Judging from BBC news footage, the rare David Cameron was also at Chester zoo very recently.
Facebook-video of the okapi-birth :
https://www.facebook.com/chesterzoo1/videos/10153234383700912/
Im planning to go next week so will see if we can get a sneak peak, i love the Okapi and sure it yesterday on fb and Twitter
Okapi are shy animals you know![]()
At the members talk last night the zoo said that they plan to keep mum & calf off show and peaceful for a bit longer. Okapi are shy animals you know![]()
oh i know they are , we go least once a month so we will see them at some point![]()
Ah right - just your comment about going next week and looking for a sneak peak - didn't want your expectations dashed but if your happy with a view sometime I'm sure Stuma will accomodate us at some juncture![]()
Sorry I don't think it is right OK some children might think it is wonderful but not all children are the same, I personally know it goes on but wouldn't like to see it. I could upset a lot of children, like I say I know it is only natural.
Children are usually not more sensitive to bad things than human, in part their immature brains often do the opposite, it protects them by not understanding every single detail.
Ah right - just your comment about going next week and looking for a sneak peak - didn't want your expectations dashed but if your happy with a view sometime I'm sure Stuma will accomodate us at some juncture![]()
ive got a yearly membership so its no rush to see babies , took me weeks to see the tigers coz they were always asleep when i went lol
suggest you do check regularly they grow at a rapid rate and within 6 months you will struggle to realise it is a calf....in fact its the age some husbandry guides suggest starting to separate calf from mum. (which is at a point the female could concieve again).
Tee hee, I sometimes forget children are human
I took my friend's little daughter, whose whole family are vegetarian and very much against meat eating, to a bird of prey display. She asked what they were eating and I told her they were chicks. She said "I think they are oranges". I didn't argue. However shortly after she went up to participate and came back completely unfussed and whispered "They are chicks".
A couple of years later she was given an adoption of the wild dogs at YWP and part of it was to feed them, she was quite accepting that meat IS what they eat so you've got to do it.