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An interesting note, in this podcast called “That’s So Cincinnati” Thane Maynard (the director of the Cincinnati Zoo) states that the Louisville Zoo will be “sending their elephants to a scantuary in Tennessee”. Very interesting. I had not heard this mentioned by anyone yet. I wonder when this will be happening. I will attach the link to the interview below. He also talks about the new Elephant Trek exhibit at the Cincinnati zoo and the new elephants that arrived from the Dublin Zoo. He mentioned the Louisville Zoo at the 10:40 mark on this specific podcast. It’s a great listen!

S2 Ep204: That's So Cincinnati with Cincinnati Zoo's Thane Maynard
 
An interesting note, in this podcast called “That’s So Cincinnati” Thane Maynard (the director of the Cincinnati Zoo) states that the Louisville Zoo will be “sending their elephants to a scantuary in Tennessee”. Very interesting. I had not heard this mentioned by anyone yet. I wonder when this will be happening. I will attach the link to the interview below. He also talks about the new Elephant Trek exhibit at the Cincinnati zoo and the new elephants that arrived from the Dublin Zoo. He mentioned the Louisville Zoo at the 10:40 mark on this specific podcast. It’s a great listen!

S2 Ep204: That's So Cincinnati with Cincinnati Zoo's Thane Maynard
Any idea if Louisville's completely phasing out elephants or if they'll double down and expand?
 
Any idea if Louisville's completely phasing out elephants or if they'll double down and expand?
From what Thane Maynard said on that podcast, it sounds like they will be sending them to a scantuary in Tennessee. I would be interested in knowing if they are doing this and when. The Louisville Zoo has not made any announcement that I am aware of that they will be doing this. I do not know if they plan on expanding. I know in 2016 they "expanded" their elephant exhibit. I have been to the Louisville Zoo several times and unfortunately I don't personally think they have room on either side of the elephant exhibit to expand anymore. This elephant exhibit is, in my opinion, still extremely small. Will be keeping my eye on this.
 
An interesting note, in this podcast called “That’s So Cincinnati” Thane Maynard (the director of the Cincinnati Zoo) states that the Louisville Zoo will be “sending their elephants to a scantuary in Tennessee”. Very interesting. I had not heard this mentioned by anyone yet. I wonder when this will be happening. I will attach the link to the interview below. He also talks about the new Elephant Trek exhibit at the Cincinnati zoo and the new elephants that arrived from the Dublin Zoo. He mentioned the Louisville Zoo at the 10:40 mark on this specific podcast. It’s a great listen!

S2 Ep204: That's So Cincinnati with Cincinnati Zoo's Thane Maynard
I would hope Mikki would be given the chance to breed one last time considering how valuable she is. Although in saying that, if there are plans to send them to TES it obviously indicates Louisville do not plan to do so. A male calf from her would be great (as he would theoretically move into the breeding program down the line), but obviously that wouldn't be a guarantee and a female calf would throw a spanner in the works regarding such a move.
 
From what Thane Maynard said on that podcast, it sounds like they will be sending them to a scantuary in Tennessee. I would be interested in knowing if they are doing this and when. The Louisville Zoo has not made any announcement that I am aware of that they will be doing this. I do not know if they plan on expanding. I know in 2016 they "expanded" their elephant exhibit. I have been to the Louisville Zoo several times and unfortunately I don't personally think they have room on either side of the elephant exhibit to expand anymore. This elephant exhibit is, in my opinion, still extremely small. Will be keeping my eye on this.
I really think this is a no brainer. The Louisville elephants should be sent to a facility where Mikki has access to a proven breeding bull. It is no use sending reproductive age elephants to a retirement home sanctuary (It is like caving in to the politically correct AWR people without acknowledging what great strides elephant ex situ conservation management has done over the last 2-3 decades).
 
On January 30th, the zoo announced they broke ground on a new building for offices and a training center, as well as new on-site holding areas for their ambassador animals. The zoo is also planning on renovating the MetaZoo educational facility to house more ambassador animals. Construction has already started and will be completed by the summer of 2024.

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Zoo Breaks Ground on Project Supporting Animal Ambassador Expansion (Media Release)

On February 29th, the zoo announced that they finished construction on the new building, called the David and Patricia Daulton Education Building. The facility is now starting Phase 2 of the plan to renovate the MetaZoo Discovery Center. The building will be closed until renovations are completed, projected to be around late autumn 2024. All the animals inside the center have been moved around temporarily to other parts of the zoo.

Also on February 29th, the zoo announced they acquired (2.0) striped skunks named Harry and Neville from the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo in Colorado, as well as a (1.0) inland bearded dragon named Reptar which will be on display when renovations are completed.

Finally, it was reported on February 29th that the zoo acquired a (0.1) Linne's two-toed sloth named Fern in late 2022 which has finally made her display debut in the sloth exhibit.

https://www.facebook.com/Louisville...WnStFscqMv5cnHR3oEtRT6SbySH6dCTfxbiYcAsMzmSWl
Watch It Unfold — MetaZoo’s Ongoing Transformation!
Louisville Zoo adds 3rd sloth to exhibit
 
It has been confirmed that elephants Mikki and Punch will be moving out to the Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee, with the move taking place next spring. The Zoo’s white rhinos will inhabit the space once renovated, and a new species (most likely okapi) will eventually be decided for the rhino exhibit.

Louisville Zoo will retire Mikki, Punch to The Elephant Sanctuary
Great news to hear,, though it may be sad, it was definitely the right choice for the girls, and I am glad that they are considering bringing back elephants in a few years.
 
It has been confirmed that elephants Mikki and Punch will be moving out to the Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee, with the move taking place next spring. The Zoo’s white rhinos will inhabit the space once renovated, and a new species (most likely okapi) will eventually be decided for the rhino exhibit.

Louisville Zoo will retire Mikki, Punch to The Elephant Sanctuary

Looks like Thane Maynard (the director of the Cincinnati Zoo), was right and today it was officially announced.
 
Great news to hear,, though it may be sad, it was definitely the right choice for the girls, and I am glad that they are considering bringing back elephants in a few years.

Their master plan does show elephants coming back, but this article mentions it would be a very large amount of money to bring them back. (more than 100 million dollars) I know they are currently fundraising for the new Kentucky Trails exhibit that they are looking to build in an undeveloped part of the zoo. They have not even broken ground for this entire new area yet. I would guess it will be another 2-3 years before we see Kentucky Trails open, possibly longer. My point being that bringing elephants back would probably be down the road, like 8+ years or longer. Hopefully I am wrong. In my personal opinion the Louisville Zoo defiantly needs to improve other areas of the zoo that are older before they work on a massive (and expensive) new elephant exhibit. I am attaching the zoo's master plan below that was released in 2016. https://louisvillezoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/MASTER-PLAN-FINAL.pdf
 
Their master plan does show elephants coming back, but this article mentions it would be a very large amount of money to bring them back. (more than 100 million dollars) I know they are currently fundraising for the new Kentucky Trails exhibit that they are looking to build in an undeveloped part of the zoo. They have not even broken ground for this entire new area yet. I would guess it will be another 2-3 years before we see Kentucky Trails open, possibly longer. My point being that bringing elephants back would probably be down the road, like 8+ years or longer. Hopefully I am wrong. In my personal opinion the Louisville Zoo defiantly needs to improve other areas of the zoo that are older before they work on a massive (and expensive) new elephant exhibit. I am attaching the zoo's master plan below that was released in 2016. https://louisvillezoo.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/MASTER-PLAN-FINAL.pdf

Thanks for posting the zoo's Master Plan. I'd looked through it before but it's always nice to revisit the document. Louisville Zoo has been talking about Kentucky Trails for many years and it's going to cost a minimum of $30 million and be the centerpiece exhibit complex of the Master Plan. Looking farther ahead, the African zone needs works, some of the older sections of the zoo could use a revamp, and in my personal opinion the chance of elephants ever making their way back to Louisville is 5% at best. That ship has sailed and it would take a funding miracle to devote acres of space and a tremendous amount of money to bring back elephants. It's a positive decision to send them away, in terms of animal welfare reasons.
 
the chance of elephants ever making their way back to Louisville is 5% at best
As I said in the African thread earlier, I agree. I also don't think we have enough animals for Louisville for the foreseeable future. I think they are just going to be like Brookfield who say they want them to return, but likely won't.
 
There are certain individuals who may be willing to cut a bigger check for a world-class elephant habitat than for a display of local wildlife. I think we overlook that not every zoo renovation will be funded equally.

Of course, if Louisville is sending their animals to a sanctuary and not another zoo, that could signal that they are not as serious. I view bowing to sanctuary pressure as a bit more of a step back.

I hope to visit Louisville before the elephants leave. Are they the last US facility with both species or does Miami still have both?
 
Of course, if Louisville is sending their animals to a sanctuary and not another zoo, that could signal that they are not as serious. I view bowing to sanctuary pressure as a bit more of a step back.
The Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee is an AZA certified facility, and have in recent years became a retirement home for individuals from a handful of other AZA zoos too. Especially seeing as TES is only about five hours from Louisville, it's likely the less stressful, simpler option for the Louisville Zoo than finding a zoo willing to take the elephants, especially given the behavioral challenges that sometimes occur when introducing elderly elephants to each other. Of course, I also doubt there's any AZA zoos who would be willing to take both the African and Asian elephant, so TES might as well be the only option to keep these two elephants together.
 
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