Posts Tagged ‘Baby Animals’
Help Enforce Ban On Outdoor Sales Of Animals
California recently enacted an important law, amending Section 597 and adding Section 597.4 to the Penal Code, (http://e-lobbyist.com/gaits/text/347726) banning the sale of live animals “on any street, highway, public right-of-way, parking lot, carnival, or boardwalk.” The law targets swap meets and flea markets where dog and cat breeders and exotic bird dealers sell their animals. The law also applies to poultry and small animal sales at farmers’ markets, livestock auctions, and other events.
Using this law, we can prevent the sale of thousands of animals every year in California and make business difficult for animal abusers and breeders. Enforcement is going to be difficult, so we need you to help monitor enforcement of this important new law.
IDA is calling on animal advocates across California to be vigilant and do some investigating in your community. Is there a flea market or carnival that sells live animals in your area? How about a parking lot or outside a grocery store? If you find animals being sold outdoors, take a photo of the animals and the area and contact us. We can assist you in assessing if the seller is in violation of the law (there are some exceptions) and contacting your local law enforcement and getting the sales stopped.
If you can help monitor enforcement of Section 597.4, or if you have questions, please contact Hope@idausa.org or 415-448-0058.
To support our work please click here.
Adopt, Don’t Shop, And Please Support Spay/Neuter Programs!
It’s hard to resist puppies and kittens wrapped up in bows, but in this season of giving it’s important to remember all the homeless animals who need loving homes.
It’s estimated that an unfathomable six to eight million dogs and cats enter shelters each year. Half of them, tragically, are euthanized. Most of us cannot even get our minds around the fact that three to four million cats and dogs are euthanized, every year, in the United States alone.
The biggest thing you can do to reverse this trend is to support spay and neuter efforts in your community. Find a good local program and donate your time to help. Become a messenger in your community for spay/neuter programs, by supporting them where they exist, or working to start them where they don’t. Convince your neighbors and elected representatives that funding spay/neuter is the most cost-effective way to help dogs and cats. Write letters to the editor supporting increased public funding for low-cost spay/neuter.
Next best thing you can do is adopt furry family members from shelters, rather than supporting pet stores and breeders. There is no good reason to ever choose a pet store or breeder when so many animals in shelters need homes.
A few important things to remember:
- Be certain you are ready to make a lifetime commitment to your new family member. If you’re a parent getting an animal mainly for your children, be sure you are willing to be the primary caregiver, as children often lose interest.
- Animals given as gifts are frequently unwanted and are returned. If you want to give an animal as a gift, first make sure the future guardian is ready to make the commitment. Give them a gift certificate for a shelter adoption, and then take them to the shelter to see who they bond with.
- About 25% of dogs and cats who enter shelters are “pure-bred,” so if you’re attached to a particular breed, odds are you can find them in a shelter. There are also a large number of breed specific rescues. But consider, instead, a mutt – if you’re looking for love and companionship, the breed is not very relevant.
- If you’re looking for smaller animals, most shelters also have rabbits, rats, guinea pigs and birds. But don’t presume that “small” equals easy to care for – learn the special needs of any species before bringing them into your home.
- Consider adopting an older cat or dog. Shelters have a harder time placing older dogs and cats and they are often the first to be euthanized. There are a great number of advantages with an older animal companion. They have generally already been trained and will be calmer. Black cats are also hard to place due to unreasonable superstition, and black dogs are often bypassed simply because it’s harder to see their facial features in a shelter setting. Tell shelter staff you’d like to meet the cat who has been there the longest, or the eldest dog. The shelter staff will love you!
- If you decide to adopt a dog please consider a vegan diet. Dogs can be very healthy and thrive on a well-balanced vegan dog food.
- Be certain to spay or neuter the new addition to the family. Accidental breeding is one of the biggest reasons for the overpopulation problem.

Vegan was a sick and malnourished feral who was trapped by a shelter worker. After she was diagnosed with FeLV, and deemed unadoptable, the shelter worker (and current IDA staff member) decided to adopt her.
If you go about it the right way, the holidays can be a great time to add a new family member and to give him or her all of your love!
For more tips on how you can be a great guardian and help keep animals safe, please visit our Guardian Campaign.
To support our work please click here.
Work every day of your life to right what is wrong.
Must-see Film: The Elephant In The Living Room
Seems like IDA has mostly been urging people to avoid movies this year because of the use of elephants and other wild animals who are cruelly trained and confined. But here’s an award-winning film about wild animals that we highly recommend: The Elephant In The Living Room. (Note: There are no elephants in the film but don’t let that stop you from seeing it!)
The Elephant In The Living Room is a documentary feature-length movie, produced by Michael Webber and featuring our new hero for the animals Tim Harrison, that examines the subculture of exotic animal owners and dealers in the U.S. The film takes a balanced approach to the issue, showing compassion for the animals and for a misguided human whose dysfunctional love for two lions is sure to end badly. Its main focus is Harrison’s efforts to help the lions and their owner by convincing him to let them go to a sanctuary. The story takes some unexpected twists and turns, and I’ll warn you that there is one heartbreaking scene. But this film is so important that everyone should see it.
The ownership of exotics is unfortunately alive and well in the U.S., as we know all too well at IDA. We are fighting right now to stop an elephant from being brought to a proposed pseudo-sanctuary in Maine. Despite altruistic claims, it’s just one more story about someone wanting to possess a wild animal, no matter how detrimental it is for that animal’s welfare. Like many parts of the U.S., there is no law in Maine banning the ownership of exotic animals.
The Elephant In The Room is by far is one of the most compelling and enlightening films ever made about the issue, and it’s one you should not miss. It’s not in major theaters, but you can own it on DVD (a bargain for $19.99) or Blu-Ray by visiting the film’s website and ordering a copy (it says “pre-order” because the actual release is next week). And be sure to “like” the film by visiting its Facebook page.
Disclaimer: IDA has had no involvement in the making or distribution of The Elephant In The Living Room. We just think it’s such a significant film that we’re helping to spread the word about it. Buy a copy and share it with friends or arrange a special in-home screening to educate people about this important issue.
Join IDA’s Elephant Task Force to find out what you can do to help elephants!
International Day of Action for Elephants in Zoos is a Huge Success!
This year’s International Day of Action for Elephants in Zoos (IDAEZ) on June 11th was an outstanding success, featuring events in 27 cities and a virtual protest that used social networking technology to circulate more than 9,000 messages about the suffering and premature deaths of elephants in zoos. Thanks to everyone for your involvement!
Elephant advocates held demonstrations from the U.S. to Canada to the UK and Spain, educating thousands of people attending their local zoos. Media reports on IDAEZ events carried our message to even more of the public. Scores of colorful banners and posters, and the 30,000 informative flyers that were handed out, opened people’s eyes to the lifetime of misery elephants endure in inadequate zoo displays.
We welcome the many IDAEZ events in new cities this year, including the Houston Zoo, Fresno Zoo, Honolulu Zoo, Rosamond Gifford Zoo, Birmingham Zoo, Milwaukee Zoo and Ft. Worth Zoo.
We’re also pleased to report that events could not be held at the Central Florida Zoo and the Brookfield Zoo near Chicago because those zoos no longer have elephants! And it looks like there will be even fewer zoos holding elephants in the years to come.
The virtual protest, also held on Saturday, was a great success. This special cyber-demo allowed everyone to participate in IDAEZ by Tweeting zoos and posting enlightening messages on zoos’ Facebook pages about the physical and psychological suffering that Earth’s largest land mammals endure in cramped zoo enclosures. Rather than allow their members to read the truth, at least seven zoos shut down their Facebook pages in different ways.
IDA thanks everyone who participated in IDAEZ in person and on-line. You helped educate people around the world about the terrible plight of elephants in zoos, bringing us a step closer to ending their suffering. And we also thank this year’s celebrity supporters, Lily Tomlin, Jorja Fox and Mariana Tosca, for their commitment to helping the elephants.
You can visit www.HelpElephants.com to read more about IDAEZ and our campaigns for elephants in zoos and circuses.
INTERNATIONAL DAY OF ACTION FOR ELEPHANTS IN ZOOS: JOIN IDA’s VIRTUAL DEMONSTRATION ON SATURDAY!
Saturday, June 11, is the International Day of Action for Elephants in Zoos, when activists around the world will be sending a message that elephants just don’t belong in cramped, unnatural displays that shorten their lives by decades.
This year, everyone can help the elephants, no matter where you live, by participating in a virtual demonstration on Facebook and Twitter. It’s easy to do and a great way to spread the word that it’s time to stop the elephants’ suffering.
Here’s how it works:
Facebook Instructions – Speak up for Elephants in 3 easy steps!
1. Make sure you have your protest “sign“. All you have to do is right click on the “Elephants Suffer” image and choose “Save” to get this “sign”. Replace your profile photo to your “sign” and keep it up all weekend!
2. Go through the zoo list and “Like” the promotional pages for these zoos. This will allow you to post comments on their pages:
United States
- Albuquerque Biological Park, Albuquerque, NM
- Audubon Zoo, Audubon, LA
- Birmingham Zoo, Birmingham, AL
- BREC’s Baton Rouge, Baton Rouge, LA
- Bronx Zoo, Bronx, NY
- Buffalo Zoological Gardens, Buffalo, NY
- Busch Gardens, Tampa Bay, FL
- Buttonwood Park Zoo, New Bedford, MA
- Caldwell Zoo, Tyler, TX
- Cameron Park Zoo, Waco, TX
- Chaffee Zoological Gardens, Fresno, CA
- Cheyenne Mountain Zoo, Colorado Springs, CO
- Cincinnati Zoo, Cincinnati, OH
- Cleveland Metro Park Zoo, Cleveland, OH
- Columbus Zoo, Columbus, OH
- Dallas Zoo, Dallas, TX
- Denver Zoo, Denver, CO
- Dickerson Park Zoo, Springfield, MO
- Disney Animal Kingdom, Lake Buena Vista, FL
- El Paso Zoo, El Paso, TX
- Fort Worth Zoo, Ft. Worth, TX
- Greenville Zoo, Greenville, SC
- Hogle Zoo, Salt Lake City, UT
- Honolulu Zoo, Honolulu, HI
- Houston Zoological Gardens, Houston, TX
- Indianapolis Zoo, Indianapolis, IN
- Jacksonville Zoological Gardens, Jacksonville, FL
- Kansas City Zoo, Kansas City, MO
- Knoxville Zoo, Knoxville, TN
- Lee Richardson Zoo, Garden City, KS
- Little Rock Zoo, Little Rock, AK
- Los Angeles Zoo, Los Angeles, CA
- Louisville Zoological Gardens, Louisville, KY
- Lowry Park Zoo, Tampa, FL
- Maryland Zoo, Baltimore, MD
- Memphis Zoo, Memphis, TN
- Miami Metro Zoo, Miami, FL
- Milwaukee Zoological Garden, Milwaukee, WI
- Montgomery Zoo, Montgomery, AL
- Nashville Zoo, Nashville, TN
- Niabi Zoo, Coal Valley, IL
- North Carolina Zoo, Asheboro, NC
- Oakland Zoo, Oakland, CA
- Oklahoma City Zoo, Oklahoma City, OK
- Oregon Zoo, Portland, OR
- Phoenix Zoo, Phoenix, AZ
- Pittsburgh Zoo, Pittsburgh, PA
- Point Defiance Zoo, Tacoma, WA
- Reid Park Zoo, Tuscon, AZ
- Riverbanks Zoo, Columbia, SC
- Roger Williams Park Zoo, Providence RI
- Rosamond Gifford Zoo, Syracuse, NY
- St. Louis Zoological Park, St. Louis, MO
- San Antonio Zoo, San Antonio, TX
- San Diego Zoo Safari Park, Escondido, CA
- San Diego Zoo, San Diego, CA
- Santa Barbara Zoo, Santa Barbara, CA
- Sedgwick County Zoo, Wichita, KS
- Seneca Park Zoo, Rochester, NY
- Six Flags Discovery Kingdom, Vallejo, CA
- Smithsonian National Zoological Park, Washington, DC
- Toledo Zoo, Toledo, OH
- Topeka Zoological Park, Topeka, KS
- Tulsa Zoo and Living Museum, Tulsa, OK
- Virginia Zoo, Norfolk, VA
- Wildlife Safari, Winston, OR
- Woodland Park Zoo, Seattle, WA
- Zoo Atlanta, Atlanta, GA
Canada
- Bowmanville Zoo (Ontario)
- Calgary Zoo (Alberta)
- Granby Zoo (Quebec)
- Toronto Zoo (Ontario)
3. Starting on Saturday June 11th, start posting your comments! Remember that your comments will be seen by followers of all ages and comments that include profanity or can be interpreted as “abusive” will probably be removed before the general public gets a chance to read them and may result in your profile being reported and/or deleted by Facebook. IDA is not responsible for any comments you may leave or action that results.
Twitter Instructions:
1. Make sure you have your protest “sign“. All you have to do is right click on the “Elephants Suffer” image and choose “Save” to get this “sign”. Replace your profile photo to your “sign” and keep it up all weekend!
2. Go through the zoo list above and “Follow” these pages. This will allow you to send them direct messages and Tweets using the @. here’s an example of how this works – you Tweet : @ZooAtl Elephants need more space than urban zoos can provide. It’s cruel to keep elephants in zoos!
And that Tweet goes directly to the Zoo Atlanta Twitter page.
3. Encourage your friends to join your Twitter Demo! Tweet to them to also change their profile image to their “sign”. Here is an example of a Tweet you can use to encourage them to Tweet the zoos you are Tweeting: FF! Follow these zoos ( Then list a bunch of Twitter pages for zoos with elephants and put a @ before their address. Example : @ZooAtl ) & Tweet about what you think of zoos!
4. Starting on Saturday June 19th, start sending direct messages and Tweeting to the zoos you are following using the Reply function. Here is are some examples of a great Twitter Demo Tweet: @ZooAtl is no fun for the Elephants who live there. OR Elephants belong in the wild not @ZooAtl
5, You can run your Twitter Demo all day – Rain or Shine! But remember messages and Tweets that include profanity or can be interpreted as “abusive” may result in your profile being reported and/or deleted by Twitter. IDA is not reasonable for any messages or Tweets sent or action that results.
Here are some quick messages you can send (but feel free to create your own):
Elephants are suffering and dying prematurely in zoos.
Elephants should not suffer for our entertainment!
Elephant captivity does not equal conservation.
Elephants need more space than urban zoos can provide.
It’s cruel to keep elephants in zoos.
The largest zoo exhibit is still not big enough to meet elephants’ complex needs.
Inadequate conditions for elephants cause them to suffer painful foot disease and arthritis, infertility, and high infant mortality and stillbirth rates, and aberrant behaviors.
Repetitive rocking, swaying and head bobbing are signs of psychological distress; elephants don’t do this in the wild!
The life of an elephant in a zoo = misery, disease and early death.
Think about it: Elephants have a natural life span of 60-70 years, yet they are dying decades before their time in zoos. You call that conservation?
Time to ban the bullhook in zoos! Stop cruel, circus-style training!
Think about it: North American zoos will spend about half a billion dollars on remodeling exhibits that still will be too small for elephants. That money could protect entire populations of elephants in Africa and Asia!
Think about it: Zoos spend more than $25million a year to display fewer than 300 elephants. That money could protect entire populations of elephants in Africa and Asia!
The world’s leading elephant experts say elephants don’t belong in urban zoos. Why aren’t zoos listening?
Think about it: Scientific research shows that elephants in zoos have far shorter life expectancies than those in the wild.
Keeping elephants in zoos will not save them in the wild.
Elephants don’t belong in cold weather zoos!
To find out how you can help elephants year round – CLICK HERE to Join IDA’s Elephant Task Force!
Are You Ready for the International Day of Action for Elephants in Zoos? Breaking News: CSI’s Jorja Fox Lends Her Support!
On Saturday, June 11, activists in at least 24 cities around the world will take part in the International Day of Action for Elephants in Zoos, holding outreach events and demonstrations to send the message that it’s wrong to keep elephants in small zoo displays where these magnificent animals are suffering and dying prematurely. This year we’re also offering a surprise co-event, but you’ll have to stay tuned to this blog for more information later in the week.
IDA is delighted to announce that CSI’s Jorja Fox (also seen in ER and West Wing) has joined Lily Tomlin in endorsing the International Day of Action for Elephants in Zoos. Besides being a great actress, she’s also a dedicated advocate for animals and offers these inspiring words:
“Jorja Fox here, asking you to please support this year’s International Day of Action for Elephants in Zoos! We need to put the focus where it belongs – on protecting elephants in their natural habitats – and stop wasting hundreds of millions of dollars on artificial zoo displays that will never meet their needs. Instead of cruel confinement and domination, let’s offer sanctuary, peace, compassion and hope. It’s up to each and every one of us to take a stand for the elephants now in order to ensure their welfare in captivity and their continued existence on this planet.”
You don’t want to miss this special day of action for the elephants, who need your help more than ever! Click here to view a list of scheduled events. For more information, visit our IDAEZ page or email IDAEZ@idausa.org.
Victory! Fulton County Bans Use of Bullhooks On Elephants…And More
In a great win, the Fulton County Commission in Georgia voted 4-1 to ban the use of bullhooks on elephants. The ordinance covers unincorporated south Fulton, and it would apply primarily to smaller circuses that visit the area, effectively stopping them from using elephants in performances and rides. Unfortunately, it does not stop the use of bullhooks by the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus, which performs in Atlanta.
Bullhooks are steel-tipped rods resembling fireplace pokers that are used to train and control elephants through physical punishment and intimidation (see accompanying photo). Handlers prod, hook and strike the elephants, often causing puncture wounds, lacerations and abscesses. There is abundant evidence showing that circuses routinely abuse elephants with bullhooks.
The perfect example of this training is seen in the footage recently released by Animal Defenders International, showing a typical training session for the elephants at Have Trunk Will Travel. The footage includes shots of Tai, the elephant featured in the movie Water for Elephants, being shocked with a hand-held electric device, and other elephants as they are hooked and viciously hit with the bullhook. (This company hires out elephants for rides, weddings, films, photo shoots, and parties, including some pretty seamy Hollywood soirees — just about anything that will make them money.) In one shot, the trainer tells the cameraperson not to show her hooking the elephants. That’s because this is the side of elephant training that’s never meant to be seen by the public, no matter if it’s a circus, a zoo, or an outfit like Have Trunk Will Travel.
What most people don’t know is that about half of zoos holding elephants use bullhooks, even though it’s inhumane for the elephants and extremely dangerous for keepers. Just this year, a young zookeeper was killed by an elephant at the Knoxville Zoo. And last year a seasoned keeper was nearly killed by a young male elephant. What makes these incidents even more tragic is that they were entirely preventable. Zoos can use a more progressive and humane training method that uses positive reinforcement and requires a barrier between elephant and keeper.
Please help IDA keep up the fight for elephants in captivity! You can start by taking part in our International Day of Action for Elephants in Zoos (IDAEZ) on June 11, a global event aimed at educating the world about the suffering of elephants in zoos. Click here for more information. If there isn’t an event planned for your zoo, it’s not to late to organize one! Contact IDAEZ@idausa.org to learn how. And stay tuned to this blog for a special announcement next week about action you can take for elephants.
Lily Tomlin Wants YOU To Participate In IDA’s International Day Of Action For Elephants In Zoos!
This year’s International Day of Action for Elephants in Zoos (IDAEZ) – on Saturday, June 11 – is quickly approaching. IDA is pleased that Lily Tomlin is again supporting this global event and the actions of advocates around the world who will hold outreach events and demonstrations to educate the public about the tragic affects of confining elephants in small, urban zoo enclosures.
Lily is urging everyone to participate:
Elephants were never meant to be confined in zoos, where they are suffering and dying prematurely. Please help me share this important message by participating in the International Day of Action for Elephants in Zoos on June 11, a unique event that brings the world together to stop the suffering of elephants in zoos.
Last year there were events in more than 30 cities worldwide that educated thousands of people around the world. You can help make this year’s Day of Action an even greater success by organizing or participating in an event near you.
Events are already scheduled in California, Florida, South Carolina, Massachusetts, Texas and Washington, and internationally in Canada, Spain and the UK. Click here for a full list of scheduled events. (New events are being added all the time so check the list often – or add your own event!)
If your city isn’t yet listed for an event, we can help you organize one. See the IDAEZ Get Started page for more information. IDA provides flyers and posters, issues alerts to advocates in your area so they can attend your event, and sends news advisories to the media.
The elephants need your help. Please join IDA and Lily Tomlin in putting an end to their suffering by taking part in the International Day of Action for Elephants in Zoos.
For more information on IDAEZ click here or email IDAEZ@idausa.org.
Good Guardians know that Bunnies need more than Baskets!
With Easter approaching, many people’s thoughts turn towards bunnies, who have long represented the holiday thanks to their symbolic associations of fertility, rebirth, and regeneration. This year rabbits are even more visible than at other years during this time, because the Chinese Lunar Year which began this February is officially the Year of the Rabbit.
But rabbits are more than just a symbol of rebirth to Christians or luck and longevity to the Chinese. They are also living, breathing animals with complex needs and wants. Many people want to bring home a rabbit for Easter or the Year of the Rabbit, but rabbits are not impulse items. They are smart, curious, loving, funny, pushy, and destructive, and can live ten or more years when given the right care. Good guardians know that having any animal means meeting that animal’s needs.
What is the right kind of care?
Rabbits are social animals, so they should never live alone; they should be spayed and neutered (to prevent cancers and to allow for companionship) and should have either a bunny friend or a cat or other well-mannered companion animal. They are domesticated, so they should live indoors, like a dog or a cat, and, like a cat, they can use a litter-box, making them very clean companions. They are active, so they need plenty of space to kick their feet up, to run, and to play. They are chewers and diggers, so they need lots of toys to exercise their teeth and their brains, and your house needs to be bunny-proofed so they don’t destroy your baseboards, furniture, or walls. Because of their propensity to chew, guardians should have a sense of humor and infinite patience. They are affectionate, and may show their love for you by “purring” (or grinding their teeth) or even licking your face. They are vegetarians, and should eat a high fiber diet full of hay, vegetables and greens, and a small amount of pellets. Like us, they have a sweet tooth but should not be given junk food. They are ground-dwelling creatures, and don’t love to be picked up. And because they are a prey species, they tend to hide symptoms of illness, so guardians should be on the lookout for subtle changes in behavior and personality; these could mean a trip to the veterinarian. And like any animal, they are individuals, so their own individual needs and desires should be met, for the happiness of the rabbit and human alike.
Sound like too much work, but you really want to celebrate the New Year and Easter in a traditional fashion? Toy stuffed bunnies are a great substitute if you’re not ready for the commitment of a live rabbit.
But if you think you have what it takes to be a rabbit guardian, visit rabbit.org for more information, and your local shelter or rescue group to adopt your new companion. The rabbit you rescue will thank you, and you won’t regret it!
This blog was contributed by Guest Blogger Margo DeMello – President of The House Rabbit Society.
Water for Elephants: Circus Cruelty is Not a Thing of the Past…
Sara Gruen’s book, Water for Elephants, was a runaway best seller – an internationally acclaimed novel told as the reminiscences of an old man, Jacob, about his experiences with a Depression-era circus where he witnessed the brutalities inflicted on people and animals alike. Jacob is the moral center of the book, recognizing and, where possible, preventing those cruelties, and in the end saving the elephant Rosie from a harsh fate. The movie version of this blockbuster is set for release on April 22, and it will be huge. The stars (Reese Witherspoon and Robert Pattinson), the story, and the pre-release buildup will combine to sell a lot of tickets.
Many people will be drawn to the movie as a lovely – though sometimes gritty – historical romance. They will watch the abuses heaped upon the animals and think about how sad it “used to be” and how much better everything is today. They will be wrong.
Elephants forced to work in circuses today, like those in the era depicted in Water for Elephants, are forced to lead unnatural, deprived lives. They suffer as Rosie suffers, year after year, with no Jacob to come to their rescue. It is no better for the other wild animals used by circuses, who spend their lives in cages and are brutalized into performing tricks for the public. They need your help.
The opening of Water for Elephants will provide us with a unique opportunity to tell people that the kind of cruelty depicted in the movie still goes on. So please save these dates: April 14 (Los Angeles premier), April 17 (New York premier), April 22 (general U.A. release).
Please plan to join IDA in bringing attention to the suffering endured by animals in the circus. You can help by coordinating or joining in events outside your local theaters to let moviegoers know that circus cruelty is not a thing of the past.
Please join our Elephant Task Force and Sign Up for IDA’s Enewsletter for more information about this opportunity to enlighten the public about circus cruelty.
The circus industry is hoping that the film will bring a shot of glamor and glory to a fading form of entertainment. There have already been efforts to use the film to generate sympathy for “Rosie” and to raise money for the International Elephant Foundation, an organization created and run by and for the circus and zoo industries. We need to inform the public that there is nothing glamorous or romantic about the kind of animal abuse rampant in circuses today.
Rather than helping circuses to flourish, Water for Elephants can and should be a catalyst for bringing about an end to the use of animals in entertainment. Elephants used in circuses, films, commercials, and other forms of entertainment are deprived of all that is natural in their lives. They have been torn from their families and subjected to unimaginably cruel training to break their spirits and make them easier to control. They are dominated through negative reinforcement, and trainers and handlers carry the constant threat of the bullhook, a steel-tipped device similar to a fireplace poker used to prod, stab, beat and intimidate elephants into submission.
Please note: Though the film portrays the circus’s treatment of animals in a negative light, IDA cannot endorse it. Unfortunately, the film’s producers did not take the book’s message to heart, instead choosing to use live animals during production of the movie. Rosie is played by the elephant Tai, who is owned by Have Trunk Will Travel, a California-based company that uses elephants for rides and for entertainment.
This blog was contributed by Deborah Robinson, IDA’s Captive Elephant Specialist.







