The South Carolina State Fair is one of the biggest
attractions for the general public that Columbia holds every year. Organised in
1869 the State Fair combines a mixture of livestock competitions with entertainment,
appealing to both rural and urban crowds of all ages. After hearing numerous
people rave about how much fun it is, I decided to go check it out. Like the funfair's
at home the grounds were lit up with Ferris wheels, dodgems and roller-coasters.
There were candy floss stools and competitions to win enormous cuddly toys alongside
various other lucky-dip and betting games. But there was one thing that really
stood out as different, and no it wasn’t the fried goodies! Although trying fried
cookie dough and fried Oreos was definitely a novelty, it wasn’t the Southern
food that shocked me.
It was the elephant.
Plodding around a tiny penned-in area
was a ginormous elephant giving rides to children for $5 apiece. Words actually
failed me for a few moments whilst the image I was witnessing began to sink in.
Sure, I’ve seen elephants at the zoo, but they have huge outside areas to roam
around in, fit with large grass paddocks, pools, mud wallows, dust baths and all
sorts of other facilities close to their natural habitat. In the UK it is
illegal to have exotic animals at travelling circuses, so when I saw this
beautiful elephant trapped, being used as nothing more than a money making machine,
my heart went out to it. For me, there is no place in today’s society where it’s
acceptable to use wild animals for our own entertainment purposes. I’m not a
huge animal rights activist or anything, but I couldn’t help but think about
that poor elephant when I got back to my apartment. I cannot see how being
transported from one place to the next and being made to perform in loud and unfamiliar
surroundings is healthy for them. Some people may argue that by having
elephants at these types of fairs, the general public get to see an animal that
they might not have the chance to see in the wild. But I think if you want to
learn about elephants, or educate your children about them, one of the worst
ways you can do it is to let your kids ride one at a fair or see one dressed up
and performing at a circus.
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