Showing posts with label Kolmarden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kolmarden. Show all posts

Friday, June 20, 2025

Agee, a very special bear, passes away


Agee - Photo from the Assiniboine Zoo.

Agee was a remarkable bear, part of a human family, a star in films and TV commercials. She passed away this week from the ravages of old age, at 30. She lived most of her life with people, but spent the past several years behind the scenes, without other bears and being pampered by keepers, in the Assiniboine Zoo in Winnipeg.

She was born January 3, 1995 in Kolmarden, Sweden, the 11th  and final cub born to Mirsha. She was raised by keepers, so from the beginning, she was used to humans. That may be why the zoo allowed her to be sold to Beyond Bears in British Columbia in Canada when she was four months old. 

Kolmarden Zoo stopped keeping polar bears about 20 years ago.

She lived with her trainer Mark Dumas and his human family for most of her life, until they were unable to care for her, when she was transferred in 2022 to Assiniboine Zoo, where she lived a quiet life away from the public eye. 

She first appeared in the 1996 movie "Alaska," in which she played a cub.  Agee would travel to movie sets in a 12-metre-long trailer and was provided with a pool to wade in on hot days.  Agee's film credits include Alaska (1996), The Journey Home (2014) and Operation Arctic (2014).  Agee was also the subject a 2017 episode of the documentary series  "Wild Animal in My Family," Season 2 episode 1. She was featured in episodes of the TV series  "Psych," and "Arctic Air." I also remember her appearing in a car commercial.

Just about everyone has seen the famous video of Agee swimming in a pool with her trainer Mark Dumas. 


Marissa, born in 1993, was full sister of Agee. Marissa moved to Fasano Italy and became mother of Giovanna of Munich, Noel of Copenhagen, Dea (now in Japan) and Grace of Fasano. 


Agee's niece Giovanna nursing Nela and Nobby.
Giovanna is also mother of Quintana.



Noel of Copenhagen, niece of Agee

Read on to find out who else is related to Agee.

In those earlier days, when Agee was born, zoos didn't seem to worry much about genetics or inbreeding, like they do today. Agee's mother Mirsha and her father Imarac were half sister and brother, sharing the same father, Olaf Wildfang, who was also the father of famous Churchill (father of Rostock's V cubs and also father of rescued circus bear Boris), Kara (mother of Boris), Lisa (mother of Lars, grandmother of Knut) and Norpol (father of Japan's Cookie). 

As far as half-siblings for Agee, in Kolmarden Zoo in Sweden, Agee and Marissa's father Imarac was also father of cubs with American born CW, who came from the Memphis Zoo. Their offspring were Nuuk-Nordman and Ilka of the Skandinavisk Dyrepark; Manasse of Finland, Yukime of Japan, all passed away. Agee's only surviving half-sibling, daughter of Imarac, is Baffin of Hamamatsu Japan, whose daughter is Momo.  

Huggies of Ouwehands spent almost two years in Kolmarden, where she gave birth to daughter Freedom, who was fathered by Agee's half brother Nuuk-Nordman. Freedom and Huggies returned to Ouwenhands in the Netherlands and Freedom became mother to Sprinter, twins Sesi and Siku (Taiko), twins Akiak and Sura, and twins Yuka and Yura, all but the last two fathered by Churchill's son Victor. 

Agee's half sister Ilka, now gone, was mother of Danish Siku, and twins Nuno and Nanu, all born in Skandinavisk Dyrepark in Denmark.

Agee's half brother Manasse moved to Finland and with Victor's daughter Venus fathered Ranzo and Sisu.

This is the statement from the zoo about Agee, and their fondness for this special bear.

We are saddened to share that our senior polar bear Agee passed away late last week.
Agee arrived in our care in 2022 as a geriatric bear in need of rescue. She lived a quiet, private life behind the scenes and has not been visible to Zoo guests, but immediately stole the hearts of her care team who have bonded deeply with her over their time together.
Since her arrival, the Zoo’s animal health team has been managing multiple age-related health conditions in Agee. These were primarily related to kidney failure, her dental health, and her mobility. Over the past month, Agee seemed to be doing quite well, and she had even gained weight. Last week she had a sudden onset, severe deterioration in her health. We believe she had a rapid, significant decline in her kidney function, potentially associated with an infection. Sadly, despite the medical intervention of our team, Agee passed away. Agee was 30 years old.
Further investigation into her sudden decline in health is ongoing and involves postmortem examinations of various tissues, screening for different types of infections, and evaluating organ functions at specialty veterinary pathology laboratories. These tests may provide further insight on Agee’s condition at the time of her passing.
Agee could be very set in her ways, our team was on Agee’s schedule and living in Agee’s world! She preferred a calm environment, familiar people, and she found comfort in predictable routines.
She loved to swim and spent much of her time cruising around in her personal pool. She would often take enrichment items and food to her bed (aka her nest) and could be spotted cuddling with her toys. Some of her favourite things included carboard boxes, rain barrels, and nesting materials like straw and hay.
Agee spent most of her life with private owners in British Columbia who were no longer able to care for her. Her short time here at Assiniboine Park Zoo was deeply meaningful to her caregivers. Please join us in offering our sincere condolences to those members of our team who loved Agee and cared for her every day.


Wednesday, March 20, 2019

Farewell to Nuuk - Nordman


Nuuk
 We have lost dear Nuuk, who was originally named Nordman when he was born in Sweden.

Skandinavisk Dyrepark in Kolind Denmark posted yesterday that Nuuk had died sometime this winter, possibly related to a flu-like illness. He was 25, a senior bear.


Nuuk
 He will be greatly missed by his dear friend and constant companion Nanok. Except during breeding season, when Nanok was with Nuuk's twin sister Ilka, the two male bears were almost always together.

The park had some wistful parting words on the loss of Nuuk, saying that "Nuuk always had his own opinion about the course of things. The rest of the polar bear residents had great respect for Nuuk, and it was not something he needed to enforce. They moved completely by themselves when he came walking. Nuuk will definitely be missed."


Nuuk
 Long before Nuuk was born, Kolmarden Zoo in Sweden had opened in 1965.  The polar bear habitat opened in 1968, at the time one of the largest in the world with six polar bears. 

Twins Nordman and Ilka were born December 2, 1993 in Kolmarden. Their father was Imarec, and their mother was C.W., an American-born bear.

Nuuk's brother, the late Manasse, who lived in Ranua Finland, was father of Ranzo and Sisu. Nuuk was also brother to the late Yukihime of Yokohama; and Baffin who lives with daughter Momo in Hamamatsu Zoo. Through his father Imarec, Nuuk was half brother to Marissa in Italy, and the famous actress polar bear Agee in Canada.

And of course through his sister Ilka, Nuuk was uncle to Siku, Nuno and Nanu.

Nanok left, Nuuk right
 Nuuk's mother C.W. and her twin brother Elvis were born in the Memphis Zoo  in Tennessee, USA, and were brought to Europe when they were just a year old. Since Elvis had a musical name, my guess is that the initials C.W. might mean Country Western. The late Elvis became the father of the Osnabruck hybrid bears Tips and Taps. Taps still survives and lives in that same German zoo.

In 1998, 5 year old wildborn cub Huggies came from Ouwehands Zoo, Rhenen, the Netherlands, to Kolmarden. Huggies became acquainted with handsome young Nordman, as he was called at the time. The result was a beautiful cub, Freedom, born December 1, 2001,  When baby Freedom was just three months old, Huggies and the cub returned to the brand new polar bear exhibit at Ouwehands.

Nuuk's daughter Freedom and her cubs in Ouwehands

In January of 2006, 12  year old twins Nordman and Ilka moved from Kolmarden, and at the same time, four year old Nanok, born in Belgium, came from Ouwehands to Skandinavisk Dyrepark. The three were the new park's first polar bear residents, finding themselves in a spacious and natural polar bear paradise.

The bridge over the lake at Skandinavisk Dyrepark

Skandinavisk Dyrepark is unlike any other zoo. The visitors can watch the bears romp and play in huge meadows and a magnificent meandering wooden footbridge provides a close but safe vantage point to view the big furry residents as they swim in the lake.

Nanok in water, Nuuk on land

In Denmark, Nordman was renamed Nuuk. It seems that someone decided Nuuk's breeding days were over so he was neutered, maybe so the boy bears would get along better. 

Young Nanok had been brought to the park from Ouwehands as a mate for Ilka, and as a friend for Nuuk. The boys really hit it off and the relationship continued right up until Nuuk's death.

Ilka in water, Nuuk on land
 Nanok and Ilka have had three cubs, Siku, and twins Nuno (girl) and Nanu (boy). Nanu has moved to the Netherlands, but Siku and Nuno are still in the park, along with Mother Ilka, and a Russian bear named Boris, sometimes called Ivan. With the loss of Nuuk, there are five polar bears in the park.

Through his daughter Freedom, Nuuk left quite a legacy as  grandfather to Sprinter (now in Hanover), Sesi (in Mulhouse France), Taiko (in France), Akiak (in Rostock) and Sura (still in Ouwehands), and great grandfather to Miss Nanuk in Mulhouse.


Nanok

Since Nuuk's mother C.W. was born in Memphis, Nuuk was related to some of our American bears. C.W.'s half sister, born in Memphis, was Chinook, later of Salt Lake City's Hogle Zoo.  Chinook was mother of the late Aurora of Rochester, Anana currently of Cincinnati, and Kiska and Koluk of Albuquerque. Nuuk's aunt Chinook is also grandmother to Luna (Buffalo), Anoki (Rochester), Lee (Columbus), Anana (North Carolina) and Hayley (Memphis).

Nuuk's aunt Chinook was also mother of Denali, born in the Hogle Zoo in Salt Lake City, who now lives in Japan. Denali is quite the favorite at the Sapporo Zoo and the father of eight cubs.  

It's sad to say goodbye to such a lovely bear. He had a good long life in a beautiful place, and had the companionship of his best friend all those years. He will be missed by so many, especially his pal Nanok. 
Farewell, Nuuk.