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End Captivity

Elephants - Beasts of the Wild

By Andrea Corwin Published 12 months ago 3 min read
(c) Andrea O. Corwin October 2017 Kenya

Cheyenne Mountain Zoo keep the following African elephants captive in their zoo.

Missy

Kimba

Lucky

LouLou

Jambo

As mentioned above, all are African elephants, the largest land animal on earth. African elephants have two species: forest (a bit smaller and endangered) and savanna elephants. Reproduction in zoos is rare, and those born in zoos don't usually live long. Gestation for elephants is eighteen to twenty-two months. Of course, captive elephants are not hunted or poached, but their captive life is not ideal.

This zoo's stance on cold weather for elephants, that normally exist is warmer climates, is that in forty-degree weather, they can go inside, and the doors to the building are kept open.

Regarding arthritis: all of them get pills for arthritis and meds for other conditions.

The zoo seems proud of the exercise they provide to the elephants - each gets a daily quarter-mile walk. In the wild, elephants may travel thirty miles daily, maintaining healthy feet and flexible joints from movement over their native habitat. This zoo has a two-acre area they can roam out of sight of visitors, according to their website. For flexibility, human caretakers in the zoo have trained the pachyderms to let the keepers help stretch them via what they call elephant yoga. Captive elephants develop foot issues due to the unnatural areas of their life, including concrete.

Elephant Encounters: paid human encounters allow visitors to feed them and watch them paint a picture. In some parts of the world, a stick is inserted vertically into an elephant's trunk so that the elephant can grasp a paint brush. It is painful for them. I don't know how this zoo has the elephants painting. They say, "Animal artists at the Zoo are taught how to paint using operant conditioning and positive reinforcement. Our animals enjoy painting as a fun form of enrichment, and you will too!"

**No humans have ever reported seeing elephants painting pictures.**

Captive elephants cannot conduct all of their normal behaviors or interact socially compared to what they do in the wild, where they live in a large herd. In the wild, there is a matriarch who leads the group on the normal migration routes. She teaches them the paths, the best food, and how to cross a deep river and ensure the babies get across. The matriarch shows them the best bathing spots in rivers or watering holes or where to get a dust bath. The knowledge is passed down. Elephants live in families and mourn when a member dies. They touch the body and hover nearby. Orphaned elephants that are rescued by the Sheldrick Wildlife Trust in Kenya are raised and released into the wild when old enough. They have numerous accounts of the females returning with their babies to show the keepers. The Trust reports on all the different personalities and likes regarding food of their rescues.

It is impossible for the Matriarch to act normally as an elephant in a zoo - she isn't roaming free, showing others which branches, twigs and fruit are the best, or ways to protect a baby from predators. She cannot teach the youngsters how to behave properly or the family structure of the herd works. No wonder some attack their zoo or circus keepers.

Elephants don't eat hay in the wild, but zoos feed it to them.

The NhRP is a nonprofit, tax-exempt 501(c)(3) corporation.

"Today, the Nonhuman Rights Project (NhRP) issued the following statement in response to the Colorado Supreme Court’s opinion in our elephant rights case, which denied the right to liberty to five elephants held captive in the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo: This Colorado Supreme Court opinion perpetuates a clear injustice, stating that unless an individual is human they have no right to liberty, “no matter how cognitively, psychologically, or socially sophisticated they may be.”

Elephants are herd animals, in complex social structures. There are sanctuaries with thousands of acres that are willing to introduce zoo elephants to a more normal life.

Copyright © 1/22/2025 by Andrea O. Corwin

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About the Creator

Andrea Corwin

🐘Wildlife 🌳 Environment 🥋3rd° See nature through my eyes

Poetry, fiction, horror, life experiences, and author photos. Written without A.I. © Andrea O. Corwin

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  • Colleen Walters10 months ago

    This is a tragedy for the elephants. I have 3.25 acres and in Florida, technically each horse requires 2 acres- I think originally it was for grazing area. I could not imagine having one elephant, let alone more, on my pastures which are about 2.75 acres. The circus and zoo mentality has conditioned people to think that the animals are OK with it, when in fact the animals don't know anything else. There are so many " cute" videos of dogs and cats doing humanistic tricks and they have almost all been abused to make them do it. We can all make an impact by not clicking on videos where animals are being abused. Some countries are known for barbaric handling of animals. It's also impactful to search for and use cruelty-free products. When I published the elephant story, it was not to glorify the story, it was to bring attention to psychological imprisonment in an extreme degree. I appreciate your compassion for God's creatures who have to share this planet with man's cruel pomposity.

  • John Cox12 months ago

    Preach it sister! Human arrogance toward animals is destructive, cruel and unnecessary!

  • Susan Payton12 months ago

    Such beautiful and smart creatures to be treated this way. A terrible tragedy. I enjoyed watching elephants at the zoo, but now after reading this, I vote for the thousands of acres donated to them as a sanctuary.

  • Cathy holmes12 months ago

    Oh, my poor soul. They're such beautiful creatures.

  • Omggg, why would they insert the paintbrushes and ask them to paint 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭

  • verse voyager12 months ago

    This is an insightful and compelling piece shedding light on the challenges faced by elephants in captivity, especially at Cheyenne Mountain Zoo. The juxtaposition of their natural behaviors in the wild versus their limited lives in captivity is thought-provoking and raises critical questions about their welfare. Thank you for sharing this detailed account—it’s a call for reflection and advocacy!

  • Rachel Deeming12 months ago

    Sad. No right to liberty? I do not agree. Sad.

  • I had no idea elephants had such complex social lives. It’s great that some sanctuaries are giving them a better chance at living more naturally!

  • Kodah12 months ago

    This makes me so sad 🥺. Elephants are such intelligent and social animals. It's important to consider what we owe these animals 💓

  • Mother Combs12 months ago

    That's so sad '(

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