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This blog is purposely for everything and anything Khmer related. If you'd like to share any stories, pictures, cambodian jokes, facts, WHATEVER! feel free to submit them here! I'll try to do as much as I can. Hope you all enjoy! :)

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Posts tagged Animals.

Not Cambodian Related, but I am an animal lover and I do think it’s worth a share :(

“Lonely old dog has dying wish come true”

Sun Bears

Edinburgh Zoo has two sun bears named Somnang and Rotana. They came to live at Edinburgh Zoo in 2010.

Somnang and Rotana are brothers, and are approximately six years old. The boys are great friends and spend most of their time snoozing together and foraging for fruit and nuts.

Rotana, a popular modern Cambodian name, gets very excited, searching high and low to sniff out hidden goodies.

Somnang, meaning Lucky, takes things more slowly, usually meandering after Rotana who has put in the ground work.

They love nothing more than rolling around on their backs, licking honey and wrestling together in their swimming pool.

grooming?

Aww <3

monkey and its baby! :) (photo belongs to cousins)

ihatethursdays:

Elephant Valley, Moldikiri, Cambodia

bebelion:

Elephant Prosthesis by Arddu on Flickr.

vegan-rage:

Elephant With Prosthetic Foot In Cambodia. A very touching story.

In 2007, orphaned baby elephant Chhouk was found wandering alone in the forests of Mondulkiri Province, Cambodia. Badly emaciated and separated from his mother, this endangered Asian elephant had lost his left front foot due to injuries sustained from a poacher’s snare. The infection and severity of the illness represented certain death for a young elephant alone in the forest.

The Cambodian government requested the assistance of Wildlife Alliance and wildlife rescue and care director Nick Marx, who made the arduous journey and stayed alongside Chhouk for more than a week while his immediate injuries were tended to. When Chhouk had been stabilized, the injured elephant was transported by truck to Phnom Tamao Wildlife Rescue Center in a difficult and treacherous 26-hour journey.

Chhouk was severely malnourished, his stump was badly infected, and nearly 5 inches of infected tissue and bone had to be removed. After his immediate survival was secure, his long-term care was the next concern. Without a foot, he was suffering severe balance issues, and the strain on his hips and back would make his lifelong welfare unlikely. With funding assistance from SeaWorld & Busch Gardens Conservation Fund, and technical support from the Cambodian School of Prosthetics and Orthotics, Chhouk was fitted with his first prosthetic foot in 2009. Because of his injuries, Chhouk will never be a candidate for release into the forest, but he is immensely beloved both inside Cambodia, and as a global ambassador for Cambodia’s threatened Asian elephant populations. Featured on television in Australia, the U.S., and Britain, he is an eloquent messenger to the world about the need to save Asia’s wildlife and forests.

Elephants are rough on hardware, and each year until he matures, Chhouk will need a replacement foot. As he continues to grow into his adolescence, he requires new prostheses to fit his growing frame and replace those lost to wear and tear. This month, Wildlife Alliance and the Cambodian School of Prosthetics and Orthotics fitted Chhouk with his fourth prosthesis.

via

delucazade:

“I’m the King of the Jungle” (by GilesT1)

(via pakizah)

kaeceylanhuseyin:

Zookeeper Sar Roeun feeds a leopard cat kitten in the wildlife rescue centre at the Phnom Tamao zoo near Phnom Penh, Cambodia. Local media reported that three female leopard cat kittens were discovered by a fisherman in a flooded area of Kandal province three weeks ago. One has since died.