Posted in Africa, Elephants, Nature, Photography, Travel

Face to Face with Your Daily Elephant

An eye tucked behind a massive trunk.  A body as tall as trees.

photograph by Cheryl Merrill
photograph by Cheryl Merrill
Posted in Africa, Elephants, Nature, Photography, Travel

Hello, I’m Back: Your Daily Elephant Resumes

Elephant trunk and fan palm.  Elephants raise their trunks to sample the air or, like this elephant, wave hello.

photograph by Cheryl Merrill
photograph by Cheryl Merrill
Posted in Africa, Elephants, Nature, Photography, Travel

An Elephant’s Eye: Your Daily Elephant

While I’m out of town for a few days this gentle eye will watch over you.

photograph by Cheryl Merrill
photograph by Cheryl Merrill

 

Posted in Africa, Elephants, Extinction, Nature, Photography, Travel

Ivory: Your Daily Elephant’s Tusk

Tanzania has lost 60% of its elephant population in five years.  All because of this, an elephant’s incisor, which looks far more beautiful on an elephant than carved into trinkets.

photograph by Cheryl Merrill
photograph by Cheryl Merrill

 

Posted in Africa, Elephants, Nature, Photography, Travel

Your Daily Elephant: Mud in her Ear

Plus a small pebble on top of her head.  She’s at a mineral lick in Hwange National Park, Zimbabwe, home to the Presidential Elephants.  There are eight elephants in this picture; they fill the entire background.  What looks like a small bite is gone from her ear.  Elephants often have ragged edges on their ears, torn by branches and thorns.

photograph by Cheryl Merrill
photograph by Cheryl Merrill
Posted in Africa, Elephants, Nature, Photography, Travel

Ear, Throat, Neck: Your Daily Elephant

If you didn’t read the title, you probably wouldn’t know just which part of an elephant’s body this is.

photograph by Cheryl Merrill
photograph by Cheryl Merrill

 

Posted in Africa, Elephants, Nature, Photography, Travel

A Kiss from Your Daily Elephant

There’s nothing like an elephant’s kiss.  2002, Botswana, Morula gives me a buss on the ear, with an assist from Doug.

photograph by Cheryl Merrill
photograph by Cheryl Merrill
Posted in Africa, Elephants, Nature, Photography

The Elephant and the Tree

Patterns on bark; patterns on skin.

photograph by Cheryl Merrill
photograph by Cheryl Merrill
Posted in Africa, Elephants, Nature, Photography, Travel

Your Daily Elephant: The Underside of a Trunk

As humans are right or left-handed, so are elephants right or left-trunked, preferring to grab and wrap one way or the other.  One of the ways to determine an elephant’s dominant tendencies is to inspect the underside of its trunk for grass stains on either the right side or the left. But before you do this, make sure you know the elephant and, more importantly, the elephant knows you.

photograph by Cheryl Merrill
photograph by Cheryl Merrill

 

Posted in Africa, Elephants, Nature, Photography, Travel

Silhouette of Ears: Your Daily Elephant

No two elephant ears are alike:

photograph by Cheryl Merrill
photograph by Cheryl Merrill