Zoo staff go without to feed animals - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
Another article about the issues. Note the food bill is around $8,000 per week. I understand due to location and quantities of food being purchased this may be understandble. Just for comparison sake the food bill for TWPZ is around $9,000 er week. Surely they could find a way to reduce costs.
Some zoo staff have complained to The Cairns Post that they have been toughing it out and are unable to pay bills at home.
But reserve owner Jenny Jattke said most of her 15 staff members realized the need to go without pay to keep the animals from starving.
"The staff are here for the No. 1 reason we’re here: for the animals," Jattke said.
"No way is our animals’ health or their food ever, ever compromised.
"They are No. 1 and I’m afraid the humans are No. 2."
This establishment might be on its last legs, and even if it survives the economic crisis what does the future hold? With only around 100 animals it is much smaller than I imagined, as that is an insignificant number of creatures in comparison to most other wildlife parks.
That's really got nothing to do with it. Werribee only has a few hundred animals and they're doing over 200,000 a year fairly comfortably (they're not really viable without cross-subsidy from Melbourne, but that's because of the problems caused by the buses).
Cairns WSR's selling point is that it's the only place in Far North Queensland to see big exotic mammals. They're the only place in the region with big cats and ungulates, and they have more primates than anywhere else as well. If you want to see a fairly broad collection of native mammals, birds and reptiles you'd go to Cairns Tropical Zoo instead.
A low number of species, as there's only 20 odd there, is probably hurting their repeat visitor numbers at the moment. I don't think they need to adopt a postage stamp approach to expansion though - the steady introduction of the right species should get people coming back.
The thing that I can't fathom is the $8000 a week feed bill. It simply doesn't make sense, and is surely where the problem lies.
For Australia it is a very decent collection for a private zoo. I'd say $2,000 would feed the carnivores for a week. I cant see them spending $6,000 a week on hay, fruits and vegetables... maybe they meant it costs $8,000 to run the place.
$8000 a week? Do they buy their big cats prime cuts of meat from the local organic meat butcher?Note the food bill is around $8,000 per week. I understand due to location and quantities of food being purchased this may be understandble. Just for comparison sake the food bill for TWPZ is around $9,000 er week. Surely they could find a way to reduce costs.
I don't know if the same owners own the place, but there was an article in Thats Life quite a number of years ago now, where it was bought by a family that had like 5 kids or so. I wonder if parents, and kids are employed by the zoo?does anyone else feel uncomfortable with the owners statements, basically saying that if the staff aren't willing to sacrifice their own basic living needs then they don't care about the animals?