Highland Wildlife Park Highland wildlife park 2013

Good to see they have bred the White-lipped, as well as the Bukara Deer.

Does anyone know if they received fresh Bukara Deer females last year, as was mentioned they planned to, or is there still only one adult female?
 
That is one hugely impressive list of births, first breedings at the park for musk ox, white lipped deer, red panda and great grey owl.
For me the most important birth is the markhor, hopefully a few, if not all females amongst them.

Great news on the Musk Oxen birth.
 
From the CEO's Blog:

This week I want to go straight back to the Highland Wildlife Park as we know much more about our recent spate of births. We’ve been able to confirm that Elara the European grey wolf has three cubs, not two as we first suspected, and we actually have two northern lynx kittens, again one more than first thought. All great news! All are still are in their respective mothers’ dens and it will be a couple of weeks yet before they start to become visible.

Since last week the Park has also seen the arrival of a capercaillie chick and our pair of wolverines that recently moved up from Edinburgh Zoo to the Highlands has also been spotted mating. The pair now live together 24/7 in their new large enclosure at the Park and if there was ever a confirmation that the animals are settled into their new home, it is this.

RZSS Blog | All the current happenings at Edinburgh Zoo, Highland Wildlife Park and RZSS.
 
One Panda kit for HWP

Happy 2nd Birthday to Kitty, our female red panda. This birthday is extra special as she has just become a first time mum. Although she is well-hidden in her den, we are able to confirm that she gave birth to one kit on 6th June.

An excellent spate of births recently for the park!
 
Article about the Muskox-breeding :
June 24, 2013
Musk-Ox Calf is a First for Highland Wildlife Park

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Highland Wildlife Park’s female Musk-ox, Karin, has given birth to the Zoo's first ever Musk-Ox calf. Born on Wednesday May 15th, little Belle has spent her first few weeks of life off-show with mom, but has now started to venture out into her outdoor enclosure.

Belle’s mother Karin was born in the Czech Republic in 2002 and came to the Park only 18 months ago in January 2012. Three-year-old father Myse arrived a few months later in May.

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Photo credits: Alex Riddell

Belle is not only a little cutie, but this hooved newbie is also a significant step in the Musk-ox breeding program– she is the first Musk-Ox to be born in the UK in 17 years, an important achievement for the Zoo’s expert animal husbandry team.

Musk-ox have an extremely thick coat which consists of two parts, long course outer hairs, and a soft dense undercoat called qiviut (pronounced kiv-ee-ut). Qiviut wool is the highly prized for its softness, length and insulation; it is considered to be one of the lightest and warmest wools in the world.
Source : Zooborns
 
Amur tiger cubs unveiled at Highland Wildlife Park

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The Amur Tiger cubs have now been sexed as 2.0 and given the names Viktor and Murray (the latter after Andy Murray) :)
 
Very exciting news from the park, HWP has been awarded a £51'700 grant from the national lottery to :

A 350 metre long raised walking platform will be created from the Park's entrance through the front drive-through reserve. Currently only accessible by vehicle, this significant extensive high level walkway will give cyclists and walkers direct access to the Park without the need to arrive by car. The Park's 2,100 metre network of footpaths across the 200 acre site will also be enhanced and disabled access will be improved.

The visitor experience will be taken to the next level with new engaging interpretation developed throughout the Park and improved directional signage. Part of the new interpretation will include an audio digital learning guide for visitors to use during their drive-through experience. Gaelic language translation on on-site interpretation, online and on educational material will also increase links with the Park's Scottish heritage.

The development of a sustainable volunteer guide and education programme will also feature. By the end of 2013 the Park will have in place a robust recruitment and training programme for a team of volunteers who will work at key areas of the Park. Forming part of the RZSS's education mission, this will ensure visitors gain a better understanding of the Park's, and of the Cairngorm's, conservation issues. This programme will also provide opportunities to local people, potentially students and the long term unemployed, to gain new skills.

Educationally, learning packs will be created, both online and in hard copy, for use within the local schools and community groups, will deliver key conservation messages with the aim of inspiring the younger generation to be involved in Scottish and global conservation work.
Finally, the Scottish wildcat facility will be expanded.

So no excuses not to visit!
 
A 350 metre long raised walking platform will be created from the Park's entrance through the front drive-through reserve. Currently only accessible by vehicle, this significant extensive high level walkway will give cyclists and walkers direct access to the Park without the need to arrive by car. The Park's 2,100 metre network of footpaths across the 200 acre site will also be enhanced and disabled access will be improved.

Excellent news for people such as myself, who are reliant on public transport!
 
It really would be nice to set up a zoo walk and talk at HWP! The place seems magical and really inside the darn beautiful Cairngorms landscape.
Better access for those on public transport would be an added bonus. Perhaps they could even do a cycling rental out?

I really do applaud their involvement with the Scottish wild cat program. It really needs widespread public engagement to get the people on board to realise how dire the situation for the only wild cat of the Isles is and what needs to be done to secure its future. Captive-breeding of purebred wild cats may be the only solution to bringing it back from the brink.

P.S. on a side note: we have had wolf confirmed in Netherlands this year, all be it a dead one. I cannot wait to learn if it is from the wild population in Germany .. (or a hoax dead wolf laid out by sicko people).
 
It really would be nice to set up a zoo walk and talk at HWP!

We did, in September 2011 - and I was the lone member who attended :o
Doug Richardson was good enough to give me the full tour and I wrote it up in a thread here.

The new walkway sounds wonderful. Even visitors with cars may get better views of the kiang and takin.

Alan
 
Doug Richardson is a top bloke. Genuinely friendly and approachable to genuine enthusiasts, with none of the pomposity that is unfortunately a common trait in the higher echelons of UK zoo professionals.
 
I really do applaud their involvement with the Scottish wild cat program. It really needs widespread public engagement to get the people on board to realise how dire the situation for the only wild cat of the Isles is and what needs to be done to secure its future. Captive-breeding of purebred wild cats may be the only solution to bringing it back from the brink.

I think if Scottish Wildcat is to make a comeback, then the HWP could/should play a major role. They have the facilities and scope to keep and breed 'pure'(?) Wildcats on sufficient scale for releases to be made into the wild, even if many of them were kept in offshow pens.
 
Doug Richardson is a top bloke. Genuinely friendly and approachable to genuine enthusiasts, with none of the pomposity that is unfortunately a common trait in the higher echelons of UK zoo professionals.

I really would welcome a formal Zoo Walk and Talk if planned well in advance. I never understood why the last one only had Alan come in from the cold?!! A little tickler for all the rest of us ... it would make a great weekender to Edinburgh and beyond! :D
 
Lifted from the blog:

The Highland Wildlife Park just worked out a wonderful statistic that I want to share with you. With the very recent birth of a litter of wildcats, 74% of the species that could breed have produced offspring so far this year – very exciting! In addition, we have at least one Przewalski’s horse and the adult female goral due to give birth within the next few weeks.
The red panda kit at the Park has been sexed and is a boy who has been named Kush, which means Happiness in Hindu. Two water vole young have been spotted in the families that are scheduled to be reintroduced as part of the Trossach Water Vole project on Monday 5th August. The two polar bears are also being weighed today and we expect them to weigh one tonne combined.
 
Sorry if it has been already mentioned, but the last Pine marten has Moved to the Chestnut conservation centre. According to the sign the exhibit will be moved into by wildcats.
 
Sorry if it has been already mentioned, but the last Pine marten has Moved to the Chestnut conservation centre. According to the sign the exhibit will be moved into by wildcats.

This seems a strange move, unless there will be a new exhibit for the martens sometime in the future, they made a fantastic exhibit, always on the move.
Hopefully with an expanding of the breeding programme for the Scottish wildcats there may be a possibilty of nearing a reintroduction phase of the project.
 
One imagines this might be a stopgap move to get more space for their wildcat breeding programme until the specially designed enclosures mentioned lately are constructed.
 
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