Bamboo

Bamboo

Bamboo came to Seattle from Thailand as a frightened one-year-old baby Asian elephant in 1968. She grew into a gentle adult, docile enough to be walked on zoo grounds and touched by zoo visitors. In the late 80’s, Bamboo became aggressive toward handlers, during a period of intense physical punishment and all-night chaining. After the birth of a baby elephant in 2001, Bamboo was put into indoor solitary confinement for weeks and began pacing in constant counter-clockwise circles and shaking her head. She was not trusted with the baby for the first few years after her birth.

Woodland Park Zoo (WPZ) transfered Bamboo in August 2005 to Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium (PDZA) in Tacoma, another small habitat zoo which specializes in “troubled” elephants, where she paced in circles and shook her head almost constantly. Zoo officials repeatedly described Bamboo as being “happy and healthy” during this time.

After nine months of being unable to integrate her with the other elephants at PDZA, they sent Bamboo back to WPZ, where she must now been kept separated from African elephant, Watoto. Like all the elephants at WPZ, Bamboo spends only a few hours a day outside. Her “stereotypic” repetitive pacing and head-shaking behavior has continued at WPZ.

We are working to have Bamboo moved to a place where she can truly heal: The Elephant Sanctuary (TES) in Tennessee. TES has generously offered to transport and care for Bamboo at its own expense.

2 Responses to “Bamboo’s Story”

  1. Joshua on 01 Sep 2010 at 1:29 am #

    I agree with what is written. I think it is disgraceful about what happened. The Zoo claims that Bamboo is naturally moody, aggressive, and the way she is. That’s not true at all. It is because a new team of handlers came in the 80’s and introduced harsh management methods. I think it is accurate to say that the only thing healthy about Bamboo is her weight, at around 9,000 pounds.
    I heard Bamboo no longer gets along with Watoto. Is it because Watoto has bullied her and Bamboo no longer tolerates this? Please reply back! Thanks.

  2. Joshua on 02 Sep 2010 at 9:42 pm #

    Is it true that Watoto and Bamboo do not get along? I thought they used to.

    I believe that no facilities should keep Asian and African elephants together. The African elephant can transmit its dormant form of the herpes virus to the Asian elephant, which will be infected with a fatal form of the virus. Calves are very vulnerable to the herpes virus. Hansa died of this virus, and I suspect that Watoto (I blame the staff, not Watoto) passed on the herpes virus.

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