Friday, August 15, 2025

Kalluk was king of the hill in San Diego



Chinook on the left, and Kalluk


The famous trio of the San Diego zoo has lost the magnificent Kalluk, who died at the age of 24, due to diseases of old age.

Stare down with Kalluk

 The world famous San Diego Zoo's polar bear habitat, Polar Bear Plunge, sits atop a hill far from the entrance, and for over two decades, Kalluk has been the king of that hill, with his companions sister Tatqiq and mate Chinook. The famous ornate California Tower of Balboa Park loomed in the distance as visitors could watch the polar bears frolic.


Kalluk under the California Tower in San Diego's El Prado.


Chinook (hidden),  Kalluk in the middle, and sister Tatqiq.

 Kalluk's story started in the winter of 2000-01, when he and his sister were born in the wilds of Alaska. Their mother, even though she was wearing a satellite collar, was shot and killed by a hunter near Point Barrow, Alaska. The cubs were rescued within hours, and brought to the San Diego Zoo at the end of March 2001. When Kalluk and Tatqiq arrived in San Diego, there were five other bears there, including Chinook, who was born in the wilds of Manitoba during the winter of 1995. As a young cub, Chinook had become separated from her mother, was rescued and brought to the San Diego Zoo. Neil and Buzz were there too, but in just a couple of months, moved to their permanent home in Como Zoo, St. Paul Minnesota.


The three bears love to have play fights in the water.
When the cubs arrived at the San Diego Zoo, the little male was 12 pounds and the little girl was 10. To tell them apart, the keepers shaved a spot on Kalluk's head. They called them Bubba and Sissy at the start.

Kalluk attacks during one of their fun battles.
In 1996, when Polar Bear Plunge at the San Diego Zoo first opened, there were more polar bears in American zoos than there were accommodations, so the enclosure was built without plans for these bears having cubs. The San Diego Zoo remodeled Polar Bear Plunge in 2010 to provide mother-cub accommodations, but there were no cubs born.

Epic battle
Officials made the decision to keep brother and sister Kalluk and Tatqiq together, since they had developed a very strong bond. For a time, Tatqiq has had birth control implanted during her annual physical exam, although zoo staff said Kalluk only had eyes for Chinook during breeding season.

Kalluk and his sister Tatqiq

Kalluk was about 1100 pounds at his peak. The keepers always gave the bears lots of vegetables, especially carrots, to keep their weight down in this warmer climate of San Diego, although it doesn't get terribly hot there, with the ocean breezes.

Three way battle. Everyone wins.

Kalluk liked to lie half in the dirt, so the other half was clean. He favored taking his naps in the center rock shelter by the double doors in the back, at the plunge point on the beach, and sometimes in the sand box in the middle.

Kalluk wakes Chinook from her nap, on the big rock

The zoo tour bus stops at the polar bears
 so everyone can get a good look.

The three bears got along very well, and I witnessed some incredible play battles in the big pool. They have always had a lot of fun together. Often Kalluk would be swimming, and the girls would be off together.


Taking turns attacking.
Tatqiq and Kalluk were incredibly bonded, and she will miss her lifelong playmate. Chinook will miss him too. Farewell, handsome Kalluk. You were loved by so many.

San Diego's golden couple, Chinook and Kalluk


Kalluk and Chinook

Monday, August 11, 2025

Antonia was unique in all the polar bear world

 

The famous Antonia


Today we heard the sad news that little old Antonia, the rare dwarf polar bear of Gelsenkirchen ZOOM, had reached her end. She had enjoyed some active days recently, but then her elderly body suddenly showed signs of failing due to old age, just as I saw last week with my 19 years old cat Pumpkin. When the body has run its course, there is nothing to be done to fix it.

Antonia was known for her big personality.

She was born November 24, 1989, in Karlsruhe Zoo, to Nadine and Willie, the same year that her half brother Anton was born there.  Antonia and Anton, along with two other cubs, were moved before their first birthday to nearby Stuttgart, in the Wilhelma. Antonia's stunted growth was obvious by her first birthday, and even so she was more aggressive and playful than the other cubs.  She was removed from the group for her own safety, and by the time she was three years old, sent to Gelsenkirchen, where she occupied a barren platform surrounded by a moat, near the entrance, for a time. Eventually, Gelsenkirchen ZOOM built the new Alaska habitat, and designed an enclosure just for Antonia.


Antonia by her personal little pond.


Despite her size, she was feisty, and keepers knew that for her safety she could not be kept with other adult polar bears. She loved to play with her keepers, though, and they would throw balls and rings back and forth. 


Antonia in her usual spot, at the edge of her pond
Antonia's dwarfism is a mystery. Her parents and siblings were all normal size. Her sister Katyusha, who lived in Berlin, reached her 37th birthday, so good genes may explain Antonia's long life, but certainly being small meant less stress and strain on bones and circulation for the little bear, less arthritis, less heart disease.


Antonia liked to admire her own beautiful reflection



Visitors often thought she was a cub, exclaiming, "kleines Eisbärbaby!" A sign was erected to explain Antonia's condition and size differences, although it is a little misleading because female polar bears usually weigh 500 to 700 pounds.. 

I have translated the sign for pounds and inches.

Length - normal bear a little over 7 feet  - Antonia 4.43 feet

Shoulder - normal bear 60 inches - Antonia 27 inches

Weight - normal bear 900 pounds - Antonia 287 pounds 




                                   Little Antonia on the big cliff 

                             

Antonia sometimes was able to experience one of the larger enclosures. When old Fanny (Hamburg's Victoria's mother) became infirm due to old age, she was given Antonia's smaller enclosure, and Antonia was given the big meadow, where she enjoyed digging at old logs.


Digging at an old log, looking for bugs, in the big enclosure.
When she was in her regular enclosure, Antonia liked to sit at the edge of the pond and gaze at her visitors.


Antonia and her reflection


Of course Antonia never did have cubs, living away from other polar bears, but her half brother Anton was father of the late Wilbär, who in turn was father of  Hope's sons in Peak Wildlife Park, and of Otis in Eindhoven. 


Wldflowers in her custom enclosure at Gelsenkirchen ZOOM.


With the recent departure of Lara for Bremerhaven Zoo Am Meer, the only polar bear in Gelsenkirchen (which has three enclosures) is Bill.


Antonia on the prowl

Antonia was the most famous resident of Gelsenkirchen, and she will be greatly missed.


Farewell, little Antonia. We were so happy to have met you.