Gypsy News

News about the Rom/Roma/Gypsy along with environmental, wildlife and animal news and alerts.

Friday, April 6, 2007

An earthshaking arrival at PAWS

By Cynthia Hubert - Bee Staff Writer
Published 12:00 am PDT Thursday, April 5, 2007

http://www.sacbee.com/107/story/149489.html

He's possibly the biggest elephant ever to stomp into Northern California.

At 9,500 pounds, more than 9 feet tall and growing, Nicholas is as gigantic as he is charming, says Pat Derby, founder of the Performing Animal Welfare Society in Galt, the pachyderm's home for the time being.

"Asian bull elephants are notorious for being difficult and destructive, but Nicholas is great," Derby says of her new charge, who escaped abusive conditions in Illinois and arrived at PAWS by truck this week. His smaller companion, Gypsy, joined him.

PAWS agreed to take the elephants after the USDA ruled in 2003 that they were being mistreated by their corporate owners in Illinois. Nine other pachyderms quickly found homes elsewhere, but Nicholas and Gypsy languished because of their size and the reputed aggressiveness of their breed.

In order to accept the animals, Derby and her partner Ed Stewart had to design a permanent enclosure for them at their 2,300-acre elephant sanctuary in Calaveras County. The project will cost about $1 million, Derby says. Until it is built, Nicholas and Gypsy will make their home behind reinforced fencing in Galt.

The campaign to raise money for the Calaveras enclosure is off to a rousing start, as game-show host Bob Barker has pledged $500,000 to the cause. PAWS is looking for corporate sponsors, individual supporters and construction supplies including pipe and barn materials to round out the costs of feeding and housing the pachyderms.

At maturity, bull elephants can reach 7 tons in weight and stand 10 feet high, Derby says. They consume about 325 pounds of vegetation each day.

For now, Nicholas and Gypsy seem pleased with their new surroundings, Derby says.

"We were prepared for the worst and hoped for the best, and we think we nailed it," she says. "They arrived here safely and we unloaded them safely. They're in good shape."

When Nicholas emerged from the truck that brought him to Northern California, "he gave us a look like, 'Where are we, and what's going on?'

"We fed him a watermelon and lots of other treats, and he loved that."

Then Gypsy made her first Northern California appearance.

"She ran right out to Nicholas, and started talking to him," Derby says. "We gave her a watermelon, and she took half of it and gave it to Nicholas. These two are totally devoted to each other. It's a very touching thing to see."

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Saturday, January 13, 2007

Giving away an elephant is as tough as it seems!

By Jeff Long
Tribune staff reporter
Published January 5, 2007

A year after mistreatment allegations prompted a great elephant exodus from McHenry County, two of the pachyderms, Nicholas and Gypsy, remain at a controversial circus training farm without good prospects for a new home.

They were left behind when eight other Asian elephants were moved last January and February from a farm near Richmond to an elephant sanctuary in the rolling hills of Tennessee. It was a 650-mile journey that began after federal investigators accused Hawthorn Corp., the farm's owner, of mistreating the animals.

The eight female elephants have since been nicknamed "The Divas" by their new caretakers, who say they are soaking up sunshine and frolicking in ponds.

"They're grand, they're worldly," said Carol Buckley, co-founder and executive director of the Elephant Sanctuary near Hohenwald, Tenn. "They're just divas. The name fit and it stuck. They're really taking advantage of their freedom in every way."

But Nicholas and Gypsy are waiting for their golden parachute. Hawthorn is still under agreement with the government to find new homes for them, and the company says that keeping them is prohibitively expensive.

(MORE)

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