Carol Buckley Explained

Carol Buckley
Birth Date:1954 5, mf=yes
Birth Place:Oakland, California, US
Education:Exotic Animal Training & Management Program, 1974 Moorpark College, California
Occupation:Elephant Welfare Consultant

Carol Buckley (born May 18, 1954) is an American elephant caregiver, specializing in the trauma recovery and on-going physical care of captive elephants.[1]

In 1995, Buckley realized a decades long dream and retired her elephant, Tarra, to their private farm in Hohenwald, Tennessee, which later became The Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee. In 2010, Buckley founded Elephant Aid International, and began consulting worldwide to help improve the lives of captive elephants and their mahouts.

Education

While a student at Moorpark College in 1974, Buckley noticed a baby elephant, Fluffy, that a local tire dealer had bought to market his wares.[2] Buckley volunteered to feed and care for the elephant, and a year later, borrowed $25,000, bought Fluffy, changed her name to Tarra, and founded Tarra Productions.

Career

Tarra Productions

By 1980, when Tarra was six years old and a playful, pre-adolescent elephant, Buckley taught Tarra to roller skate.[3] For their first 15 years together, Buckley lived with, cared for, trained, transported, and performed with Tarra in circuses and zoos in the US and Canada.

In 1984, Buckley began thinking that the life she and Tarra were living did not meet Tarra's psychological needs,[4] and began to search for a better life for Tarra in a variety of zoos and animal parks where she worked and consulted, but the animal seemed to be bored in confinement.[5] In the end, Buckley began looking for another option.[6]

In November 1994, Buckley, with a bank loan, bought 112 acres in Hohenwald, Tennessee. Buckley built a barn for Tarra and co-founded The Elephant Sanctuary (Hohenwald) in Tennessee, the first natural habitat refuge for sick, old, and needy elephants.[7] Today, the Elephant Sanctuary (Hohenwald) is 2700acres, housing African and Asian elephants in three separate sections with four barns, enclosed by 20miles of fencing.

Elephant Aid International

In 2010, Buckley founded Elephant Aid International.

Since the founding of EAI, Buckley has spent months each year in Nepal, India, Thailand and Sri Lanka consulting on and providing elephant foot care,[8] [9] target training and Compassionate Elephant Management (CEM)[10] for elephants and their mahouts,[9] and, creating solar powered chain free corrals to get working elephants in Asia off chains.

Elephant Refuge North America (ERNA) in Attapulgus, GA

With knowledge gained from founding, creating, building and directing The Elephant Sanctuary (Hohenwald), as well as the knowledge gained from work on 'Chain Free Means Pain Free' projects and other elephant welfare projects in Asia,[11] Buckley created Elephant Refuge North America (ERNA) in 2016.[12] The new Elephant Refuge in North America is located in Attapulgus, Georgia a few miles north of Tallahassee Florida. Buckley chose this site because it provides elephants 850 acres of species suitable habitat to wander and explore day and night, including pastures, forests, lakes, around 50 inches rainfall year-round, mild winters, hot humid summers. In addition the site will provide live web cams for people to observe natural elephant behaviour in real time, and an international intern/education center.[13]

Selected works

Books

Awards and honors

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Kerulos Center – People. Kerulos.org. July 25, 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20131104084749/http://www.kerulos.org/about_kerulos/faculty.html#buckley. November 4, 2013. dead.
  2. Web site: Tarra | Carol Buckley | Tennessee | Scott Blais | Author :: AmericanWay . 2011-10-28 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20111201145218/http://www.americanwaymag.com/tarra-carol-buckley-tennessee-scott-blais-author . December 1, 2011 . mdy-all .
  3. Web site: Tarra the Roller Skating Elephant. Ojai History.
  4. Web site: Where the elephants roam. tribunedigital-chicagotribune.
  5. Web site: The Way God Made Them: A Woman's Plight to Save the Circus Elephant She Loves . 2011-11-17 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20111021100806/http://www.lhj.com/relationships/family/pets/the-way-god-made-them-a-womans-plight-to-save-the-elephant-she-loves/ . October 21, 2011 . mdy-all .
  6. Web site: Honolulu Star-Bulletin Hawaii News. archives.starbulletin.com. July 25, 2017.
  7. Web site: For elephants, acres to roam A Tennessee refuge awaits Phila. transplant. philly-archives.
  8. Web site: O Yim, Where Art Tou?. Elephant Dreaming. May 6, 2011 .
  9. Web site: Katherine's Journal | Elephant Sanctuary - Boon Lott's Elephant Sanctuary in Thailand - BLES . 2011-10-28 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120425115659/http://www.blesele.org/katherines_journal/?page=8 . April 25, 2012 . mdy-all .
  10. Web site: Mahout & Elephant Training Initiative – Elephant Aid International. Elephantaidinternational.org. July 25, 2017.
  11. Web site: Unchained: Indian Elephant Rehab Center to Be a Model for Rescued Zoo Animals. John R. Platt. Scientific American Blog Network.
  12. Web site: An inside look into South Georgia's future elephant refuge . Wctv.tv . 2017-07-25.
  13. Web site: CoCre – Elephant Refuge North America. cocre.org. July 25, 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170629130859/http://cocre.org/erna/. June 29, 2017. dead. mdy-all.
  14. Web site: Fact or Fiction?: Elephants Never Forget. James Ritchie. Scientific American.
  15. https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1998-dec-27-me-57935-story.html}}
  16. Web site: Book Review – Tarra and Bella: The Elephant and Dog Who Became Best Friends – Dad of Divas. September 10, 2012. Dadodivas.com. July 25, 2017.