In the first few months of life, as a baby elephant learns to handle its trunk, the wriggling appendage has a mind of its own—kind of like a human infant’s flailing limbs.
With water guns, buckets, and even elephants dousing people with their trunks, pretty much everyone gets soaked during this Thai New Year festival. It's a symbolic fresh start, and a welcome respite from the heat!
In the first few months of life, as a baby elephant learns to handle its trunk, the wriggling appendage has a mind of its own—kind of like a human infant’s flailing limbs.
In the first few months of life, as a baby elephant learns to handle its trunk, the wriggling appendage has a mind of its own—kind of like a human infant’s flailing limbs.
With water guns, buckets, and even elephants dousing people with their trunks, pretty much everyone gets soaked during this Thai New Year festival. It's a symbolic fresh start, and a welcome respite from the heat!
With water guns, buckets, and even elephants dousing people with their trunks, pretty much everyone gets soaked during this Thai New Year festival. It's a symbolic fresh start, and a welcome respite from the heat!
In the first few months of life, as a baby elephant learns to handle its trunk, the wriggling appendage has a mind of its own—kind of like a human infant’s flailing limbs.
In the first few months of life, as a baby elephant learns to handle its trunk, the wriggling appendage has a mind of its own—kind of like a human infant’s flailing limbs.
In the first few months of life, as a baby elephant learns to handle its trunk, the wriggling appendage has a mind of its own—kind of like a human infant’s flailing limbs.
Known as skilled navigators of treacherous mountain conditions, maybe it isn’t such a surprise to find goats making their way up narrow trunks and branches of Argan trees.
A new species has been caught on camera in a remote African forest. The bizarre mammal, which has a long, flexible, trunk-like nose, was discovered in a remote Kenyan jungle.