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Belfast Zoo’s elephants Dhunja and Yhetto ready for retirement

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By Bernadette AllenBBC News NI

BBC ElephantsBBC

Dhunja and Yhetto will form a herd with two other elderly elephants in the Netherlands

Belfast Zoo’s two remaining Asian elephants are getting ready for retirement in the Netherlands.

Dhunja and Yhetto have been residents in Belfast since 2009.

Last year, Belfast City Council gave permission for them to travel to Royal Burgers’ Zoo in Arnhem.

Burgers’ Zoo is a retirement home for elderly cow elephants within the Elephant European Endangered Species Programme (EEP).

The elephants are being specially crate trained for their journey on a daily basis.

“There is no official strict date for the move – it’s hopefully happening shortly, but we don’t want to put any pressure on the ladies,” Belfast Zoo’s Linda Frew said.

“There is always the possibility that on the day of the move they won’t want to go into the crates.“

Linda Frew

Linda Frew said the zoo doesn’t want to put any pressure on the elephants

Geriatric elephants

Gerry Creighton, chief executive of Global Elephant Care, is among the experts getting the two elephants ready for their journey.

He said the elephants had arrived from zoos in Germany and before that one of them worked in a logging camp, the other in a circus.

As they are now classed as geriatric, he said the decision was made by BIAZA – the British and Irish Association of Zoos and Aquariums, EAZA – the European Association of Zoos and Aquariums, Belfast Zoo and Mr Creighton himself, to move them.

“I went to visit the zoo in the Netherlands – it’s a wonderful facility, there are elephants of a similar age,” he said.

“There will be a group of four – and that’s the recommended number for elephants to live together.

“These elephants are similar ages and they will be able to compliment one another’s energy levels and how they live.”

Crate training

Dhunja and Yhetto are being specially crate trained for their journey

Are there other elephants at Belfast Zoo?

Belfast Zoo has housed elephants for almost 90 years.

The first elephant, Daisy, arrived in 1934 and was walked from the docks to the zoo’s site on Antrim Road, a distance of around six miles.

It is understood a 2019 audit of Belfast’s elephant enclosure raised issues regarding some elements of the facilities for the animals – these included no outdoor pool, scratching posts and the need for modernisation.

The zoo said that while there was no pool, there are showers which the elephants can press the buttons of to turn on and off themselves.

Belfast City Council Tina the elephantBelfast City Council

Among Belfast Zoo’s previous elephants was Tina, seen here in the 1970s

It is not yet clear what will be done with the space that Dhunja and Yhetto currently occupy – and if they will be replaced by other elephants in the future.

Belfast Lord Mayor Micky Murray said a conversation has yet to take place about the matter.

“Any future plans will be a decision that we need to make as a council, but we haven’t had that conversation yet and as a council we need to sit down and look forward,” he said.

Anyone who wants to say their goodbyes to the elephants still has time – the zoo is hosting a series of events next week ahead of their departure.

Catherine Gill holding her daughter Brannagh

Catherine Gill said it was lovely for her daughter Brannagh to see the elephants before they leave

Catherine Gill got the chance to see the elephants being crate trained along with her daughter Brannagh Young.

She said they were grateful that they got to see Dhunja and Yhetto before they leave.

“We’ve heard the reasons why they are leaving Belfast and we are glad that they will have the company of the two other elephants in the Netherlands,” she said.

“It’s lovely for Brannagh to see the elephants in real life and because it’s the last time it’s extra special.”

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