Andrew Swales
Well-Known Member
You must excuse me too, (as I am no expert) for not knowing that a 'prayer meeting' and 'divine intervention' were different...Fair enough, hopefully I clarified my point.
You must excuse me too, (as I am no expert) for not knowing that a 'prayer meeting' and 'divine intervention' were different...Fair enough, hopefully I clarified my point.
You must excuse me too, (as I am no expert) for not knowing that a 'prayer meeting' and 'divine intervention' were different...
?
I wasn't suggesting divine intervention, more blind faith. Sometimes you need a blind faith in something if you're going to succeed where others haven't, not necessarily a religious faith but in this case it seems to have been.
Its perhaps woth noting that 'Elephant Eden' at NA has not turned out quite as they intended re stocking it. Initially they advertised its purpose was to house 'rescue elephants' from other zoos/circuses etc. That didn't happen. It was also billed at one stage as 'home for a breeding herd of Asiatic elephants'. That also didn't happen. What they have got is excellent and very spacious modern accomodation( I have only seen photos) that is currently underused as home to just three African bulls, though more may follow. So it has ended up as a home for bachelor African elephants. Not detracting from that as a valuable function, but it seems despite the state of the art building, sourcing the actual Elephants to fill it has involved some difficulty.
Yes, indeed - such an investment without a specific end in mind, based on a 'build it and they will come' hunch (or another choice of description) - is very different to the approach most zoos would take these days.Its perhaps woth noting that 'Elephant Eden' at NA has not turned out quite as they intended re stocking it. Initially they advertised its purpose was to house 'rescue elephants' from other zoos/circuses etc. That didn't happen. It was also billed at one stage as 'home for a breeding herd of Asiatic elephants'. That also didn't happen. What they have got is excellent and very spacious modern accomodation( I have only seen photos) that is currently underused as home to just three African bulls, though more may follow. So it has ended up as a home for bachelor African elephants. Not detracting from that as a valuable function, but it seems despite the state of the art building, sourcing the actual Elephants to fill it has involved some difficulty.
Yes, it was empty for a long time, maybe two years. It seems they had no idea of where they would source elephants but built it with the philosophy of 'build it and they will come'.
Pretty sure they’re out of tigersJust being curious are there any tigers there now?
I'm sure NAZF will have a breeding herd eventually but maybe we all just have to be patient.
Are the plans to keep tigers in the future or is the enclosure now occupied by the lions?
How?
To change from a bachelor facility (for any spp) to a breeding one, would require the building of another bachelor facility (either on-site or else-where) to take the bachelors, thus freeing up the original accommodation. The chances of this happening must be minimal - so once a bachelor facility, always a bachelor facility...
Sorry, I have no idea what you mean. Perhaps Embu can answer you again.@Andrew Swales I apologise if I come across as morbid, but once Yhetto and Dunja at Belfast Zoo pass away the enclosure at Belfast could become the new European bachelor heard for African Elephants.
The three zoos from where the current Elephants came from- one was Howletts, one was a zoo in Sweden somewhere and I can't remember where the adult bull came from. If you look on Noah's Ark's own pages they may give the information.@Pertinax when you say this “A few other zoos have been prepared to send three surplus bulls there but that is about it at present“ what Zoo’s are you referring too?
The three zoos from where the current Elephants came from- one was Howletts, one was a zoo in Sweden somewhere and I can't remember where the adult bull came from. If you look on Noah's Ark's own pages they may give the information.
You may be underestimating the usefulness of a bachelor herd to an elephant breeding programme. In the wild, young bulls learn a lot of their social skills from adult bulls, who exert discipline where necessary. I believe I’m right in saying that this makes them safer with conspecifics in later life, and better breeding bulls accordingly. There is at least one continental zoo hosting a bachelor group of Asian Elephants.@Pertinax when you say this “A few other zoos have been prepared to send three surplus bulls there but that is about it at present“ what Zoo’s are you referring too?