently in a different situation is so true becacuse I've see him in a different frame of mind actually charging someone. An elephant who "knows" you and isn't bothered by you when you are sitting down on a veranda could act like an entirely different animal if you stood up and he had never seen you stand up before. You are then bigger than he is used to seeing you and are more threatening.
The place where we part company though is "In the locals mind the sooner they get rid of him the better". The fact of the matter is, that in many, many cases the "local" just moved into the area knowing full well it was elephant territory. Then they started their shambas and when the elephant eats their garden want the elephant shot. In a case such as this I have no pity on the farmer at all. For those people who have lived in the area for years, I feel differently.
Don't know if you have been in Amboseli lately over by the Serena. Five years ago when I went on my first trip there were only a couple of families there. Now it is amost a village. They knew, supposedly, when they moved there they were right in the middle of a corridor but they moved there anyway. The number of cattle is increasing rapidly. Do I feel sorry if one of their 300 cows gets tusked. Not a bit - other than the fact that if they aren't paid off, they will retaliate.
Sit and watch the animals in Ambo some time. Elephants never go after any other animal in the park. They co-exist peacefully. Why then do they go after the cattle outside the park? My gut reaction is that the herder is yelling or perhaps even throwing things at the elephant and he retaliates. Can't blame the elephant for that.
I haven't seen the movies of which you speak and I agree with you that part of the way we think about wildlife is due to that warm fuzzy feeling.
My favorite story was one in Joyce Poole's book. A camel herder in Kenya went out with his camels. The camels came back at night but he didn't. Early the next morning they sent out a search party. They found the man sitting propped up against a tree with an elephant standing beside him. They tried shooing it away but it wouldn't go, and they were prepared to shoot it. He said "don't shoot it, it saved my life" Turns out that the elephant had charged him. He fell breaking his leg. The elephant turned around and realized it had hurt him and picked him up with trunk and tusks and placed him up against the tree, guarding him from lions at night. I felt this story was too good to be true and only half believed it. When I stayed at Elephant Watch Camp in Samburu I mentioned it to Iain Douglas-Hamilton. He said he knew the story to be true because he knew the man it happened to. Truly incredible.
Must run and put dinner on the table. Will talk later.
- Edited by Jan on 06.12.2006, 02:33 -
- Edited by Jan on 06.12.2006, 02:35 -