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Atkinson said one goal is to bring more elephants to the sanctuary. Currently there are 12 Asian and two African elephants, but they have space enough for 50 more Asian elephants. Food and care cost about $1,000 per elephant each month, and there are currently 14 caregivers and 10 administrative staff workers. The elephants are still kept behind fences and are provided food and medical care, but the sanctuary is as close to living in the wild as they can get, Atkinson said. It looks much like a working Tennessee farm with acres of open pastures and woods and barns to store food and equipment. But as Atkinson drives his car bumping along the rutted dirt roads, he points out a glimpse of three of the Asian elephants, their gray hides peeking out between the tree branches. The sanctuary's first elephant was Tarra, a female Asian elephant that Buckley had trained to perform in circuses, television and movies. Her friendship with a dog named Bella, chronicled in a much-watched video on YouTube, has been one of the sanctuary's most popular stories. The elephants -- all female because female elephants in the wild live in herds apart from the males
-- spend their days foraging, bonding with the rest of the herd and cooling off in the lake. In wintertime, they can escape the cold into heated barns. The African elephants, which are kept separate from the Asian elephants, like to strip all the foliage off the trees and then rip them roots and all out of the ground. But like any wild animal, the elephants can be dangerous. In 2006, a caregiver was killed at The Elephant Sanctuary when one of the elephants suddenly knocked her over and stepped on her chest. Co-founder Blais was also injured in the accident. The sanctuary is accredited by the Global Federation of Animal Sanctuaries and inspections over the last three years by the U.S. Department of Agriculture found no violations. Teresa Telecky, director of wildlife for Humane Society International, international branch of Humane Society of the United States, said elephants need space and the companionship of other elephants and the sanctuary is one of only two places in the country that can offer that. Atkinson said he's confident that vital job will continue. "We have and always had a twofold mission," Atkinson said. "One is to care for sick and needy elephants and the other is to educate people about the plight of elephants, whether they are in captivity or in the wild." ___ Online: The Elephant Sanctuary:
http://www.elephants.com/
[Associated
Press;
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