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Elephants Save Tourists from Tsunami: 2 January 2005
A number of tourists at Thailand's Khao Lak beach resort may owe their lives to elephants who apparently sensed that last week's powerful tsunami was approaching, and sounded a warning.
Reuters news agency says eight elephants that are normally used to carry tourists on rides along the beachfront became agitated last Sunday, more than an hour before the first tsunami wave hit the shore. The beasts then began trumpeting in an unusual manner, their trainers said it sounded as if the elephants were "crying," and pulled at their chains, trying to leave the beach.
Later, just before the first gigantic wave inundated the beach, the elephants resumed their plaintive chorus and broke away from their trainers, heading for a nearby hill covered in jungle vegetation. By this time the trainers realized what was happening, and followed.
Some of the pachyderms lifted tourists onto their backs with their trunks, Reuters says, then charged up the hill into the jungle to a safe place.
Scientists have noted on many occasions that similar unusual behavior by animals has appeared to anticipate natural calamities such as earthquakes.
Elephants Save Tourists from Tsunami: 2 January 2005
A number of tourists at Thailand's Khao Lak beach resort may owe their lives to elephants who apparently sensed that last week's powerful tsunami was approaching, and sounded a warning.
Reuters news agency says eight elephants that are normally used to carry tourists on rides along the beachfront became agitated last Sunday, more than an hour before the first tsunami wave hit the shore. The beasts then began trumpeting in an unusual manner, their trainers said it sounded as if the elephants were "crying," and pulled at their chains, trying to leave the beach.
Later, just before the first gigantic wave inundated the beach, the elephants resumed their plaintive chorus and broke away from their trainers, heading for a nearby hill covered in jungle vegetation. By this time the trainers realized what was happening, and followed.
Some of the pachyderms lifted tourists onto their backs with their trunks, Reuters says, then charged up the hill into the jungle to a safe place.
Scientists have noted on many occasions that similar unusual behavior by animals has appeared to anticipate natural calamities such as earthquakes.
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Re: Elephants Save Tourists from Tsunami
Fri, January 7, 2005 - 11:00 PMI'm surprised that these elephants were kind enough to aid the people.......These poor creatures are captured in the wild, trained through starvation, and made to work very hard with very poor care. I hope they got away.... -
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Re: Elephants Save Tourists from Tsunami
Fri, January 7, 2005 - 11:05 PMwww.elehost.com/elephants.shtml
'The compassion, communication and social nature of elephants are something we admire and strive to achieve in our daily work.' -
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Re: Elephants Save Tourists from Tsunami
Mon, January 10, 2005 - 10:26 AMYeah, from what I've seen personally and also based on other stories I've heard from friends of mine who have spent time in Thailand, Cambodia and Vietnam, the elephants that are used for elephant rides tend to be treated VERY poorly. They'd have to be a lot more forgiving than just about any species I know of--just about any species who are treated the way these elephants are for as long as they are, generally become vicious.
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Re: Elephants Save Tourists from Tsunami
Thu, January 20, 2005 - 10:50 AMI heard that a lot of the tribal people in the area got their cues from the unusual animal behavior and headed for the hills too. -
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Re: Elephants Save Tourists from Tsunami
Thu, January 20, 2005 - 12:25 PM"I heard that a lot of the tribal people in the area got their cues from the unusual animal behavior and headed for the hills too."
Link, please! =) -
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Re: Elephants Save Tourists from Tsunami
Tue, February 8, 2005 - 6:54 AM
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