H’Blu, whose name fittingly means ‘return home’ in Vietnamese, joins six other former riding and working elephants at the park who were also rescued by Animals Asia. She will spend the rest of her life roaming, foraging, swimming, napping, playing and deciding which elephants to interact with, while her mahout quietly follows her to ensure her continued safety and happiness.
Animals Asia is delighted to announce that we have rescued another
riding elephant in Vietnam.
H’Blu is a 62-year old female Asian elephant who has spent decades
being forced to give rides to tourists. She has never been able to
express her natural behaviours, form bonds with other elephants, or
roam and forage through the forest as she would in the wild.
After months of negotiations with her owners, Animals Asia and our
partners at the Elephant Conservation Centre finally convinced them
to relinquish H’Blu into our care at the Yok Don National Park in
Dak Lak, where we run Vietnam’s very first, and so far only, ethical
elephant project.
The project is the result of years of discussions with the National
Park, which used to offer elephant rides to tourists. It enables
rescued elephants to roam the forest and exhibit their natural
behaviours while tourists quietly observe from a respectful
distance.
Yok Don National Park is a vast, forested area in central Vietnam,
and the second largest national park in the country. It covers an
area of 600 square kilometers and has a unique ecosystem that
harbours a vast variety of important and endemic species, so is the
ideal location for rehoming former working elephants.
“With more and more people becoming aware of the cruelty involved in
forcing such a large, wild animal to work for humans, and of the
decline in wild elephant populations, we’re hopeful that the ethical
tourist model will continue to grow and thus enable us to rescue
more elephants.” Dave Neale, Animals Asia’s Captive Animal Welfare
Director said.
Dave continued, “And with the Memorandum of Understanding Animals
Asia signed with the Dak Lak government to end elephant riding,
we’re confident that more elephant owners, communities, and
eventually other countries, will want to be part of this pioneering
program.”
H’Blu, whose name fittingly means ‘return home’ in Vietnamese, joins
six other former riding and working elephants at the park who were
also rescued by Animals Asia.
She will spend the rest of her life roaming, foraging, swimming,
napping, playing and deciding which elephants to interact with,
while her mahout quietly follows her to ensure her continued safety
and happiness.