Wrapped in Warmth: Orphaned Baby Elephants Find Comfort in Blankets, Filling the Void Left by Lost Mothers

If you’re feeling the big chill that’s descended on much of the Northern hemisphere, then you’re probably wrapped up nice and warm with a big blanket.

Orphans In Blankets

But whilst a winter blanket might be everyone’s latest seasonal obsession (and something of a fashion statement), at The David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust’s Elephant Orphanage in Kenya, the colorful array of blankets modelled by the residents have an entirely different purpose.

In the cold mornings in Nairobi National Park and without their mother and protective herd by their side, these young orphaned elephants are vulnerable to nature’s elements. These multi-colored coats are their secret weapon for survival.

Orphans In Blankets

At their young age, the elephants need full time protection, not just from poachers and predators, but from the wind, rain, cold and hot sun during the heat of the day. This is exactly what the blankets provide. Highly susceptible to pneumonia, without the protection of their fluffy blankets, the cold could claim the lives of many orphaned elephants.

These unwittingly fashionable elephants even have their own tailor-made raincoat blankets too, and when the heavens open, elephant Keepers have waterproofs and umbrellas at hand.

Orphans In Blankets

As well as providing protection and warmth for the young elephants, blankets play another crucial role. Bottle feeding a baby elephant is not quite as easy as you may think as they rely on their mother for reassurance and a place to rest their trunk while feeding.

The young elephants will eventually be weaned off their blankets, ready to start their journey to the wild. This happens when the elephants reach between 12 and 18-months old. But whilst they are young, there needs to be plenty of blankets to go around.