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Toronto

Toronto zoo elephant convoy passes inspection in Chicago

Follow our exclusive coverage as CBC's the fifth estate accompanies the three elephants from the Toronto Zoo as they are transferred to a sanctuary in California.

'Be careful with them,' border guards say when trucks cross into U.S.

The journey begins

11 years ago
Duration 3:30
3 elephants from the Toronto Zoo begin their long journey to a U.S. animal sanctuary.

Three Toronto Zoo elephants en route to their new home in California have passed an inspection in Chicago and are back on the road.

Agents with theU.S. Fish and Wildlife service conducted a quickinspection ofthe animals and sent them on their way Friday afternoon.

CBC's current-affairs programthe fifth estateis following the convoy of trucks carryingThika,TokaandIringato the PAWS Wildlife Sanctuary in SanAndreas, Calif., and has been sending live updates throughout the trip.

Producer Lynette Fortune was interviewed Friday on CBC News Network and said the elephants are travelling well.

Follow the elephants

Click here to follow along as the CBC's the fifth estate provides up-to-the-minute coverage of the elephants' journey south. Producer Lynette Fortune and a CBC cameraman are the only members of the media on the road with the elephants, sending updates and photos throughout the two-day trek until they reach the PAWS sanctuary. Watch the full documentary on the elephant trek on the fifth estate, Friday, Nov. 1.

Their convoy crossed the U.S. border early Friday after leaving the Toronto Zoo before 11 p.m. ET on Thursday.

"I don't think the border agents believed what they were seeing," she reported. "They got out their flashlights and looked atIringa'sfoot and as the truck pulled away they said,'Be careful with them.'"

Fortune reported that the elephants are "riding very well."

"The goal is to keep them warm and comfy during the journey," she said.

A fifth estatephoto documenting the elephants' journeyshowsthe team of handlers installing panels on the elephants' transport trailers to keep them warm during the trip, which is expected to take about 50 hours.

Several handlers and veterinarians are travelling with the pachyderms.One of the elephant experts told Fortune that these are the quietest elephants of the 18 she's ever moved.

Handlers feed the Toronto Zoo's elephants en route to their new home at a California wildlife sanctuary. (CBC)

The team took multiple breaks along the highway on Friday to rest,feed and water the animals. The convoy had packed 54 bales of hay for the trip.

Toronto city council voted in 2011 to send the three aging elephants to the PAWS sanctuary after animal rights advocates voiced concern for their welfare.

A series of squabbles involving zoo staff, city councillors and animal advocates delayed their departure.

In the end, it was decided to move the elephants to a new home in a warmer climate.

For more than a year, trainers workedwith the elephants to prepare them for their move, so that the pachyderms would feel comfortable in their crates when being transported.