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"watering can"

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Mahouts (elephant keepers) lead the elephants at the watering hole in the Elephant Conservation Center, Sayaboury, Laos, in December 2018. L...

#3581794

The Elephant Conservation Center In Laos

22 December 2018

Mahouts (elephant keepers) lead the elephants at the watering hole in the Elephant Conservation Center, Sayaboury, Laos, in December 2018. L...

#3581794

22 December 2018

Mahouts (elephant keepers) lead the elephants at the watering hole in the Elephant Conservation Center, Sayaboury, Laos, in December 2018. Laos was known as ‘The land of a million elephants’ in the past, today the elephant population in the country stands at around 800 individuals. Half of them is made up of captive elephants, and their number is in decline; the owners are not interested in breeding animals (the cow needs at least four years out of work during her pregnancy and lactation), illegal trafficking to China and other neighboring countries continues. Against this backdrop, the Elephant Conservation Center is the only one organization in Laos who is interested in maintaining the population and breeding of elephants. They have the only elephant hospital and research laboratory in Laos. The Center was created in 2011, and now the team is protecting 29 elephants that had been working in the logging industry or mass tourism, and 530 hectares of forest around Nam Tien Lake in Sayaboury. ‘If we have extra money, we buy an elephant,’ says Anthony, the manager. The primary goal of the Center, besides conservation and breeding, is to reintroduce socially coherent groups of healthy elephants to a natural forest where they can contribute to the increase of the wild population. For this reason, a special socialization programme has been developed by the biologists, where domesticated elephants learn to communicate and survive in the wild under the supervision of specialists. ‘There are not enough elephants in Laos,’ says Chrisantha, the biologist of the center. ‘We need around 5000 of a species to sustain a population, and we are nowhere near that. The efforts we are making now at least give a bit of hope for the future.’ (


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Mahouts (elephant keepers) lead elephants into the forest after watering in the Elephant Conservation Center, Sayaboury, Laos, in December 2...

#3581820

The Elephant Conservation Center In Laos

22 December 2018

Mahouts (elephant keepers) lead elephants into the forest after watering in the Elephant Conservation Center, Sayaboury, Laos, in December 2...

#3581820

22 December 2018

Mahouts (elephant keepers) lead elephants into the forest after watering in the Elephant Conservation Center, Sayaboury, Laos, in December 2018. Laos was known as ‘The land of a million elephants’ in the past, today the elephant population in the country stands at around 800 individuals. Half of them is made up of captive elephants, and their number is in decline; the owners are not interested in breeding animals (the cow needs at least four years out of work during her pregnancy and lactation), illegal trafficking to China and other neighboring countries continues. Against this backdrop, the Elephant Conservation Center is the only one organization in Laos who is interested in maintaining the population and breeding of elephants. They have the only elephant hospital and research laboratory in Laos. The Center was created in 2011, and now the team is protecting 29 elephants that had been working in the logging industry or mass tourism, and 530 hectares of forest around Nam Tien Lake in Sayaboury. ‘If we have extra money, we buy an elephant,’ says Anthony, the manager. The primary goal of the Center, besides conservation and breeding, is to reintroduce socially coherent groups of healthy elephants to a natural forest where they can contribute to the increase of the wild population. For this reason, a special socialization programme has been developed by the biologists, where domesticated elephants learn to communicate and survive in the wild under the supervision of specialists. ‘There are not enough elephants in Laos,’ says Chrisantha, the biologist of the center. ‘We need around 5000 of a species to sustain a population, and we are nowhere near that. The efforts we are making now at least give a bit of hope for the future.’ (


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Mahouts (elephant keepers) lead elephants into the forest after watering in the Elephant Conservation Center, Sayaboury, Laos, in December 2...

#3581822

The Elephant Conservation Center In Laos

22 December 2018

Mahouts (elephant keepers) lead elephants into the forest after watering in the Elephant Conservation Center, Sayaboury, Laos, in December 2...

#3581822

22 December 2018

Mahouts (elephant keepers) lead elephants into the forest after watering in the Elephant Conservation Center, Sayaboury, Laos, in December 2018. Laos was known as ‘The land of a million elephants’ in the past, today the elephant population in the country stands at around 800 individuals. Half of them is made up of captive elephants, and their number is in decline; the owners are not interested in breeding animals (the cow needs at least four years out of work during her pregnancy and lactation), illegal trafficking to China and other neighboring countries continues. Against this backdrop, the Elephant Conservation Center is the only one organization in Laos who is interested in maintaining the population and breeding of elephants. They have the only elephant hospital and research laboratory in Laos. The Center was created in 2011, and now the team is protecting 29 elephants that had been working in the logging industry or mass tourism, and 530 hectares of forest around Nam Tien Lake in Sayaboury. ‘If we have extra money, we buy an elephant,’ says Anthony, the manager. The primary goal of the Center, besides conservation and breeding, is to reintroduce socially coherent groups of healthy elephants to a natural forest where they can contribute to the increase of the wild population. For this reason, a special socialization programme has been developed by the biologists, where domesticated elephants learn to communicate and survive in the wild under the supervision of specialists. ‘There are not enough elephants in Laos,’ says Chrisantha, the biologist of the center. ‘We need around 5000 of a species to sustain a population, and we are nowhere near that. The efforts we are making now at least give a bit of hope for the future.’ (


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Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


Mahouts (elephant keepers) lead elephants into the forest after watering in the Elephant Conservation Center, Sayaboury, Laos, in December 2...

#3581828

The Elephant Conservation Center In Laos

22 December 2018

Mahouts (elephant keepers) lead elephants into the forest after watering in the Elephant Conservation Center, Sayaboury, Laos, in December 2...

#3581828

22 December 2018

Mahouts (elephant keepers) lead elephants into the forest after watering in the Elephant Conservation Center, Sayaboury, Laos, in December 2018. Laos was known as ‘The land of a million elephants’ in the past, today the elephant population in the country stands at around 800 individuals. Half of them is made up of captive elephants, and their number is in decline; the owners are not interested in breeding animals (the cow needs at least four years out of work during her pregnancy and lactation), illegal trafficking to China and other neighboring countries continues. Against this backdrop, the Elephant Conservation Center is the only one organization in Laos who is interested in maintaining the population and breeding of elephants. They have the only elephant hospital and research laboratory in Laos. The Center was created in 2011, and now the team is protecting 29 elephants that had been working in the logging industry or mass tourism, and 530 hectares of forest around Nam Tien Lake in Sayaboury. ‘If we have extra money, we buy an elephant,’ says Anthony, the manager. The primary goal of the Center, besides conservation and breeding, is to reintroduce socially coherent groups of healthy elephants to a natural forest where they can contribute to the increase of the wild population. For this reason, a special socialization programme has been developed by the biologists, where domesticated elephants learn to communicate and survive in the wild under the supervision of specialists. ‘There are not enough elephants in Laos,’ says Chrisantha, the biologist of the center. ‘We need around 5000 of a species to sustain a population, and we are nowhere near that. The efforts we are making now at least give a bit of hope for the future.’ (


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Commercial use is not permitted without prior authorization.
Please contact us for more information.


Mahouts (elephant keepers) lead the elephants at the watering hole in the Elephant Conservation Center, Sayaboury, Laos, in December 2018. L...

#3581852

The Elephant Conservation Center In Laos

22 December 2018

Mahouts (elephant keepers) lead the elephants at the watering hole in the Elephant Conservation Center, Sayaboury, Laos, in December 2018. L...

#3581852

22 December 2018

Mahouts (elephant keepers) lead the elephants at the watering hole in the Elephant Conservation Center, Sayaboury, Laos, in December 2018. Laos was known as ‘The land of a million elephants’ in the past, today the elephant population in the country stands at around 800 individuals. Half of them is made up of captive elephants, and their number is in decline; the owners are not interested in breeding animals (the cow needs at least four years out of work during her pregnancy and lactation), illegal trafficking to China and other neighboring countries continues. Against this backdrop, the Elephant Conservation Center is the only one organization in Laos who is interested in maintaining the population and breeding of elephants. They have the only elephant hospital and research laboratory in Laos. The Center was created in 2011, and now the team is protecting 29 elephants that had been working in the logging industry or mass tourism, and 530 hectares of forest around Nam Tien Lake in Sayaboury. ‘If we have extra money, we buy an elephant,’ says Anthony, the manager. The primary goal of the Center, besides conservation and breeding, is to reintroduce socially coherent groups of healthy elephants to a natural forest where they can contribute to the increase of the wild population. For this reason, a special socialization programme has been developed by the biologists, where domesticated elephants learn to communicate and survive in the wild under the supervision of specialists. ‘There are not enough elephants in Laos,’ says Chrisantha, the biologist of the center. ‘We need around 5000 of a species to sustain a population, and we are nowhere near that. The efforts we are making now at least give a bit of hope for the future.’ (


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A farmer watering his city farm at West flood canal in Jakarta, Indonesia on October 21, 2018.
 (Photo by Anton Raharjo/NurPhoto)

#3331220

Rural Life In Jakarta

21 October 2018

A farmer watering his city farm at West flood canal in Jakarta, Indonesia on October 21, 2018.
 (Photo by Anton Raharjo/NurPhoto)

#3331220

21 October 2018

A farmer watering his city farm at West flood canal in Jakarta, Indonesia on October 21, 2018.


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A syrian family refreshing with a watering can near the greek village of Evizoni, 3km from the macedonian border.(Photo by Valerio Muscella/...

#719698

Refugees illegally pushed back at the border between Greece and Macedonia

5 August 2015

A syrian family refreshing with a watering can near the greek village of Evizoni, 3km from the macedonian border.(Photo by Valerio Muscella/...

#719698

5 August 2015

A syrian family refreshing with a watering can near the greek village of Evizoni, 3km from the macedonian border.


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