I went to Howletts last week with the kids and was a little taken aback when one of them asked 'Daddy, why are there people playing with the cheetah?'
Sure enough there was a small group of people (about 7) strolling around inside the cheetah enclosure (with the cheetah) and a couple more on the other side of the fence engaging with it through a single layer of wire. If I had to take a guess I would say that it was probably members of the Aspinall family and some friends / relatives.
It actually really shocked me - so much so that I thought I had better check on ZooChat to see if I was overreacting or misinterpreting things. It just looked like someone was keeping a cheetah as a pet, but in the grounds of a wild animal park. The enclosure had the usual informational boards up about the cheetah and its habitat so it was definitely 'meant' to be there. And we overheard a nearby keeper saying that it was going to be released into the wild at some point in the future. It just didn't seem the right thing to be doing from either the cheetah or the human's perspective.
Needless to say I had to tell the kids they couldn't have a go!
Sure enough there was a small group of people (about 7) strolling around inside the cheetah enclosure (with the cheetah) and a couple more on the other side of the fence engaging with it through a single layer of wire. If I had to take a guess I would say that it was probably members of the Aspinall family and some friends / relatives.
It actually really shocked me - so much so that I thought I had better check on ZooChat to see if I was overreacting or misinterpreting things. It just looked like someone was keeping a cheetah as a pet, but in the grounds of a wild animal park. The enclosure had the usual informational boards up about the cheetah and its habitat so it was definitely 'meant' to be there. And we overheard a nearby keeper saying that it was going to be released into the wild at some point in the future. It just didn't seem the right thing to be doing from either the cheetah or the human's perspective.
Needless to say I had to tell the kids they couldn't have a go!