After a shaky first few days in the world, baby elephant twins born last week on a logging camp in Myanmar are doing well, officials told AFP on Thursday.
Last week, in the state-run Myanmar Timber Enterprise’s 60-acre Wingabaw elephant camp in the Bago region, Pearl Sint was born just minutes before her brother Kyaw Pearl.
The assistant manager of the camp, Myo Min Aung, stated that the pint-sized twins were around four inches shorter than the typical calf at two feet and six inches in height.
This indicated that they were too short to reach their mother’s breasts for feeding.
“We helped them by putting small wooden blocks under their front legs and bringing their heads up to their mother’s breast,” he said.
On the third day, they were able to feed themselves and quickly showed their personalities.
“The little male likes to wander around and play with humans rather than stay with his mother,” said Myo Min Aung.
“He is not feeding as much as the female little one does.”
Another official at the camp, who did not want to give his name, said he hoped the twins would not take after their father, a bull elephant named Aye Htike.
“He was badly behaved. He used to attack the other elephants and people,” he said.
Pearl Sandar, the twins’ mother, “has a kind heart”, the official said.
“She doesn’t attack others… we are training the twins to be well-behaved, not like their father.”
The arrival of the twins takes the population of the elephant camp up to nine, the official said.
Previously around 3,000 elephants were used for labour at state timber enterprises in Myanmar, the majority dragging freshly cut trees through the dense jungle to transport hubs and mills.
But now those at the Wingabaw camp, like many others, carry humans instead of logs and earn their keep as a tourist attraction.
Fewer than 50,000 Asian elephants remain in the wild, and fewer than 2,000 of them are found in Myanmar, according 2018 figures from environmental group WWF.
“This is my first time personally experiencing an elephant twin birth,” said Myo Min Aung.
“I am happy to take care of the little twin elephants, but it is also a big responsibility.”