Asian Elephants 20 oz. double walled, stainless steel, vacuum insulated* travel tumbler. No one wants to drink room-temperature coffee and this classic style travel tumbler will make sure your beverage is the perfect temperature for hours on end.
* What is vacuum insulation? Not only is it double walled, meaning a different layer on the inside and the outside, but it also has a layer of space (insulation) in between the two layers which are airtight (sealed). With the air vacuumed from between the two layers, the heat or cold is minimally transmitted through to the next layer, keeping the desired temperature inside the drinking vessel.
Original artwork © 2010 Samara E. King & TwoBee, LLC rendered in color pencil for the Smithsonian National Zoological Park.
In addition to being smaller than their African elephant cousins, Asian Elephants (Elephas maximus) have smaller ears and two finger-like protrusions on the tip of their trunks. They also have more hair on their bodies and can display a heavy pinkish pigmentation around their ears, face and trunk. When male calves mature into adolescence (from 9 to 18 years of age), they gradually break away from the close-knit structure of their birth-herd, and may live alone or form bachelor pods with their peers. Only about 30,000 Asian Elephants still live in the forests of South and Southeast Asia where this intelligent and docile animal has been historically used as a beast of burden, an entertainer and a weapon of war. The Asian Elephant is listed as ‘Endangered’ by the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Learn more about Asian elephants at: https://nationalzoo.si.edu/animals/exhibits/elephant-trails and https://elephantconservation.org/elephants/asian-elephants/
S4C (Shops4Conservation) directly supports the work of conservation organizations saving species in the wild. 50% [GP] of all sales go directly to on-the-ground efforts that protect wildlife and empower communities.
* What is vacuum insulation? Not only is it double walled, meaning a different layer on the inside and the outside, but it also has a layer of space (insulation) in between the two layers which are airtight (sealed). With the air vacuumed from between the two layers, the heat or cold is minimally transmitted through to the next layer, keeping the desired temperature inside the drinking vessel.
Original artwork © 2010 Samara E. King & TwoBee, LLC rendered in color pencil for the Smithsonian National Zoological Park.
In addition to being smaller than their African elephant cousins, Asian Elephants (Elephas maximus) have smaller ears and two finger-like protrusions on the tip of their trunks. They also have more hair on their bodies and can display a heavy pinkish pigmentation around their ears, face and trunk. When male calves mature into adolescence (from 9 to 18 years of age), they gradually break away from the close-knit structure of their birth-herd, and may live alone or form bachelor pods with their peers. Only about 30,000 Asian Elephants still live in the forests of South and Southeast Asia where this intelligent and docile animal has been historically used as a beast of burden, an entertainer and a weapon of war. The Asian Elephant is listed as ‘Endangered’ by the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Learn more about Asian elephants at: https://nationalzoo.si.edu/animals/exhibits/elephant-trails and https://elephantconservation.org/elephants/asian-elephants/
S4C (Shops4Conservation) directly supports the work of conservation organizations saving species in the wild. 50% [GP] of all sales go directly to on-the-ground efforts that protect wildlife and empower communities.