Taronga Zoo Kodiak Bears. GOING GOING...3,2

Compared to the poor bears in those &#%$ bear bile "farms", your Syrians at Melbourne zoo are living in paradise!

(You can all boycott the Olympics over the situation in Tibet - I reckon the bear "farms" are a bigger reason to give them a miss.)
 
how about cos you just find sport really boring? :D

apart from the fact that melbourne's bear exhibit is tiny - its also almost entirely concrete. a good third of the exhibit is taken up by a pool that the bears virtually never use and for whatever reason the keepers have made no effort to refurbish it ever since i remember. no new logs to climb - nothing.

its been a disgrace for a long time.
 
I remember the old bear pits at Melbourne - concrete walls, concrete floor and each with a concrete "igloo", for want of a better term, to climb on. Except for the polar bear - instead of an igloo he had a (concrete) pool. No logs or anything organic in the enclosures.

Taronga's (and Adelaide's) were much the same, except that Taronga's were much deeper, being built on a steep slope.

Way back in 1970 I spent about 30 minutes watching a polar bear at Taronga playing in its pool with a small pebble. (In those days animals such as these were not given toys.) The bear was using its mouth to put the pebble on the back of its paw, then flinging it into the water and diving for it. This was not stereotypical behaviour, and he seemed to enjoy it very much. He was one of two male polars that Taronga had at that time. One died in 1984 and the other was sent to New Zealand. They were Taronga's last polars.
 
I went to Taronga today. The remaining female Kodiak Bear was sleeping in her cave, totally inactive. On the other hands, Sun Bears were drawing a big crowd with a Volunteer posted at the exhibit, explaining their past and drumming up suppor for the ARAZPA asian bear campaign. Good work.

Hey, Poor old bethal, having worked with her for a few months when we did still have the 3 and then again when it was just the girls it does sadden me to see her by herself, Kodiacks are amazing animals but when we are taking on conservation roles as zoo's the sun bears are a very important to our region, kodiack aren't endangered so unfortunatly the time of the kodiacks are over. And the volly you would have seen at the enclosure yesterday is a wonderful young man whos a youth volenter at our zoo, he stands out there for 2 hours 3 times a week during school hols and 3 hours on the weekends during school time, i don't know if he is a zoobeat forum member, but still i just send a shout of congrates to a wonderful and very motivated young person wanting to make a change in the world, even though he's still at school.
 
Have I missed something? Has poor old Bethel been taken off display or has she (as seems more likely) finally gone to bear heaven?
I was at Taronga on Easter Monday and noticed that the sun bears were in her former enclosure and that a Sumatran tiger is in their former home.
 
Have I missed something? Has poor old Bethel been taken off display or has she (as seems more likely) finally gone to bear heaven?
I was at Taronga on Easter Monday and noticed that the sun bears were in her former enclosure and that a Sumatran tiger is in their former home.

She might be hibernating (or is it too early?) so they take her off display when she does hibernate.
 
Both Bethyl and Mr Hobbs are sharing the same exhibit, Satu the male tiger is in the former sun bear exhibit.
 
Back
Top