Showing posts with label Lars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lars. Show all posts

Monday, December 27, 2021

Farewell to Katjuscha

 

Katjuscha

Katjuscha

It is the end of an era. The Berlin Zoo polar bear habitat's probably final resident, 37 year old Katjuscha, has passed away. She had been suffering from a heart ailment for some time, and had been treated for it, but now, the oldest polar bear in the world had come to the end of her days. She was found by her keepers, in her den, on Christmas Eve morning, it was announced today. She had peacefully died in her sleep.


Kati, during her afternoon walk. 

She had turned 37 years old November 16, and she was given a small party with a treat.

She was known for her beauty and grace. Visitors would often see her just sitting in the doorway, watching the world go by.


Katjuscha, watching the world go by

Last year, there were two other lady polar bears in the world who had reached the age of 36: Snow Lily in Milwaukee, and Winnie in Japan, both just several weeks younger than Katjuscha. Now all three are all gone.

Kati at teatime, in 2014.

Katjuscha was born in 1984 in Zoo Karlsruhe, the daughter of Nadine and Willie. Nadine and Willie were also the parents, five years later, of Antonia, the famous dwarf polar bear. Also in 1989, Willie became the father of Nancy, one of Katjuscha's lifelong companions in the Berlin Zoo, and also Anton, father of Wilbär.

Tosca in front, Katjuscha in the middle,
 and Nancy, top, sleeping, in 2014.
 

Katjuscha came to Berlin when she was almost a year old, and remained there all her life. At one time, she was part of Lars' harem, the three ladies of the Berlin Zoo: Nancy, Tosca and Kati. The four bears made for quite a sight for Berlin Zoo visitors.

Katjuscha in 2014, the fluffy one.

Tosca and Lars' son, the famous Knut, was part of the group for a short time too, after Lars left, until  young Knut died from a brain disease which tragically caused him to fall into the water and drown.


Katjuscha watching Nancy and Tosca from her doorway.

After that sad event, it was just the three ladies of  the Berlin Zoo. Tosca and Nancy seemed to be best friends, and Katjuscha was on her own. We lost Tosca and Nancy a few years ago, but Kati continued on, well past the expected age of a polar bear.

Katjuscha in her kingdom in 2019

Now she is gone too, and the polar bear area is empty, save for the nearby memorial sculpture of Knut. 

It is truly the end of an era.


Rest in Peace, sweet lady.



Tuesday, September 14, 2021

Wuppertal's polar bear home was revolutionary in its day

 

 9 month old cub Anori, with Mom Vilma above,
in 2012.

 
Vilma swims in the pool, as little Anori plays
 on the steps of the Art Nouveau architecture
 
 of her home. 

I cannot think of a polar bear habitat still in use that is older or more stylish than the beautiful Art Nouveau / Art Deco creation of Zoo Wuppertal. It was designed to be a work of architectural art, and built in the early days of the 20th Century, just as the Victorian Age was ending. This multi-faceted exhibit, which has had improvements added over the years, incorporates many features that modern enclosures boast, such as smell ports with sea lions on the other side, underwater viewing window, various levels of diving platforms, and a large swimming area.


                                                    Luka and Anori, 2016

The climbing steps, designed to suggest random ice floes piled one on top of the other, keep a polar bear's back leg muscles strong. Newer polar bear habitats emphasize varied levels, just as this century old design exhibits.

This was one of the first zoo enclosures based upon Carl Hagenbeck's idea of open exhibits for zoo animals, without bars, to give the animals a more natural home. Hagenbeck came up with the idea of using giant wire forms covered with concrete to construct somewhat natural looking exhibits, some with mixed species separated by moats within the exhibit.


                                 Hagenbeck's Polar Panorama.

 The Wuppertal design is even more advanced than Hagenbeck's.  The polar bears are separated from the visitors without the moats that Hagenbeck used as barriers. The designer used granite blocks for the back walls of the habitat.


                                          Overlooking the pool

The Wuppertal enclosure must have been quite the sight in those early days, back when even the Schwebebahn was new. Visitors would have seen an imposing architectural wonder, gleaming white and resembling an alabaster  temple. Nowadays, the paint is peeling, but it still is impressive and the bears seem to love it. Lush vines drape over the stones, adding to the beauty. The vines turn scarlet every autumn. 

I imagine that when the Wuppertal polar bear home was first opened, it had railings instead of the current glass barriers overlooking the pool on both sides.


                                 Vilma and Lars in Wuppertal in 2011

Over a century ago when virtually every other zoo kept their polar bears in cages, or possibly in the newer but still primitive bear pits, Wuppertal built a first class home for polar bears that even now is impressive. It may not meet the very high standards of modern polar bear keeping because of its more limited space and lack of grass, but it certainly is grand. With the addition a few years ago of the mother-cub enclosure out the back with its coziness and soft surfaces, the polar bears get plenty of exercise running back and forth, in addition all the swimming.

The mother-cub room has a lower area which can serve as a shallow pool for a young cub, or be drained for more play area or a mulch pit.


                                                             Anori at 9 months


           9 month old Anori and the underwater viewing window, 2012.


Zoo Wuppertal was founded in 1879, with exhibits in buildings on beautifully landscaped grounds designed by garden expert Heinrich Siesmaye. It continues to be known for its lush vegetation, rolling hills and great variety of trees. The Green Zoo.


                                 Anori (top) and Luka in 2016

The polar bear and seal/sea lion installation, the "Northland Panorama," was the first outdoor exhibits to be built at Zoo Wuppertal, right after the turn of the century, maybe 1910 or before. I haven't been able to find the exact date, but it was very early in the last century. The first polar bear cubs were born in 1931.

One of Wuppertal's more famous residents was Boris, a polar bear with a distinctive craggy face unlike any other. I did not meet Boris, as he died in 2009, but I did visit his daughter Szenja of SeaWorld San Diego. Three cubs he fathered in Wuppertal were Troll (who went to Tierpark Berlin, and died in 2015), 28 year old Candy of Japan, and Szenja, who died in 2017.

                              Szenja in SeaWorld San Diego

 

Another famous resident of Wuppertal was Lars, father of the famous Knut. He came to Wuppertal in 2009, where he and Jerka, female polar bear, got along well. And then tragedy struck. In 2010, Jerka became deathly ill with a mystery illness, and then Lars as well. Jerka did not recover, and Lars was very sick for weeks, but slowly regained his health. It was later determined to be a form of herpes from Zebras, maybe carried by mice from the far away zebras to the polar bear enclosure.

When Lars was recovered, another female arrived from Rostock. It was Vilma, and in January of 2012, she gave birth to Anori. Lars went to Rostock then, because Vilma and Anori would need the room at Wuppertal. By that time, the new mother cub room had been constructed. Anori is the only cub to have used it.

Anori's birth created quite the stir. Long lines formed to get a glimpse of this little girl when she was old enough to be presented to an adoring public. The press was there too, and photographers just couldn't get enough photos.

In 2013, Vilma moved to Rostock where Lars was waiting for her. They later had another cub, Fiete, who now lives in Hungary. Lars fathered a set of twins, Qilak and Nuka, in Aalborg Denmark. Vilma and Lars are gone now.

Anori's cousin from the Netherlands, Luka, arrived to be playmate for the nearly three year old cub. 

 
                               Water games with Luka and Anori.


Anori and Luka spent seven years together in Wuppertal, and always seemed to be having a grand time. They had inventive toys and enrichment, and loved to run from the pool area through the house and out to the mother cub area, then back again. There were pool games and contests, a tug of war, playing tag around the raft, always something to do. Birthdays were celebrated with huge colorful cakes and even more new toys, with cheering and singing by crowds of fans on those wintry party days.



                                                   Anori and Luka (in back)

But recently zoo officials decided that the time had come to close down the old polar bear habitat, when suitable homes could be found for Luka and Anori. It didn't meet the standards set by the newer enclosures, and it requires a lot of water, which is expensive in the Wuppertal area. 

A year ago, Luka moved to Yorkshire Wildlife Park in the UK, where he has lots of grass to roll in, and three other young males as companions.

Now, Anori is getting ready for her big journey to France. The historic polar bear structure will not go to waste for the sea lions are preparing to move in. They have probably had their eye on the neighboring property for some time!


          There are many levels for play. Here are little Anori and Vilma


The California Sea Lions are just below the polar bears, and will  expand their area, when Anori leaves.

 


The mother-cub area was a new addition. 



School children get a good luck at the cub, Anori, in the mother cub area


                    Anori standing while Luka watches in the mother cub room



             Walking up from the zoo entrance, there are the polar bears.

After more than a century, this Wuppertal landmark will be closing down as a polar bear home when Anori leaves in the coming weeks.

A traveling box has been placed in her area, so Anori can get used to it. Her new home will be in Mulhouse, France, where she will live with her cousin Sesi and cub Kara. There are two beautiful spacious grassy enclosures there, one with a smaller splashing  pool, and the other has a larger pool with a huge viewing window. As in Wuppertal, the keepers there give the polar bears lots of toys and enrichment, so Anori will be happy.



Luka underwater in 2015

Even with the polar bears gone, the Green Zoo Wuppertal will continue to be a fine place to visit. Their elephant family seems to always have one or two new babies. The interior penguin exhibit up behind the polar bear habitat is new and exciting with a 15 meter long viewing tunnel to see the King and Gentoo penguins, while the African penguins live just across the road from the Sea Lions, and they are a lot of fun to watch. The lion habitat is the largest in Germany and well worth the climb up the mountain to get there.



                   Baby Gus the elephant and his family in Wuppertal in 2019


                                        African Penguins in Wuppertal


Sunday, November 18, 2018

My Quest to meet Boris- Part 2


Boris

I had come over halfway across the country, to the Point Defiance Zoo in Tacoma Washington, with a very special goal, to see Boris, who at nearly 33 years of age, is the oldest male polar bear in the U.S.


Boris, the oldest male polar bear in the U.S. zoos

On my first day visiting the zoo, I got to talk with Sheridan, the polar bear keeper at Point Defiance, took a look at where Boris lives, and found out who his neighbors are. I spent some time with the arctic foxes, the Musk Oxen, companion polar bear Blizzard, who is 10 years younger than Boris, the puffins and the walruses. But the old guy I had come so far to see had spent his day inside, playing with his toys in the indoor pool and sleeping. Boris, in his elderly state, is not allowed out on Thursdays, it seems, since that is the day they drain, clean and refill the pool.

Churchill of Rostock, father of Boris

Boris is the firstborn son of the late Churchill in Rostock, Germany. Boris came into the world on December 15, 1985 under the stork's nest of the old Castle at the Rostock Zoo. Boris' mother was Kara, Churchill's half sister. Kara was also sister of Lisa, mother of Lars and Knut's grandmother. The father of all three, Churchill, Kara and Lisa, was Olaf Wildfang. Zoos were not very strict about the studbook in those days, as evidenced by the family tree of Lars as well.

The late Tosca, one of the other German circus bears,
 became mother of Knut
In those days, in Europe and in the U.S., polar bear births in zoos were more common, and with more cubs, there wasn't always a zoo that could take the cubs when it was time to leave their mothers. Those were different times. Sadly, 18 month old Boris was sold into the East German circus system, and spent many years traveling and performing with Wilhelm, Tosca, Kenneth and other polar bears under the training of a tiny German woman known as the Polar Bear Princess, Ursula Böttcher. Ursula loved her bears and treated them humanely, but the traveling circus life was never easy for the bears.

After German Reunification, without the state subsidies for the East German circuses, everything changed. By the late 1990s, the performers had retired or gone elsewhere, and the circus assets were sold off. Tosca went to the Berlin Zoo, where she lived with Boris' cousin Lars and became mother of the famous Knut. A male polar bear named Tromsö, now 29, still lives in the Amnéville Zoo in France. But at the time, in the late 1990s, with a bigger zoo polar bear population than now, zoos wanted bears that could breed and provide cute little cubs. The male circus bears had been castrated so they would not fight with the other bears, so zoos were not anxious to take them.

Sadly, the bears who were not taken in by European zoos were sold to the Suarez Brothers Circus in Mexico, where the conditions were hot and terrible. The bears were poorly fed on dog food, white bread and lettuce, and they had cramped quarters and no pools, no way to cool off. Wilhelm took a swipe at a trainer, and in response, he was declawed.


Polar bear keeper Sheridan with some lettuce for Boris at Point Defiance Zoo.

A Canadian couple visiting Mexico saw the circus, and filmed the pathetic bears performing. They brought attention to the plight of the polar bears in the Mexican circus and the suffering animals were were rescued in late 2002 in the U.S. territory of Puerto Rico by U.S. Officials. One of the six bears died during transport. The other bears were in pretty bad shape, including Kenny and Boris, who were flown to the Point Defiance Zoo in Tacoma, Washington. There the two bears were given extensive dental treatment and medical care, good nutrition, and lots of love.

Boris watches Sheridan go, hoping for more lettuce

It is now 2018, and all the others have died, Kenny in 2012, but Boris carries on. I decided I needed to visit him before it was too late.

Boris steps down from the rock perch, to head for the water bowl

So on my second day in the Seattle area, I arose in the dark, again rode buses for hours, and climbed through the fog up the hill once again to the zoo entrance. First stop was to try to see Boris. Sheridan, the polar bear keeper I had talked to the day before, had informed Boris that he would have a special visitor and he was to be on his best behavior. As I came into the viewing building, I could see that Boris was there, atop the left rock platform, munching away on lettuce being thrown to him by Sheridan from the other side of the fence. At this time of year, he gets six pounds of food a day, to maintain his weight at 911 pounds. His favorite food is lettuce, maybe because of his familiar diet during his Mexican circus days. Less weight means less strain on his old arthritic bones. By the way, Boris does NOT like melon.


Boris had some abscesses on his foot,  which you can see here.
 He walks very slowly and carefully these days.

Boris is craggy and majestic in his old age, just like his father Churchill was, but Boris is a gentle giant, whereas Churchill was banished from the company of other polar bears for his aggression. 

Boris resembles his father Churchill, but with more gentleness

Boris' circus days are long behind him, but he did put on a “show” just for me. It was more like a royal audience.


Boris slowly makes his way

He climbed down from his rock, slowly and gingerly lumbered toward me so I could get a good look. Boris is not fond of the uneven river-stone rocks in the enclosure, but that was the material used at the time of construction in 1982. I wished he could have some grass to roll upon.


Boris walks carefully on the riverstone floor
Boris has recently had root canals for his poor old teeth. Last spring he underwent experimental and revolutionary stem cell treatment for his arthritis. This had never been done before with polar bears, and seemed to give him some relief. The experiment was repeated this summer, but the results the second time were disappointing, but he is getting medication for his arthritis. He is also receiving eye drops several times a day.

Boris weighs in at 911 pounds these days.

On this morning, Boris had several abscesses on his right front paw that had ruptured earlier, so there were streaks of blood on his paw. The vet would be keeping an eye on that.


Boris still likes his toys. I can imagine him balancing balls in his circus days.


Boris paused to play for a few moments with the blue ball.


Click on the link for the Video:


The keepers change out his toys regularly, to keep him interesting in playing.

The old circus bear slowly made his way over to the big yellow bowl of fresh water, and had a few sips.


Fresh water in the bowl. The swimming pool is filled with saltwater.

Boris takes a sip. Note the blood on his paw from the broken abscess.

Chewing lettuce makes Boris foam at the mouth a bit.
And then Blizzard joined the party. The younger bear quickly took control of the blue ball, grabbing it in his moth and running off with it, climbing up to the right side rock resting place. Boris seemed not to mind.

Click on the link for the video of Boris walking, ever so slowly. 

Video: Boris walking and Blizzard with the ball

Blizzard at the right takes control of the ball.
   Boris lingered by the yellow bowl, then strolled carefully over to the left side rock platform, climbing up ever so slowly. You can tell that he's an old bear, just by the way he walks.


Boris has had enough. He makes his way toward the exit.

Boris heads for the hills


He pauses a moment on the rock platform. 

This is  what you see  from one of the two viewing rooms. You can step down into a second viewing chamber which gives visitors an underwater look at the bears playing in the pool, although that did not happen during my visit.
 Boris is on the left, and Blizzard is on the right.
After a few minutes rest atop the flat rock, he decided that the public audience was over, made his way down, and took his exit. I was lucky enough to enjoy about an hour with His Majesty.

Boris makes his exit towards the indoor pool
 and a nice soft pile of hay for his nap.
Younger bear Blizzard continued to hold court atop the right hand rock, but there was to be no swimming that day. In the autumn, bears slow down. They eat less, move less, play less.

Blizzard toys with the blue ball.
Sheridan, the keeper, told me that Boris was free to come and go, but he would probably not come out again for the rest of the day. I did check every few hours, but it was just Blizzard, and he was mostly napping.

Boris on his throne
Although it was only for an hour, I was happy to have seen Boris, at last. Thanks, Boris, for coming out just for me. To me, you are European Royalty.