Meet Kasper and Kitso,
Kasper
Male - born in 1986.
He is a bull elephant 4.200kg and stands 3.2metres at the
shoulder.
He was raised on a game farm in Namibia but is originally from the
Kruger National Park.
He also plays an important roll in teaching Kitso the do’s and
don’ts in the day to day routine.
He enjoys his long swims in the dam at the Sanctuary and enjoys
the interaction with people and has a love for oranges.
Kitso
Born in 2000.
He is a bull elephant 2.200 kg and stand at 2.0 metres at the
shoulder.
He is a very playful elephant loves to mess about in the mud with
his tusks and to spar with Kasper.
Always loves to eat and throw his feed onto his back
We had the best time with these majestic creatures. Completely different and far more intimidating from getting close to the Indian elephants, which I got used to in Thailand.
We opted for the early morning brush down program, followed by a quick introduction to the elephants as a show and then some one on one interaction as well as the truck in hand walk about.
What a difference from the tours we did in Maputo, the guide and the handlers were super informative, and have such amazing knowledge of elephants. They gave us the feeling that they really connect with these two elephants.
Kitso and Kasper, are truly special and in great hands of people who treat them like their own children. Rather large ones!!!!
Wow! Dru, I think Kasper is rather happy to see you :) Ruuuuuuuuuuuuunnnnnnn!
25 Interesting facts about African Elephants.
- The elephant’s foot is constructed in such a way that the animal is
virtually walking on tip toe, with a tough, fatty pad of connective tissue
forming the sole.
- Elephants tusks are overgrown incisors protruding from the upper jaw. They
grow at a rate of 15–18cm a year, depending on their diet.
- Jan van Riebeeck’s first mention of ivory in his journal is a record of
three tusks bartered from Hottentot hunters for 250g of tobacco.
- The skeletal frame of an elephant allows the animal to stand upright on its
hind legs.
- Elephants wear down 6 sets of molars in a lifetime.
- Elephant herds consist of females, who are usually related, calves and young
bull calves. The eldest female, called the Matriarch, most often leads the
herd.
- Bull calves get kicked out of the herd when they reach about 12 years of age
to join the bull “bachelor” herds or to become a solitary bull. Bull herds will
only join a female herd when it is mating season, or at a waterhole.
- The average speed for charging elephants is about 35–40km per hour.
- A calf will only learn how to use its trunk properly at about six months of
age.
- Elephants are known to display a deep sensitivity and awareness of death and
will return repeatedly to carcasses and skeletons of deceased herd members,
running their trunks gently over their remains as though paying their
respects.
- Elephants spend as many as 18–20 hours a day feeding and drinking.
- An elephant generally sleeps for only three or four hours a day. Very
occasionally they may lie down for an hour or so, but mostly they take short,
cumulative naps, usually standing upright or leaning against a tree or termite
mound.
- A fully grown adult bull’s tusks can extend to 3m and weigh as much as 100kg
each. The heaviest recorded tusk weighed 102.7kg.
- Like man, elephants are usually left or right “handed” and will use one tusk
almost exclusively.
- Elephants have a highly developed social structure, with family bonds, love,
loyalty and intelligence.
- African elephants have four hoof nails on their front feet and three nails
on the hind leg.
- The elephant brain can weigh up to 4,8kg depending on the age of the
elephant.
- The small intestine is 82 feet long; the large intestine is 21 feet, and the
rectum is a further 13 feet. That makes a total of 116 feet of intestine that
the food has to pass through. Digestion of food can take 22-46 hours.
- An elephant’s jaws can crack open the thickest and hardest shells of fruits,
releasing the seed kernels inside.
- Elephants use a wide range of sounds to express their moods and
feelings.
- The gestation period in female elephants is 22 months. When the calf is born
it can weigh 100kg-120kg and stands about 85cm tall.
- Another adaptation that the elephant has is its appendix. This organ is 5
feet long and its role is to process and break down proteins, starches and the
simple and complex sugars that are found in its food. Larger than the stomach,
this organ is where the majority of the intestinal bacteria are located that are
required to digest the vegetable materials.
- The bone structure of an elephant is similar to that of human beings, for
example they too have a wrist joint in the front legs as well as knee caps and
ankles in the back legs. Even the shoulder blades are positioned in the same
place as in humans.
- When standing on hind legs, the kidneys are in the same position as that of
a human being.
- The elephant’s memory surpasses that of humans.