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#1
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Comment: This was just sent to me, and it seems quite odd. I have no idea if it is accurate, but it certainly seems strange:
This is not a joke, but the article is almost a funny enough story to qualify. All I can say is, it's a good thing their architect used high ceilings when they built this Lodge. Otherwise they would have problems for sure. Our God is an awesome God to have given us these majestic animals. We thought we are the only ones who have BRAINS and MEMORIES!!!! Elephants march through hotel lobby after it was built on their migration trail! ![]() ![]() The Mfuwe Lodge in Zambia happens to have been built next to a mango grove that one family of elephants have always visited when the fruit ripens. When they returned one year and found the luxury accommodation in the way, they simply walked through the lobby to reach their beloved grove of trees. The animals come in two-by-two. Hotel staff and visitors have gotten used to the elephants' impromptu strolls through the lobby. Now the family group, headed by matriarch Wonky Tusk, return every November and stay for four to six weeks to gorge on mangos - up to four times a day. Andy Hogg, 44, the lodge director, has lived in South Luangwa National Park since 1982. But in all his years of dealing with wild animals he has never seen such intimate interaction between humans and wild animals. "This is the only place in the world where elephants freely get so close to humans," says Andy. "The elephants start coming through base camp in late November each year to eat the ripe mangos from our trees." Living in the 5,000 square mile national park, the ten-strong elephant herd is led to the lodge each day by Wonky Tusk. The hotel was built directly in the path of the elephants' route to one of their favorite foods .... mangos. ![]() ![]() "The most interesting thing about these wild animals," explains Andy, "is that this is the only herd that comes through, and they come and go as they please." Mfuwe Lodge consists of seven camps and the base camp where the elephants walk through. Employing 150 staff, the management of the lodge report that there have been no incidents involving the wild elephants to date. "The elephants get reasonably close to the staff, as you can see in the pictures of the elephants near the reception area," Andy explains. "But we do not allow the guests to get that close." ![]() "Guests can stand in the lounge but only as long as there is a barrier between the elephants and the guests," he added. "The elephants are not aggressive but you wouldn't want to tempt them. It is the elephant's choice to be here and they have been coming here for the last ten years. There are other wild mango trees around, but they prefer ours. The lodge was unwittingly built upon their path," Andy says, "so we had no idea they would do this. It wasn't a design error, we just didn't know. The lodge was built and the elephants started walking through afterward." ![]()
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#2
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That second to last elephant inside looks really fake.
Also, wouldn't the hotel object to the ELEPHANT CRAP every where?! |
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#3
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Well, the pictures appear to be from the official website.
Photos taken during the annual elephant migration through the reception at Mfuwe Lodge. |
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#4
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Alright, YOU tell the elephants they can't crap in your lobby.
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#5
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Ah, the age old question. "Where does a two ton elephant poop?"
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#6
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In hotel lobbies, apparently.
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#7
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Look in the background - you can clearly see people craning to watch it. Doesn't look fake to me.
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#8
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Seems to be pics from the lodges web page
http://www.mfuwelodge.com/gallery_elephants.htm |
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#9
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Silly me, I thought this was going to be about the zoo animal retirement home out on Pool Station Road.
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#10
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Looks like a fun place to work..
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#11
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Really? I don't think I know anyone who thinks that.
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