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SuperHeroine: Carol Buckley
By Trish Milburn
If you watch the news, you're bombarded with stories of greed
and selfishness on a daily basis. That's why it is so
heart-warming to hear stories of selflessness, kindness and
dedication to important causes. And it's especially remarkable
when you meet someone who has dedicated his or her life to a
cause with such passion and love that it takes your breath away.
That was my impression of Carol Buckley, co-founder of The
Elephant Sanctuary in rural Hohenwald, Tennessee. It takes only
seconds to realize how much boundless love she has for the
animals in her care. She smiles at their child-like antics, hugs
them when she passes them in the pasture, and works tirelessly
to give them a life better than the one they've known during
their years of captivity in zoos or circuses.
The Elephant Sanctuary is not open to the public, but I was
fortunate to get to visit this peaceful, serene slice of the
countryside while doing a story for the magazine for which I
work. Whether watching the elephants in the pasture via the
Ele-cams, walking through that pasture with them or talking with
Buckley about the dreadful conditions in which some of them
lived before coming to the sanctuary, it's obvious that these
creatures are a part of her soul. Perhaps that is her purpose in
this life - to be their champion.
Buckley's love affair with elephants began with Tarra, the
elephant with whom she performed for a number of years. When
Buckley and sanctuary co-founder Scott Blais created the
sanctuary, which has a similar habitat to the elephants' native
lands, Tarra became its first resident.

Carol
caresses Tarra, the elephant she's cared for since Tarra was a
baby.
As word spread, more old, sick and needy elephants were sent to
the sanctuary. Unfortunately, there is a great need for this
type of place. Even the elephants that are kept by loving and
caring owners often are in desperate need of the fields, forest
and creeks the sanctuary offers. Elephants are herd animals that
tend to roam 30-50 miles in a day. In captivity, they often have
to stand still for long periods of time on either concrete or
hard-packed earth, sometimes chained. This leads to foot rot,
the leading cause of death among captive elephants.
Since the sanctuary opened in 1995, it has been home to 14
elephants - 11 Asians and three African. Two of that number have
unfortunately died. Barbara had chronic wasting disease, and
Tina - who I stood next to as she was treated for her serious
foot deterioration - died last year. One only has to read the
description of Tina's last days on the sanctuary's Web site to
realize how much Carol, Scott and the entire staff care about
these animals - and how much the elephants care about each
other.
I felt it that day I visited, but I realize more and more with
each bit I read about the sanctuary and the remarkable people
who work there that it's a magical place. For elephants that
were ripped from their families as babies and then kept in
captivity for years, even decades, it's like heaven.
"They all have horrific histories and come with a lot of
emotional baggage," Buckley said at the time I interviewed her
for the magazine article. "They're initially guarded when they
arrive here, but it's only a matter of hours before they really
change. The elephants communicate, and each time the transition
time is shorter."
Even elephants that have been aggressive or deemed problem
animals in their former environments seem to know things are
different when they arrive at the sanctuary. Buckley believes
the elephants already living there tell the newcomers upon their
arrival, "It's okay. You're going to love it here."

Carol Buckley and Scott Blais, co-founders of The Elephant
Sanctuary, visit with Bunny and Shirley as they explore part of
the sanctuary's forested acreage.
Considering all the feeding, health care, office duties, fund
raising, teleconferencing with schools, and the extensive diary
entries and photos on the sanctuary's Web site, I've wondered if
Carol ever sleeps. But then, maybe guardian angels don't need
sleep.
No matter how much Buckley and the rest of the sanctuary
staffers and volunteers have done to help elephants find a more
natural, peaceful life, there's always more to do, more
elephants to save. The sanctuary has grown from slightly more
than 100 acres to more than 2,700. More facilities such as
specialized barns have been built, and two distinct habitats
have been created to keep the Asian (Tarra, Jenny, Shirley,
Bunny, Sissy, Winkie, Delhi, Lota and Misty) and African
elephants (Tange, Zula and Flora) apart. The staff members are
always in various stages of negotiation to bring other elephants
to the sanctuary, including ones that may never recover from
their ailments but deserve to live out their final years roaming
with other elephants as they would had they never been taken
into captivity.
The sanctuary survives through the kindness of individual and
group donations. It receives no government funding. It's not
cheap to take care of an elephant, let alone 12 and counting.
But, to me, you can't put a price tag on how happy the elephants
look as they nuzzle each other with their trunks and play with
their toys such as tetherballs and spare tires. And they have
Carol Buckley and her dedicated staff and volunteers to thank
for their happiness and tender loving care.
To find out more about The Elephant Sanctuary, including live
shots of the elephants via the Ele-cams, go to
www.elephants.com. Be warned, the site is addictive and you
might look up from your computer screen to see that an hour or
two has gone by. But they're hours well spent.
Photos courtesy of Robin
Conover and The Tennessee Magazine.
To read
last month's SuperHeroine article, click
here
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