At the National Zoo, it’s time for a young male elephant to find a mate
“Tail,” Debbie Flinkman commanded the gray behemoth standing before her.
“Kandula,” she said, holding out an orange-tipped training stick. “Tail.”
The Asian elephant she helped raise weighs 7,300 pounds. He is 13, has brown eyes and long eyelashes, and was standing in a huge steel shipping container, open at one end.
He knew that “tail” meant he had to present his rear.
That meant turning around and backing into the container, which is scary. But he had to practice because he is going on a journey.
At the National Zoo, it?s time for a young male elephant to find a mate - The Washington Post
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The zoo wants to get an unrelated breeding male to replace Kandula — and has a potential candidate, officials said.
The zoo said it will retain ownership of Kandula