Showing posts with label Zookeepers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zookeepers. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Kudos for NC Zoo Kudus

The North Carolina Zoo recently announced the birth of a new kudu calf in their African Plains exhibit. Here's the little girl getting one of her first vet checks. A little known fact about me: I am a huge fan of kudus. I worked with them for many years both at the Dallas Zoo and the African Plains exhibit at the NC Zoo where this gal was born. She's quite an armload for a baby. This photo reminded me of what fantastic little hiders they are and how many hours we would spend searching the exhibit to find them for exams. Being excellent at hiding is how they stay safe from predators in the wild. Mom helps them locate a spot to lie down, and they immediately curl up and blend right into their surroundings, often staying still and silent as the trees for hours on end.   
\

The NC Zoo plains exhibit is spectacular, if you haven't seen it, I highly recommend a visit. You will think you've stepped right out onto the African Plains, for real. They house a number of African antelope and rhinos on about a hundred acres of rolling hills and grasslands right next door to their African elephant exhibits. The exhibit has several thickets of trees, a pond and a lake. 

It isn't easy to find babies in all that tall grass. We would sit hidden for hours with our binoculars trained on the mother antelope until she would magically call the baby out of hiding. In actuality, their calls are infrasonic, too low frequency to be heard by most predatory species, including humans. But it seems as if they make some magical silent agreement and then mother and baby move in tandem to meet for nursing. That's when we'd follow them to get a better idea of where to locate the calf for its exam. Of course, we didn't dare touch the calf until the herd moved away from it again. They don't take kindly to babies being messed with. One oryx mother beat the crap out of the truck because we had her baby in the back for a medical check up.

Soon, this little kudu girl will grow. And grow. And grow, into one of the largest and most lovely of all the African antelope species. Though they can be fairly docile most of the time, they will take you out if they feel cornered or threatened. A little known fact about kudus: they will do pretty much anything for a grape. I helped train the NC Zoo's kudu herd to voluntarily come into smaller, enclosed holding areas from the exhibit using nothing more than a clicker and a bunch of grapes. 


Anyway, kudos for Mr. Kudu, his baby mama, and his keepers on their latest kudu calf. 
All photos appear courtesy of the NC Zoo.

Monday, June 4, 2012

Birthing a Six Foot Baby

A friend just called today with the fantastic news that one of her giraffes is in labor. Well, it's actually the zoo's giraffe, but when you take care of the animals every day, they begin to feel like yours. I have no doubt she's as proud as any soon-to-be gramma could be.

The news immediately took me back to watching my first giraffe birth many years ago at the Dallas Zoo. The poor female walked around with hooves protruding from her for hours. We were all really worried the baby would suffocate after so long in the birth canal. But some six hours after it all began, the baby's head and neck began to emerge. It didn't take much longer for the baby to come falling out. I covered my eyes, thinking surely the fall would injure the not so little guy. But, the vet on call that day assured me that hitting the ground actually helps clear their air passages and get them breathing.

What was really astounding was how huge the baby was. When she stood, she was six feet tall and weighed something like 150 lbs. That's quite a baby. She was up and walking around like she'd been born to it within the hour, too. The whole thing was truly amazing. Here's hoping my friend's giraffe birth goes off without a hitch. May momma giraffe and her fairly ginormous baby be happy and healthy. In honor of the impending birth, I thought I'd share some photos I took of a couple of my young giraffe friends.

All photos by Amanda Corlies Sandos.


Monday, May 28, 2012

Remembering Those We've Lost

Here I am feeding Moja treats.
Here I am with Isabeau
Memorial Day is about honoring those who have and still do serve
our country. It's an important day in my family and always has been, since so many of my family have served in the armed forces. In fact, I blogged about my grandfather over at amandacorlies.com. But, I also find myself thinking about some of the many animals I've loved and lost today. So, I thought I'd share some images I found of them. I hope you enjoy a lovely holiday with friends and family, today. Thanks so much to all those who have and still do serve our country!

Nita and Teela

I have a tattoo of Grady the leopard on my ankle

Tonto letting me hand feed him browse.

Forest Gump the Puffin who didn't like to swim.
My angel of Mercy, pictured here with Cinco
Sting the Blue-Crowned Hanging Parrot. His partner was Roxanne.
Bambesa, my favorite Okapi and her calf.




Thursday, February 9, 2012

Zookeepers Faking it? All in a Day's Work.

Today, Mark Percy reported a Fake Rhino Escape on BBC News. A Tokyo zoo was filmed running an animal escape drill complete with a cool papier mache life-size rhino costume. I had myself a chuckle at the video. I do have to correct Mr. Percy, though. Faking animals for escape drills is an expected part of most zookeeper's job descriptions. It was included in all of mine for all of the zoos I worked at. This has become a common and accepted way to ensure that zoos have a workable plan in place for actual animal escapes, and that all the employees fully understand and are comfortable with their assigned rolls.

I can tell you from experience that having an organized plan in place, and running simulation drills has helped to capture escaped animals quickly and without injury to the animal or the zoo visitors. Once, we had a chimp scale her exhibit wall during a fight with her troupe. She escaped during visitor hours. The zoo staff had visitors safely locked in buildings throughout the park and had the chimp contained safely in less than thirty minutes. Pretty amazing. Chimps might look cute, but they are one of the most dangerous animals. Not only are they smart, but they are strong enough to rip your limbs off, they have huge teeth, and they can be highly aggressive when they are scared or angry. I ended up clearing visitors from the area where the chimp was running around loose, aggressive posturing and challenging people. I was pretty freaked out to be one of the unlucky ones in the wrong place at the right time. Not much freaks a zookeeper out. Not if they are any good at their job.

Anyway, each zoo's escape plan is usually written and tailor made for that facility. It often breaks the animals and escape protocols down into categories according to the danger factor. So there are changes to the rules for those species housed at a facility that are listed as dangerous and those listed as intermediate or non-dangerous. For example, you would not see keepers approaching a polar bear to poke it with sticks like you did the "rhino" in this video. In fact, I'm not sure all zoos would use this method for their rhinos, and it would probably vary according to the animal's individual personalities. I've known rhinos I could pat like a dog and others that might leave me with a stub if I tried it. 

Anyway, at my last zoo we would get tapped by the director or one of the curators to become part of a secret plan to run an escape drill for the rest of the staff. Whoever was tapped would be given the species they would play and some basic parameters of the drill.  You might be told, tomorrow you will be a gorilla who escapes at 8:35 in the morning. You will attack Jim who will play the injured keeper to drill the EMT staff at the same time. The rest then becomes up to those playing the role. The animal roll players are expected to behave as they think the real animal might.

At the start of a drill, the rest of the staff would hear an outgoing radio call (we all carried hand-held radios on our belts) that sounded something like this, "This is an escape drill. This is Keeper Wallace. There is an escaped female gorilla. I repeat, we have a gorilla escape drill in progress. She was last seen in the vacinity of the gorilla visitor overlook running west. I no longer have a visual on her. Again this is an escape drill. Zoocom did you copy?"

And from there, the main communications people would take over and responses would begin to roll in from the different teams like the vets, the safety team, and the weapons team. The keepers in each area would begin to follow a complicated instruction list for their particular section of the zoo that we were expected to memorize. Every area had their list of duties, and we were expected to follow all of them to the letter as if an actual animal had escaped. 

Sometimes, having humans playing the animals proved challenging. We knew to look for someone wearing an orange vest with the name of the animal taped to it during drills. No elaborate animal costumes were used.  During one drill, a good friend of mine played the roll of a gorilla. Being a  smart a** of grand proportions, he climbed way up in a tree, which isn't usual for a gorilla, but also could happen if one were scared. It took us a long time to discover his hiding place and most of us had walked right below him several times looking. Boy did we feel stupid. 

Human error is always a factor. Once, our animal actor, pretending to be an escaped Hamadrayas baboon, took himself off in the woods to hide, but he forgot to turn his hand-held radio on. The zoo was in a rural area with large tracts of forest surrounding it. In the meantime, an actual baboon escaped inside the holding building while they were drilling the staff on the shift procedures. So, the fake escape had to be called off because it became a real escape. Yes, truth is stranger than fiction. Our fake animal couldn't be located because he couldn't hear his radio and nobody had time to go find him. The real animal was contained by giving it food incentive, so it eventually ran back into an empty cage. No harm, no foul. But, we were left wondering what to do about the long lost human. Eventually, groups of us went out into the woods to yell for him and bring him home. Lots of lessons were learned that day and some major changes were made to the animal escape policy, too. 

So, if you want to work at as a zookeeper, know that animal acting might be required of you, and the ability to go with the flow is always a plus. Be prepared for the unexpected!

Many thanks to Andi Lea, my friend and collaborator over at The Ravens Crossing, who sent me the link to the BBC report.

Friday, February 3, 2012

Baby Baboon Born at the NC Zoo

Courtesy of Jody Wiley
The birds, the bees, and the baboons are doing that thing they do over at the North Carolina Zoo. On January 21st, 2012, a new Hamadryas baboon was born at the zoo. This little girl has quite a family as the newest member of one of the largest troops in the United States. She now lives among the eighteen other baboons housed at the zoo's African Pavilion. According to the reports the new baby is being cared for by the mother.

Special thanks to my friend and former coworker Tom Gillespie who provided me with this fantastic photo taken by Jody Wiley.

Check out this Zoo Files video about the baby born last August. It shows the mother, Rhea, protecting her baby from an overzealous would be mother, plus you get to see the zoo staff giving an ultrasound.

Congratulations to the baboons and their keepers at the NC Zoo on their latest addition.