The Bronx Zoo currently has three elephants. These three elephants, Patty, Maxine, and Happy, were on display at the Zoo Center together prior to the induction of Patty and Maxine into the Monorail. Where is Happy? Why don't they exhibit her?
Is there any room for the elephants back at the Zoo Center?
Haven't they turned Zoo Center into a Komodo dragon exhibit?
So there wouldn't really be space for them realistically at the Zoo Center at the moment?
The Bronx Zoo currently has three elephants. These three elephants, Patty, Maxine, and Happy, were on display at the Zoo Center together prior to the induction of Patty and Maxine into the Monorail. Where is Happy? Why don't they exhibit her?
Happy is kept in the Wild Asia building and has her own yard. She was originally kept with Grumpy and the other elephants until Maxine and Patty killed Grumpy and they do not get along with Happy either so they cannot be kept together. Happy is a very social elephant, having lived with Sammi until her untimely death and the other elephants before that. Happy, now is completely alone, not a good situation for an elephant. I was told that Happy is occasionally brought into the exhibit area, but I have never seen her. It is a pity that zoo/sanctuary politics are what they are or Happy might have a better life.
from Grumpy, an Asian elephant at Bronx Zoo (the page for Grumpy)Oh really? Do you have a reference to share that speaks about this?
In 1972, the Laguna Hills Lion Country Safari in California imported seven Asian calves and dubbed them the "Seven Dwarves." They came from Thailand and cost $800 per elephant. Shortly thereafter they were transferred to the West Palm Beach Lion Country Safari in Florida, minus one that died beforehand.
Sneezy (SB160) was sold to the Memphis Zoo in July 1974 and has resided at the Tulsa Zoo since 1977. Happy (SB208) and Grumpy (SB168) were sold to the Bronx Zoo in March 1977. Happy still lives there with two other females Asian elephants, whereas Grumpy died in 2002. Dopey (SB148, later renamed Cindy) and Bashful (SB151, later renamed Jaz) were sold to Howard Johnson in May 1978 and transferred to his son Gary Johnson of Have Trunk Will Travel in 1987, eventually joining the George Carden Circus in 1993 where they still perform today. Doc (SB272, later renamed Vance) was sold to Bill Swain in June 1980, sold again to Mike Hackenberger of the Bowmanville Zoo eight years later, and died in 2007. The last dwarf, Sleepy, was the calf that never left California.