Thursday, June 28, 2012

A big party for Qannik at Glacier Run




Today, June 28 marks Qannik's first anniversary at her new home, Glacier Run at the Louisville Zoo. She is still a media darling. The Louisville Zoo has produced a wonderful DVD documenting her first year called “Qannik: A Polar Bear Cub's Journey.”

Qannik and her sister were born in January of 2011 (a guess, since she was born in the wild). In April, she was found wandering alone, separated from her mom and twin sister, near an oilfield. She was drastically underweight, just 15 pounds, about half what she should have weighed at that age.

The rescued cub was nursed back to health at the Alaska Zoo, where she won over many fans and friends, and poignant photographs of this sweet little bear girl recovering from her traumatic experiences circulated around the world, making headlines and bringing attention to the plight of the polar bear in today's changing environment. 

When it was time for Qannik to leave her friends at the Alaska Zoo, UPS generously provided the logistically complicated flight to bring Qannik and her staff to the Louisville Zoo. That big adventure was called “Operation Snowflake.” Grandma Arki, from the Brookfield Zoo, was the only other resident of the brand new Glacier Run habitat at that time.
Arki
In September, Siku of the Toledo Zoo arrived. Siku is the grandson of Arki (although of course they don't know this, because they are bears). He is a year older than Qannik and while they can see each other across the way sometimes, and of course they can smell each other, they aren't ready to play together. Qannik now weighs almost 300 pounds and Siku is almost 600 pounds. In addition, Qannik has spent most of her life as an only child, and probably doesn't know how to share her toys and her space.

When asked about when Qannik and Siku will be put together, zoo staffers say that the bears have to be mentally ready for that step. In addition, Qannik will have to put on some more weight so she is closer in size to her companion. Because Qannik is property of the Department of Fish and Wildlife, the zoo must also get official approval for such a step.
Training sessions with food in the overhead walkway

The staff at the zoo always take their cues from the bears when it comes to activities and schedules. The bears come first.


Zoo Director John T. Walczak chats with Qannik

What a big ball!

My Egg!




She loves her Crazy Egg



Qannik plays with a stick

Qannik still is a busy little girl, playing with her toys and swimming. She currently has an interest in putting things like sticks, or frisbees, or balls, or her new golden egg, into a crevice in the rocks underwater, and is always surprised when they float to the top. And then she just does it again. You can see she is trying to figure things out.

Qannik is trying to stick one of her toys into an underwater hole, a favorite activity.





Underwater ballet
Qannik, being the "girly" girl that she is, seems to be attracted to visitors wearing pink, orange or yellow. The bright colors catch her eye. She is taking more notice of her fans than she did a few months ago, and often swims over to say hello.
Greeting her fans...

Hello to a special visitor.

Hello, everybody!

It's time for my close-up

Kisses from Qannik
Siku is currently in the rotation schedule, but a last minute change meant that we didn't get to see him on the day of our visit. Since the zoo has two enclosures where we can watch the bears, and they have three polar bears and three Grizzly bears, the exhibit is always changing. However, Qannik is usually out and about.

Grandma Arki is swimming more, and “dancing” very little these days, thanks to the many enrichment activities offered by the zoo staff. Arki was supposed to be part of a zoo training talk on the day of my visit, but the old lady decided to take a nap. She had been swimming for quite a while  that morning, so she was tired out.

Qannik can look forward to an anniversary party with presents and treats on her special day. She is one lucky girl. Happy Anniversary, Qannik!



A pretty girl with a pretty smile



Saturday, June 23, 2012

Aurora and Anana get playful


Aurora and Anana love to wrestle, swim and play all day.
Those beautiful polar bear sisters of the Columbus Zoo never seem to get tired of playing.
Anana smiles for the camera
During my visit in May, Aurora and Anana charmed and thrilled their fans with energetic antics, and hammed it up for the Paparazzi at their home in the award winning Polar Frontier.


The sisters spend their day frolicking in the 167,000 gallon salt water pool, where the water is chilled to a comfortable 64 degrees (comfortable for polar bears, that is). Here you can meet the bears face to face in the covered surface viewing area, or go below to see them swim and play underwater. They just love to show off for the crowds, and interact with the children.


Tasty fingers?

Anana poses for the camera

Smile!

The Columbus Zoo has a wonderful underwater viewing area, and the girls like to show off. They know they have an audience of polar bear fans.

The underwater viewing area is spectacular!

Aurora

Aurora relaxes in the wildflowers


Anana likes her salad of seaweed


Having a nice healthy snack.

Anana enjoys the seaweed that grows in t saltwater pool.

Aurora prefers the land, and Anana prefers the water, but they both love playing games together 
The twin girls were born November 25, 2006, in the Toledo Zoo, the daughters of Marty and Crystal. They are sisters of polar bear cub Siku and granddaughters of Arki, both now happily living in the Louisville Zoo.


These ladies they will be 6 years old this fall. I wonder if they will find a boyfriend soon? 


But they are happy with each other's company. It's nice to have a playmate.

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Tundra - still young at age 25



Tundra, the 25 year old lady polar bear at the Indianapolis Zoo, may be alone, but she is not lonely. This gorgeous bear looks a lot younger than her years, and is popular with the photographers in the crowds who gather around her lovely home.

Tundra and her pretty smile

Her fur is thick and fluffy, and she certainly doesn't look like a senior citizen. She is also quite playful and active, much to the delight of all her visitors. She likes to sit on the rock ledge in the water, put her mouth just under the surface of the water, and blow bubbles.
Tundra likes to blow bubbles

Tundra was born at the San Diego Zoo on November 15, 1986, the daughter of longtime San Diego Zoo residents, the very popular couple Bonnie and Caspar. I can't find any record of Bonnie having more cubs after Tundra, even though Bonnie lived until 2001. Caspar died in 1996. In fact the San Diego Zoo hasn't had a cub born since the late 80s.

Tundra came to the Indianapolis Zoo on May 9, 1988, at the age of 17 months.
 Add caption
Tundra charms her young visitors with a shake


Tundra makes some faces

I don't know about Tundra's companions at the zoo during those early years, but there were two bears with her in recent years.

Young Triton, son of Norton and Trixie, was born at the Roger Williams Zoo in Providence RI, and came from the Detroit Zoo in 2004, but sadly died of a twisted colon on April 11, 2008 at the age of 11. Incidentally, Triton was the father of Talini, born in 2005 in the Detroit Zoo. Talini's mother is Barle, who was rescued from a Mexican circus.

Tahtsa, a petite little old lady polar bear, came to the Indianapolis Zoo in October of 2006. Tahtsa was born in the Denver Zoo November 20, 1974, but spent most of her life in the Louisville Zoo. When Tahtsa died on August 12, 2009, she was said to be the oldest polar bear in captivity or in the wild, just a few months short of her 35th birthday. The two lady bears were always kept separate, however, and were never out at the same time.
Tundra strolls by the waterfall in her home

The underwater viewing area is on the right.

Tundra has the whole place to herself these days

The habitat has a lovely waterfall, and a nice swimming area with an underwater viewing window so everyone can enjoy watching Tundra swim and dive and blow bubbles.
Tundra entertains

So Tundra is now the only polar bear in Indianapolis, but she seems happy enough, and she looks fabulous.


Friendly Tundra

Beautiful Tundra

Happy Tundra!

Saturday, May 12, 2012

Happy Mothers Day to Arki and Inga




Today, in honor of Mothers Day, we celebrate one of our notable mother polar bears, the lovely dancing Arki, the 27 year old grand dame. She is the mother or grandmother of seven bears in U.S. zoos. Arki now lives in Glacier Run in the Louisville Zoo, which is a leader in creating a great bear environment.

Mother Inga, center, with Otis and Rita behind
We also celebrate 7 year old Grizzly Bear mother Inga, mother of a couple of two-year-old rambunctious cubs, also residents of Glacier Run.

Arki lives in Glacier Run with two polar bear cubs and the family of grizzly bears, and the zoo rotates the bears through the two outdoor environments during the day.

Arki's grandson Siku plays with his mother Crystal,, in the days when he lived at the Toledo Zoo



One of the cubs living at the Louisville Zoo is Arki's grandson Siku, who was born at the Toledo Zoo two years ago and moved to Louisville last fall.

Arki had spent most of her life at the Brookfield Zoo in Chicago, where she and her mate Aussie produce some fine polar bear cubs, three of whom are still living, include Siku's father Marty, born in 1996, who now lives at the Toledo Zoo with lady bears Nan and Crystal.

Aurora and Anana at the Columbus Zoo can call Arki Grandma
Through Marty, Arki has four grandchildren: Siku at the Louisville Zoo, five year old twin girls Aurora and Anana (with Crystal) at the Columbus Zoo, and five year old son Nikita (with Nan), now at the Kansas City Zoo.
A poster at the zoo

Arki is also mother to Payton, born in 2003 and now living in the Memphis Zoo with his young lady friend Haley.

Grandma Arki is also mother of 5 year old cub Hudson, born in 2006 and still living at the Brookfield Zoo. In the year Arki gave birth to Hudson, there were only four cubs born in U.S. Zoos, and the other three were her grandchildren, Aurora, Anana and Nikita, fathered by Arki's son Marty.

Arki gave birth to a baby girl, Tiguak, born in 1999. Arki unexplainably rejected Tiguak, so the tiny cub was hand raised by zookeepers. She went to the zoo at St. Foy in Canada, where she was adored by all who knew her. Sadly, Tiguak died in April of 2011 following some routine dental surgery.

Arki was also mother of a boy, Kinapak, born in 2000, who tragically died in the Buffalo Zoo in 2007, possibly after ingesting some foreign objects that shouldn't have been in the enclosure.

Grizzly Mamma Inga

Making life in Glacier Run even more interesting is the Grizzly Bear family, consisting of mama Inga and her children Otis and Rita. Inga was a “nuisance bear” who was caught going through garbage and raiding chicken coops in Polson, Montana, and had exceed the “three strikes” rule. She and her cubs would have been put down if not for the Louisville Zoo volunteering to take them in. They arrived in August of 2010, when Otis and Rita were just about 6 months old. These bears still belong to the Department of Fish and Wildlife, but now have a permanent home at the zoo. Qannik, the other polar bear cub at the zoo, also belongs to the Department of Fish and Wildlife, but she will never be returned to the wild either.

Mother Inga


The Louisville Zoo believes in making life interesting for its bears. Polar Bears and Grizzly Bears in the wild live in an ever-changing world, and this zoo is shaking things up to make life fun and unpredictable in a number of ways.

Inga, top, and Rita and Otis (by yellow ball)
For one thing, the bears are rotated in and out of the two exhibit areas several times a day, spending some time in their bedrooms, and some time in the big pool area, and some time in the “loading dock” area. Glacier Run is designed to look like an abandoned mining town, with the interesting features often doing double duty as bear enrichment and exercise equipment.
The Grizzly children play-fight

Grandma Arki in retirement

Two years ago, it seemed that Arki had entered bear menopause, and the new Glacier Run exhibit was looking for a nice bear to live in the new state-of-the-art exhibit, so she came to Louisville, for a time as the only resident of Glacier Run.

Behind Arki is a ramp to help her get some exercise and strengthen her back legs. 
According to one of the keepers, the Louisville Zoo has been working with Arki in many ways. For one thing, her back legs weren't very strong. When she arrived, whenever she was asked to stand, her back legs were shaky. Now, she stand up regularly on strong and sturdy back legs. For the past two years, she has been running up and down ramps and stairways that are thoughtfully built into the environment.

Arki

Beloved by the zoo staff, Grandma Arki still does her charming little pacing dance at times. Every time a bear changes locations in Glacier Run, keepers arrange for little surprises, bits of food hidden in various spots and food puzzles to solve, which is designed to cut down on the repetitive behavior. Arki is a gentle old lady, kind of set in her ways, and will always do her walking dance. Zoo staffers do daily fecal (poop) collections for each bear, to test for stress hormones, and Arki's stress hormones are the lowest, so the staff feels that she is not pacing out of stress, but out of a comforting habit. When she dances, she closes her eyes in a peaceful way, as if to say that she is happy. 
She walks forward, then dancing backwards in rhythm, with her eyes closed, and a peaceful look on her face.

Although she will always engage in the stereotypical behavior of pacing, she is also spending more time in the pool swimming than she used to. The keepers are happy with her progress. They also learned about her favorite things from the Brookfield Zoo staff, and they make sure she gets an occasional treat of of her favorite lettuce peanut butter sandwiches.


Happy Mothers Day to Arki and Inga, and to all the other bear mothers out there.