nagarifle wrote:thanks Nitro
you seem to have had lived an interesting life with the elephants, you say that the elephant above 7 feet should not be caught and trained. why is that?
can you please expand on what methods were used to destroy rouges? what type of firearms were used? etc even today do you have any idea of rouge elephants that are destroyed in Assam?
many thanks
I am trying to get my daughter into it.Amongst ipods and X Boxes she does seem to have an inclination towards elephants.
Training elephants does involve considerable amount of breaking in.A wild elephant which is + 7 feet in height has already started maturing from being a juveniel into a sub adult.It already starts behaving like an adult.Once caught, they will go without food and water for days to establish their stubbornness.There have been instances where they would prefer to die than to break down under human pressure.
We are now trying to develop new humane methods of training using positive and negative restraint.
Proclaimed Rouges have been destroyed mainly using firearms - be it a Smooth Bore Gun, Rifle or a Muzzle Loader.Contractile Balls shot from smooth bore guns,303, 30-06, 7mm, 9mm, 375 H&H Mag right upto 600 Nitro Express have all brought down elephants at one point of time or the other.There are records of elephants being brought down by local tribesman using poison tip arrows.
The last rouge to be brought down in Assam was in Sonitpur District around mid December 2006.It was an elephant nicknamed "Laden".A father and son duo shot it using a Jeffrey made boxlock double firing a .475 no.2 and a Winchester Post 64 Model 70 rifle chambered for the 458 WM.
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