Elephant eye close up. NJ Wight

The Texture of Elephants: Living Landscapes in Nature

When I dream of Africa, I dream of elephants…

Elephants greeting with trunks entwined. NJWight

The Texture of Elephants

Wrinkled and rough, creased and crusted, the texture of elephants create living landscapes in nature. These thundering giants with gentle eyes captivate and hold tight in our imagination. Even if you have never seen one, it is likely that your mind can quite easily conjure up an image of this unique and curious creature. And yet, if you have been lucky enough to encounter one up close, you might be hard-pressed to find the words to describe it the magic of being in its presence.

Close up of an elephant eye amongst the herd.

Wild Elephant Encounters

Whether sitting quietly surrounded by a large herd in the Sabi Sands, listening to the cracking of branches and swooshing of trunks as they forage and feed in the woodland, or watching a family play and relax on the banks of Kenya’s Ewaso Ngíro River, each experience has been different from the last. And each encounter leaves me longing for the next.

Elephant Family In Ewaso River

Love at First Sight

My very first trip to the continent was visiting Tanzania in 2007 and I was rightfully humbled by the mock-charge of a large bull in musth! It was in Tanzania that I first stood barefoot in elephant footprints and watched in the moonlight as a small family crossed a dry riverbed 100 feet from our truck. There years later, in Kenya’s Samburu National Reserve, I photographed a 3-day old calf — and the next day, that same calf taking baby steps, another day older.

Once, at first-light in Botswana’s Okavango Delta, a young bull paid me a visit at my tent, his eyelashes poking through the mesh window as I was lacing my boots. Every experience has been memorable. You do not easily forget an elephant encounter. Now, after 10 years of travelling to Africa, my elephant memories will last me a lifetime!

Three day old baby elephant.

Walking With Elephants

Morula was born around 1977 and was an orphan of a Zimbabwean culling program. She was 31 when I met her and had the opportunity to walk with her through the wilds of the Okavango Delta. She was one of three elephants that I was privileged to spend time with, accompanied by Doug Groves of the Living with Elephants Foundation. Rubbing her trunk, legs, and belly, my fingers roamed her textures, delighting in the feel of her hard, rough skin and her prickly, thick ridges covered with short bristles of hair. We joined her family, trailing behind and walking through the bush, in her way, in her time. When she lay her trunk over my shoulder it felt like a wire brush and I was astonished by its weight. My heart danced in my chest…

Behind an elephants ear. NJ Wight

Elephant Ears are a Soft Touch

There is absolutely nothing delicate about the texture of elephants. That is until you rub behind their ears. The most heightened sensory experience I have ever had with an animal has been running my hands behind the ears of an elephant. Their skin transforms. Warm and soft with smooth contours, those enormous flaps protecting hidden hollows. It is magical. They are living landscapes my palms have roamed in wonder.

Back of elephant ear. NJ Wight

Our Connection to Elephants

Elephants seem to hold enormous appeal. I am not quite sure what it is about this marvelous animal that captivates us so. Whether it is the unimaginable size or that wondrous and unusual body? Or perhaps we are drawn to the herd and the close sense of family they share with humans? Or maybe their deeply emotional personalities? Whatever it is, of one thing I am quite certain; our connection to the elephant runs very, very deep.

I know I have been charmed by the elephants I have met and I am fortunate to carry them with me.

View Elephant Gallery Check out NJ Wight’s Art Cards!

 

For more information about elephants and how you can help, please visit the following organizations:

http://www.sheldrickwildlifetrust.org/

http://worldwildlife.org/species/african-elephant

https://biglife.org/

http://www.bornfree.org.uk/campaigns/elephants/

NJ Wight

Image maker and storyteller, bringing my audience up close to the extraordinary wildlife that has transformed my thinking and shaped my creative expression.


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