Cairns Wildlife Safari Reserve staff going without pay so lions don't go hungry

"Currently negotiations in progress to keep the zoo open" I'm assuming this is more of the same: 'say what sounds good to the public and save face a bit'

Such a poor outcome for a zoo which had so much to offer.

Where's nanoboy's lotto win when you need it :)

It's drawing tonight, so keep your fingers crossed.
 
They are very touchy on their facebook site.

For all the sensationalist untrue posters out there u will be reported & banned from our page, no animals were ever going to be destroyed this is a total lie!! Nobody bought the zoo at auction, will be all aired on channel 7 local news...possibly tonight? There are currently negotiations in progress to try to keep the zoo open & if this fails they ALL have a beautiful home to go to, where they will be utilised in international breeding programs.

I replied

that is good as I had heard most the animals were going to Indonesia and those they did not want would be euthanased

And now it is gone they have deleted it, and I am banned.
 
I like the "they will all be in international breeding programs" part.... Most of the animals are to old to breed and the others have little to no value in any program as their history is lost/unknown. Yeah I requested info on what animals would be sent where and was swiftly deleted and banned... Clearly something she is keeping from the public.
 
I have just noticed they have their Peafowl advertised for sale on Gumtree.com.au saying they have closed their business and they cant leave them there - has anyone got any updates as to whether they have actually closed their doors and where the other animals have gone?:confused: I found 1 half of the property listed as sold on real estate. I understood some of their animal such as the cheetah and the tiger were actually owned by other zoos, so do they get them back or what?
 
is the place still open or what? The Wikipedia article on them says they closed this month but there's no citation so I don't know if that's rumour or fact.

The following article was from last month:
Push to turn former Far Northern zoo into a nature sanctuary- Local Cairns News | cairns.com.au
20 March 2013

EVER wanted to own a zoo or at least a little bit of one? Well, here is your big chance.

Plans are under way to turn Shambala Animal Kingdom at Koah, which is due to close in the next couple of months, into a sanctuary for native and exotic species.

But the people behind the project face one little problem they need $800,000 to get the proposed Gaia Sanctuary off the ground.


That's how much would be required to buy the land and infrastructure at the zoo and put it all into an animal welfare trust.


Jennie Gilbert, who co-founded the Cairns Turtle Rehabilitation Centre, and her husband Rod Gilbert, of Marlin Coast Veterinary Hospital, will on the board, as will the current zoo owner, Elaine Harrison, and other prominent Cairns businessmen, who have not as yet been named.


Mrs Gilbert said the zoo, formerly the Cairns Wildlife Safari Reserve, was up for sale and the animals would go into quarantine at the end of April ready to be shipped to wildlife parks across Australia and Indonesia.


There was already an offer on the property from another buyer, so they had to be quick if they wanted to secure the land.


Mrs Gilbert said the plan was to sell membership of the trust to the public with platinum, gold, silver and bronze level membership.


The first 250 people would be able to buy platinum membership, which would normally cost $20,000, for just $5000.

"We need to secure the land within the next six weeks, otherwise it is being sold," Mrs Gilbert said.

Membership would give people a year-round pass and they were also looking at putting in accommodation.

Mrs Gilbert said that after the bulk of the animals had been transferred, there would still be a couple of tigers, otters, a cheetah, serval, Japanese macaque and two gibbons.
 
update!

It is closed. I just found this article.

Animals' destiny abroad after Shambala shuts at Koah- Local Cairns News | cairns.com.au
16 April 2013

Pigmy hippos and lions are likely to "fullfill their destinies'' in Indonesia after the signage was taken down marking the end of an era at Shambala Animal Kingdom.

Preparations are in hand to close the site at Koah in what owner Elaine Harrison says will arguably be the biggest transfer of zoo animals in Australian history.

It may not be of quite the same Biblical proportions as Noah's Ark, but in a way Ms Harrison feels that she too has ensured a safe haven for the exotic species under her care.

Within a month or so the zoo's 24 lions, the largest pride in Australasia, as well as a variety of tigers, hippos, cheetahs, rhinos, gibbons, limas, monkeys and other animals will be transferred to zoos and wildlife parks in Australia and Indonesia for conservation and breeding programs.

"It is important that I was here as a steward to move them on to safe and viable places,'' Ms Harrison said.
The Sydney solicitor with a passion for animals bought the Cairns Wildlife Safari Reserve, as it was then called, a year ago.

Under previous owners it had lurched from one financial problem to the next.
Ms Harrison now recognises that "for whatever reason" the zoo was simply nonviable.

"I have pursued my dream and my life-long passion but it hasn't turned out the way I thought it would.

"I feel good that I have made sure that these animals have a home, and if it meant that it didn't turn into Far North Queensland's biggest wildlife park, so be it.

"It is someone else's gain.

"At least I know that they have not been sent to places they should not have been or that they have been destroyed.''
She said that normally zoos only wanted younger animals but she had negotiated to secure places for older animals as well.

"Hopefully in two years I can go to Taman Wild Life Park in Indonesia and see some pigmy hippo calves and lions fulfilling their destinies in a refuge where the old ones can live out their lives, which is what they deserve," Ms Harrison said.

"I hope that some good can come out of the nightmare, that this will ensure the survival of some of these species, because the way we are destroying the planet, they won't have a home in the wild."

While the animals were being prepared for transport, a last minute proposal fronted by wildlife campaigner Jennie Gilbert and her vet husband Rod, emerged to turn the zoo infrastructure into an animal sanctuary for rescued or older exotic and native species, but that required the public to stump up $800,000 and they only have a few weeks to scrape the money together.

Yesterday Mrs Gilbert acknowledged she didn't think they would get enough investors to make it work.
Meanwhile, Ms Harrison has been dealing with the bureaucracy of sending the animals to their new homes.

They have been undergoing blood tests and vaccinations, export licences are needed and import licences as well, and all the CITES rules and regulations have to be complied with.

The animals are being slowly acclimatised to the crates they will be shipped in by putting their food inside so that they have familiar surroundings and are not stressed when it comes time to leave.

Now it is time to put them in quarantine, ready for the journey.

Before the holiday break Ms Harrison encouraged people to go to the zoo over Easter.

"This may be their last chance to see the lions and tigers.

"It will be the last roar of the lions in FNQ," she said.
 

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A sad thing to see... I wonder how different it would have been if a competent person had purchased the zoo in 2012 and listened to proper advice instead of thinking they knew best. RIP CWSR
 
So does anyone know which animals are being transferred to other Australian zoos? And if so which zoos? Is it the few quoted at the end of the article in post #128?

Mrs Gilbert said that after the bulk of the animals had been transferred, there would still be a couple of tigers, otters, a cheetah, serval, Japanese macaque and two gibbons.
 
I am suprised that the Pygmies were allowed to go off shore, esp as Adelaide's last one died recently and the Cairns ones were such succesfull breeders.... Werribee still has the old hippo lakes (off display) that could have held all of them... Altina was talking of wanting hippos.... huge shame! I would have gladly taken them on if my back yard pool was big enough! sigh!... dreams are free:(
 
I am saddened that this export of animals diminishes further the genetic and stocked diversity in Australia.
 
I am saddened that this export of animals diminishes further the genetic and stocked diversity in Australia.

Clearly the main losses here are the hippos, both species, but I don't think any of the other animals are of particular use to the region really.

There are 38 animals going, according to the article, and 23 of them are lions, which I think there is very good population of anyway. The "Bengal" tigers and brown bears are phase out species (although I do feel especially sorry for the elderly bears, who are almost certainly going to a worse home than they had). The spider monkeys, ostrich, ring-tailed lemurs are common species, and I doubt these individuals were of any real use to the population. I don't know about the rhino, whether its genes were well-represented or not. And can't they, being an endangered, CITES I species, only be exported for recognised breeding programmes?

Overall, I'm not sure its quite the loss it appears to be, except most certainly for the hippos. It would have been great if ZAA or someone could have made a deal to keep them in the country.
 
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