Mother Elephant Asks Keepers to Help Wake Calf in Adorable Video

When a mother elephant at the Prague Zoo couldn't wake her sleeping calf, she turned to the zookeepers for help.

A video of the sweet moment, originally filmed in 2016, was posted in Reddit's "Interesting As F**k" forum by u/Abhirup_0, who wrote: "Mother elephant can't wake baby who's asleep and asks the keepers for help." It has amassed over 51,000 upvotes and hundreds of comments from charmed Redditors who loved watching the wholesome interaction. You can view the video here.

The video opens with the mother walking toward her calf, Maxmilián, who is passed out in the grass of a manicured enclosure. She sniffs him with her trunk, but he doesn't move, so the mother turns around and enlists the help of her keepers.

When the keepers arrive, she points them in the direction of Maxmilián. One stays with her while the other walks over to the calf who is still snoozing in the sun and shakes him by the rear end with his hand for several seconds. Finally, Maxmilián jumps up and runs over to his mother, and both the elephants and the keepers walk off-camera together.

Sleeping elephant calf
A video showing the sweet moment a mother elephant "asked" zookeepers to help wake her sleeping calf has gone viral. atosan/istock

The zoo explained in 2016 that Maxmilián was tired from spending most of his day playing in his outdoor enclosure.

"After a whole day's 'hard work' he sometimes falls asleep so soundly that even his mother [can't] wake him up and the keepers have to step in," the zoo said, according to a provided translation.

Elephant Sleeping Patterns

As it turns out, elephants don't get much sleep. In fact, Paul Manger, a professor at the University of the Witwatersrand, told the BBC that they are the "shortest sleeping mammal,"

Captive elephants tend to sleep four to six hours a day, whereas wild elephants only get about two hours of sleep per day, the BBC explained. Further, elephants, in general, only appear to enter rapid eye movement sleep (REM sleep) every three to four days.

"Why this occurs, we're not really sure. Sleep is one of those really unusual mysteries of biology, that along with eating and reproduction, it's one of the biological imperatives. We must sleep to survive," Manger said.

Considering how comfortable little Maxmilián looked in the Prague Zoo's video, it's possible he was experiencing REM sleep and, as one Redditor suggested, "dreaming about peanuts."

Redditors React

Commenters loved the video, particularly the moment where the mother had to call over the zookeepers.

"I love this because it looks like she stops to have a chat with the other keepers while she waits," u/Ill-Organization-719 wrote.

Redditor u/Basic_Palpitation_47 imagined the "conversation" between the mother and the zookeepers went something like this: "I just can't with this f**king kid right now, it's your turn!"

u/northforthesummer exclaimed: "This is devastatingly cute for so many reasons. The exasperated mother, the snoozing baby, the cautious humans, and the thankful mother are such a combo!"

Other Viral Elephant Moments

On Tuesday, two elephant calves were filmed confronting a tourist safari at a South African game reserve.

Last month, a video of a baby elephant attempting to "intimidate" a camera operator went viral on Reddit.

And in May, an elephant was caught calling for help when it saw an antelope drowning at a zoo in Guatemala.

Uncommon Knowledge

Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.

Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.

About the writer


Sara Santora is a Newsweek reporter based in Florida. Her focus is reporting on viral social media posts and trends. ... Read more

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