Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Drink up and pay up!

Me and the girls set up a raffle at the Safari's Wine Stroll after-hours event to raise money for our AAZK chapter tonight. 
The wine stroll event is after the park has closed. Tables are set up through out the village area. Some tables are appetizers and others are wine tasting. Each of the local vineyards of the Umpqua Valley have a table for tasting and purchasing. Guests come in and get to stroll through the village, drink wine, eat good food, and enjoy the village critters and musical guests.  
We ended up with a wine bottle filled with grapes. People had to pay for a ticket ($2 donation towards animal conservation) and then guess how many grapes were in the bottle. The guess closest to the correct number won a lovely wine rack put together by Lacey and a family day pass to the safari... a gift value of $100, not a bad deal if I do say so myself.
It went swimmingly! Our table was very popular and we took home a nice sum. Guess who ended up winning the prize... our vet. So sad.
All in all a success, I think we'll definitely to something like this again.

I can't control my heart rate ... there's a cougar on me!

So, I helped cheetahs close on saturday night and we were prepping for a cheetah/tiger feed around 4:30 and we have a visitor flag us down and say that they saw a cougar in one of our cheetah pens above the Asia section of the park. Well, of course, we doubt it so we get as much info as we can. The lady swears it was a cat with no spots and that she has seen many cougars in her day and that it was definitely not a cheetah that they has seen. So they show us where they'd seen it and.... of course that is where our ambassador cat, Taini, had been housed all day to give her a break from her village pen. So we thank the guest and go to the fence to call Taini over and make sure she's ok. We call.... and call..... and call..... and no Taini. Hmmm. Not good. 
We go around to the DT side and go into the pen to find her. 
We call her until we finally see her up in the top right corner of the pen up on a hill. She doesn't respond but she does finally start coming down to us. Normally this cat loves attention. She'll normally come right up and start purring. So she slowly comes down the hill sits in front of her water bucket and drinks for like five minutes, not purring, acting VERY nervous, and when we touch her she acts irritated and huffs at us.
We're wondering at this point what the heck happened and obviously getting nervous ourselves .... is there a cougar in this pen with us right now? 
As we're trying to calm Taini and comfort her I'm attempting to groom her and pluck at a small tuft of matted fur on her lower back. She huffs at me while she's drinking her water so I back off. Dana looks a bit closer and spots an inch long gash on her right "knee". Fantastic.
We have vet staff come up to check her out and are even more aware of our surroundings especially since Taini is so jumpy and keeps glancing nervously up to the corner she had been hiding in. Vets decide it's worth stitching so we move her back down to the village and dart her. Once we get her on the table in the clinic we see a puncture wound canine width from the tear we had spotted initially. 
Curius...... veerrrrry curious.
So we clean her, stitch her, and put her back home to recover then hike back up to the corridor pen with noisemakers, pepper spray, and a rifle and do a sweep of the pen to make sure no cougar was still in there. The last thing we need is a less feisty cheetah encountering this cougar and getting more seriously injured. By the time we were done checking the pen I was covered from head to toe in poison oak. Yep, since I'm one of the only ones who has no reaction to it (so far) I got to crawl through thickets of poison oak... go me!
Just another day in the wilds of Roseburg.

Monday, July 21, 2008

Good taste, kid.

The little's tastes are maturing.
She likes fruit and Anthony Bordain.
That's my girl!
She is so obsessed with everything I do.... she's in the sponge stage .... I think I could get her to play and/or try to eat anything right now.
I was eating a nectarine last night and she was in my face trying to gnaw on it and tonight she frantically tried to claw an orange out of my hands. Then I turn around and see her sitting on the couch hind feet sprawled, belly exposed, just staring, entranced at the TV... and what was on the TV? Anthony Bordain in Peru...... eating. 
I'm telling you this cat loves food.
I learned something new today. A staple of Andean cuisine is ...... (drumroll) ...... guinea pig!!! I hear they're tasty... finally, I have found a use for guinea pigs, food!
I'm sure Mia would like them too.

Friday, July 18, 2008

Another one bites the dust!


White-handed gibbon now extinct in China:

“This loss is particularly tragic”, says anthropologist Thomas Geissmann, “because the extinct Chinese population was described as a distinct subspecies, the so-called Yunnan white-handed gibbon.” This subspecies (Hylobates lar yunnanensis) is not known from any other place. Geissmann now hopes that the subspecies may have survived in neighbouring Myanmar, but so far, he has no evidence for this.

Big Step Today!

Little came out of her safety zone and said hi to a stranger... even played a little bit!
Big Step!!!
Soooo good!

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Back in Spots

I worked cheetahs today. The early shift.... 6am. 
It was a nice change of pace... and kicked my chubby butt's ass! I was hiking up and down cheetah pens for about 5 of the 8 hours today. Literally.
We start the day by checking all the pens to clean up remains of last nights meal, find each of the cats, and get poo samples from the girls for a project we're cooperating with, give any morning meds required, etc.
We walk ALOT. There are 25 cheetah in 19 different pens and the pens are quite large, lots of hiking up and down hills involved. We moved cats around in breeding too. We needed to get bpA empty so we could build a new squeeze chute in it so we moved 4 to 6 cats, it's a blur now, we shuffled a bunch around. We gave Sexy Lexy (Lexus) access to two girls' pens to see how he reacted... a great way to see if a female is ready to breed.
We cleaned the tiger pond before we let them out, we try to keep it clean since Leah has a healing spot where they operated on her recently. We drained the cheetah pond too, it was pretty mucky.
Then we let the June bugs out into the drive-thru.... yay!!! My favorite kids! They're the youngest litter from last year's cubs. We start at 6 so we can give the cats a chance to explore the whole drive-thru before guests start arriving at the area. All the carnivore DT's are slowly becoming drive-by's for safety reasons so we no longer let cats roam around in the DT while guests are in there.
So, we'd let the cats out into the DT, were in the middle of moving cats around in breeding and we get a call on the radio from our cheetah watch docent (volunteer) saying that a truck just drove into the area and left the gate open..... !!!! wtf!? We had the docent drive down and close the gate and made sure the guy did not get out of his truck. And we leave the breeding cats where they are and book over there Turns out it was the fencing contractor who was working in the lion area and decided to come over and get started on cheetah fencing without announcing himself. Dur!
Catastrophe narrowly averted. Thank GOD Yanna was paying attention!!
After the tiger pond was clean, we let the tiggers out to play. Le-Le was her usual feisty self. I love that cat.
We also had to move Taini from lover's lane down to the cheetah spot in the village before the village opened to guests at 9am. We loaded her into her kennel, loaded the kennel into the truck, and drove her down to the village, let her loose in her display pen, and away we went.
We had a keeper talk with Taini later that day. She's such a love!
We also fed and played with our cheetah-dog, Smellie Ellie. We let her and her cheetah, Sanurra, have a play session. Fed all the breeding area cats, picked up some more poo that we couldn't find earlier, picked up some fencing materials and did some 4-wheeling into bpA to drop off the supplies and by then had pretty much run out of time for the day.
It was a good day. We got a crap-ton done.
It was nice to be in cheetahs again.

Saturday, July 12, 2008

King of Beasts dethroned?

The park is putting together a "guide book" for visitors with stats on each species and pics of our critters, way cool idea.
So I am working on putting together blurbs for our lions and bears.
Looked up estimated number of African Lions left in the wild..... yeah. Only 23,000.  !!!
Just two decades ago it was 200,000.
So sad.

How much is a little cuteness?

1 lb. 3 oz. of cuteness:
2 lbs. 7 oz. of cuteness:


Friday, July 11, 2008

It's been one month now....



Mio Piccolo!

The little is now 2 lbs 7 oz.! 
She was 1 lb. 3 oz. when I got her. She is getting so big! (for a little) ;-)
Little went to the vet for her 2nd set of vaccs.
Soooo stressful for a little. She got all her shots and did really well until the de-wormer. The vets used pill form so they have to shove it down her throat. Yeah, she did not like that at all. Took them like 4-5 tries. Glad it wasn't me. I like to let the vets be the bad guys. ;-)
She was very brave though considering there was a black-buck before us in line.

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Humans are Despicable: reason # 5,780,600,450.

This article makes me so angry and frustrated for so many reasons:

Malawi's killer lion shot dead
By Raphael Tenthani 
BBC, Lilongwe

Four game hunters have killed a marauding lion some two
 months after it broke free from a game park, killing up to
seven people.


The carcass of the bullet-riddled lion is currently on
display at the nature sanctuary here in the capital,
Lilongwe, and has been the centre of attraction the
whole weekend.

 killer lion 

Harrison Phula, one of the four hunters that successfully stalked the

 ageing and hungry lion, told journalists on Monday it was not an easy

 task to overpower the lion.

He said it took a total of four bullets to kill the animal but even after 

stopping the first two bullets in its belly, the beast still charged at the 

hunters, injuring two of them.

"With intestines coming out of its belly the lion lunged at two 

of us injuring one in the leg and crashing an arm of the other," 

he said.

The two injured hunters are currently in hospital in the northern

 central district of Kasungu, where the lion was shot.

Loose pride

Scratches still showing on his arms, face and legs, Mr Phula 

said when the two remaining hunters saw their friends were in 

danger, they pumped two more bullets into the lion and physically 

struggled with it until it died.

"We fought with it until it died," he said.


"Maybe we succeeded because of the intestines that were
 coming
 out. The good thing is that we fought with it and that our
 friends
did not die."

The hunter said the fully grown lion, which is guessed

 to be between eight and 10 years old, was so heavy that

 eight people could not manage to lift it into a truck.

However, if the beleaguered people of Kasungu, Nkhota

 Kota and Mzimba thought life was now back to normal with

 the death of the notorious beast, they may have another

 thing coming.

Assistant Director of Parks and Wildlife Hackswell Jamusana said a

 pride of three more lions has also broken free from Kasungu 

National Park and are lurking somewhere in the bushes around the 

three districts.

Mr Jamusana, however, said the people living around the 

national park have unwittingly brought the lion menace onto 

their own doorsteps.

"People vandalised the entire 110 kilometres of electric fence 

along the eastern boundary of the park which used to prevent 

animals from getting out of the park to human settlement," he 

said.

Over the years, heavy poaching has led to a decline in the 

numbers of small game such as deer and impalas, which the 

lions normally eat, he said.

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Holy Hot

It is 9:20 pm and it is 88 deg. outside and 91 deg. inside my apt. How does that happen?
It was 99 deg. at 4pm this afternoon so I don't know if it got any hotter than that but this is ridiculous.

ri. dic. u. lous.

I want 75 back.

Monday, July 7, 2008

Baby Bear Update

Baby bear on his first day with us, notice how comfortably he sits inside his kennel:



Baby bear 2 days ago, notice how he is about the same size as the kennel now and barely fits inside of it:

From just under 10lbs to 36lbs... he is growing SO fast.

Construction begins!

The fencing contractors arrived today and began work on the lion fences. Finally! The poles were up and maybe half of them were already concreted in when we left for the day. Yay!

I think we're gonna need bigger mothballs....

This giant moth was on the door to our office at work yesterday. Freaking cool!

Saturday, July 5, 2008

Day in the Life cont.

Where was I......

After lunch breaks we had to go switch the brown bears. You see, the juvenile bears don't get along with the adult bears so the young bears go out first thing in the morning then we bring them inside in the afternoon and let the adult bears outside for the rest of the day.
 hggkkl';;;tyyyyyyygyuuuuuuuuuuuuuaqqq;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;',,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,m,; 
(the above was my kitten running back and forth across my keyboard... out of control cuteness!!)
While I had spent the morning doing the lion stuff Becky, my co-worker extraordinaire, was doing the morning bear routine. So me and intern #4 a.k.a. Ramsie gathered up the enrichment and the boys' diets, went to bear huts, brought the boys into one room, put their food and toys into another, then let them in to wreak havoc on all our perfectly set up enrichment. They tear through that stuff like a hurricane! Then, once the bear jeep ranger spreads out the big bears' enrichment in the DT then we let the adults outside to play. Then we get to the fun business of cleaning. The bears poo .... a lot. So first we scoop up the poo, rake up the debris from their dinner and enrichment, then we hose out all the rooms, scrub them with a special cleaner and brush, rinse, then use a broom to sweep put as much water as we can (squeegees don't work on this floor cuz its rocky cement that has lots of pits and rough spots). 

Just as we were about to finish up and take off a Code 2 was called on the radio. A code 2 is a non-dangerous animal outside of it's enclosure. In this instance it was Hidari (our giraffe escapee-specialist who should have been named Houdini) in the Americas. He is very good at crossing cattleguards and travels the world. He used to just visit America but then figured out the Asia one so now he's been to three different continents. 
M+_BNNNNNNNNNNN (another kitten leap, she's frisky)
So we responded to that to help get him back into Africa then finished at bears and headed back to QB to get the last diets for the day.

We grabbed baby bear's pm diet, made up the lion diets, grabbed the adult bear diets, prep'd Mugi's diet and chunks for tomorrow am, headed out to black bears, and went in to feed baby. That goes pretty quick as we do not go in with him anymore we just slide his food in the door and head out again. We did see Donna-bear and Little Boy showing some breeding behavior (ooh la la!)
Now we're off to our office to start all the daily reports. We have 3 paper logs and one electronic report. One is to track baby bear's input and output, one is to track the location & diets of all the other critters, and the third is to track all of the enrichment given. The electronic report is everything that has happened over the day: health issues, diet changes, location changes, our chores, any misc events like codes or donations etc.

We had a lion/bear feed encounter this evening as well which usually starts around 4:45 since we can't feed the lions until we bring them inside and we can't bring them inside until the last car has driven through the lion area. The DT closes at 5 so the last car can enter up until then.
I'm exhausted so this is going to be short and sweet. We feed the lions and close them up for the night, drive through the park closing gates, feed the bears and close them up for the night, finish closing up the park, follow the last car out of the park, close up the cheetah DT, lock up the park, email our daily report to the curator, registrar, vet staff, and carnivore staff, then go home. Voila! That was my day and now I am going to bed. Kitty loves the sound of the tapping keys cuz she keeps attacking me while I'm typing.

A day in the life of moi.

Day in the Life

My morning started with produce. I had to go pick up produce donated from a local farm for our bears. We have not been getting very much from Fred Meyer lately so we have had to start looking elsewhere for fresh produce. Bears got to eat ya know!

Once i get to work (8:30am) we decide who is going to start the bear shift and who is going to start the lion shift. I did lions today. So I headed to QB (our food prep building in the middle of the park) to find a nice treat for Etosha (our youngest lioness). Since today is Saturday that means we have a Feast of Kings event at 11:30am. A Feast of Kings consists of a ribcage on the sundeck and guests sitting on the bleachers watching the lions eat it. We use Keeno and Natasha on saturdays which means I have to leave them in the huts until we are ready to bring them out onto the sundeck for the event. So that means Ariyeh and Mugadi would have to be out in the drive-thru for people to see, thus Etosha would have to be in one of the breeder pens. Since Mugadi's incident the other day we decided that we would not give her and Ariyeh any food enrichment anymore. Why? Because Ariyeh always starts fights over food and we want Mugi to have the least amount of stress as possible. So Mugadi and Ariyeh got elephant poo and perfume for enrichment.... now, what to give Etosha? How about a nice juicy horse leg? yummy!

I get to the lion huts and get Mugi's meds ready just in time to let Ariyeh out into the DT (drive-thru). I have to let Ariyeh out first in order to go into his room to feed Mugi her meds. She gets three antibiotics pills (SMZ) twice daily so we have to give her the am dose before we let her out. We just put each pill into a chunk of meat and she gobbles them right up. Such a good girl! Then I let her out into the DT with Ariyeh. The jeep and tower rangers will keep an eye on them all day.

Next I have to walk the fence-lines of both "breeder" pens before i can let Etosha out. So I walk the perimeter of each pen, clean up any old enrichment lying around and then hide her horse leg up in one of the trees on a lower branch. Etosha is watching me the whole time and is so excited that she is literally bouncing off the walls. She can see right where I put it too (all those cats are such cheaters). As soon as the areas are clear I go inside the huts to let her out and she is soooo excited! As soon as I open her guillotine she is off like a shot leaps through the air into the tree and knocks the leg out of the tree then leaps on top of it, picks it up in her mouth and runs off. I can hear her chomping away on it for the rest of the morning.

Since Keeno & Natasha are still in the huts I have to clean around them so that means I have a lot of shifting to do. Cleaning the lion huts consists of hosing each room, changing the waters, and then using the squeegee to get as much water off the floors as possible. Sounds easy but there are 7 rooms and two hallways and the floors are slanted weird ways and there are no drains so it can be tricky. Meat leaves greasy spots that can be a bitch to get off and lion fur snags on everything! It takes a bit longer with two cats still inside but I get them all cleaned except for Natasha's room. She won't move over to the next room. So I give up for now and head back to QB to get the rib cage for the event. 

I bring the ribcage back with me, even the small ones are heavy suckers and I have to load and unload it by myself, it's a messy job.  I cleaned the sundeck first since all the junk from two of the dens drains out there then I chained the ribcage to the fence closest to the bleachers. We chain it there because if we didn't the lions would drag it inside the huts which kind of defeats the purpose of having guests come to watch if they can't see the cats. 

Next I go back inside the huts and by then Natasha is ready to move over so I then clean her room and voila, lions is ready for our event. Once the guests are ready, we give the lion spiel, Keeno comes out and does his thing and then we go have lunch.

After lunch we have to give breaks to our lion tower and lion jeep rangers. Sitting out in the lion jeep in the hot sun for an hour while the lions just sleep the whole time can be very hard... very hard to stay awake, that is. But today was quite the adventure. We had our new male ostrich that kept crossing the road in front of our gates so I had to keep driving back and forth to open the gates. Anytime an animal gets too close to the lion area we have to close our gates to prevent that animal from coming in and/or to prevent our cats from running out to get said animal. So this bloody bird kept us hoppin. Also... I don't know why but there are SOOOO many people that think it's a good idea to roll their windows down in front of the lions. Even though they are told at the entrance booth and there are signs that say to keep your windows closed at all times while in the lion and bear areas.  So every time someone rolls down their window I have to get on the loud speaker and ask them to "Please keep all windows closed while in the lion area, thank you." Grrrr! I said it, I kid you not, like every 5 cars. And we had over 50 cars come through in an hour. Utterly ridiculous.

to be continued after I shower and go pick up more produce for the bears from Freddy's (hopefully) ..........

Thursday, July 3, 2008

Business as usual

Today was my day off but the cheetah girls had a special event in Bend with Taini, our ambassador cheetah. Since they were going to be away all day and I am the only Carnivore staff fully trained to work cheetahs alone, I was going to go in tonight and put the tigers up (i.e. feed them and close them up in their dens). 

Well I got a call around noon from Lacey saying that we had to do an emergency knockdown on one of the easter bunnies (cubs born on easter last year), Tumai, and so she was going to stay behind but needed my help for the procedure. I said no problem and so went in at 1pm. 
The poor lamb (actually a cheetah) couldn't even walk on his left foot at all. We don't know what he did to it, he and his cublings were in a pen that has a big ravine down the middle so he probably did something while running through the pen chasing each other for food.

So we had to move 8 cats around in order to get the bunnies into the pen that has the squeeze chute (a narrow hallway that gets smaller and smaller until it ends at a guillotine where we have their crate set up to load them up into it). We then had to wait for the vets to arrive. We waited, and waited, and waited. To kill the time we cleaned tiger huts, got the crate ready, got some meat chunks ready and then waited some more. It was weird cleaning tiger huts again, it took me a little while to remember where everything was but then it was like butta. I miss this department.

We finally had vet staff so we separated Tumai from his brother and sisters by guiding them into the squeeze chute and leaving Tumai in the bigger pen so the vets could dart him. These kids are pretty good at moving where we want them to.... you just have to know when to push and how hard to push. We never actually touch them, just our presence is enough to make them want to move away from us and if we open a gate or a door then they know that is where we want them to go and so they usually just go towards the open gate. Once you understand how cheetah think then you get it down in no time. 

Once Tumai was isolated we escorted vet staff in to get a closer look at his foot, they agreed we would definitely need to get xrays so we had to knock him down. Out came the dart gun, once he nodded off we loaded him onto the stretcher and into the back of the truck then we were off to the clinic.  We took blood, groomed him, checked his ears & teeth, checked his microchip, took xrays of his front legs... nothing was broken, no fractures or anything abnormal so we gave him meds and put him in the crate, gave him the reversal and watched him recover. I cannot believe how much quicker the cheetah are to wake up than the tigers or the lions. It took Mugadi about 5 hours to even attempt to sit up and Tumai was standing in about 2 minutes! Amazing how different drugs work. So we figured it was just a bad sprain and he should be back to normal in no time. So now he's a happy kid, back with his cubbers, and chirping away (cheetah made bird noises).

All in a days work. I love my job.

Then we went out for margaritas ;-) So nice!

R.I.P. BW

We have a crusty old barn cat that lived at our diet prep building in the middle of the park. He came to us as a kitten 13 years ago who had been hit by a car. He stole the hearts of the Safari employees and stayed to be the luckiest most loved cat in the world. He got fed treats daily, his favorite being avocado. And in return for catching mice he got chunks of fresh horse meat. He was a lover and a fighter. He would greet us every morning with his creaky old meow and get rubs and every once in a while submit to a hug and a cuddle in the arms of a few select keepers. We pulled fox-tails from his fur and shaved his clumpy mats in the summertime. He was the most loved cat and one of the luckiest alive, getting loves and treats from the whole staff.
 
One of my co-workers found him this morning listless with a large nasty cut on one of his legs. I don't know what happened or how long he was like that but it kills me that he made it back home hoping that someone would find him and take care of him. We are going to have a special burial for him at the park.

Dubbers..... I am going to miss you so!

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Heart of a Lioness

Our oldest lioness, Mugadi:
We had to do a knock-down on her yesterday, poor lamb, she hasn't been eating. As of yesterday morning it had been three days since she had eaten and we were justifiably worried. She's 19 and the average lifespan for captive lions is 20 so she's getting up there.

So we anesthetized her. She was darted at 9:40am, we drove her to the clinic and began our inspection. We took blood samples, thorough xrays, and a full body exam. Her lower canines are stumps, she lost them a while ago but they appear to have become infected. They had puss and smelled pretty bad. Her kidney levels were pretty normal, she had no cancer or anything weird on her xrays, but her blood sample did show a slight infection most likely from her teeth.

She was pretty dehydrated too so we pumped her full of fluids, tried to remove as much of the worst rotted tooth as we could and then gave her pain meds and anitbiotics.

She was back in the huts around 12:15pm. Around 5:15pm she finally showed signs of trying to sit up and by midnight when I went in to check on her she was fully sternal and was looking around and there was no vomit or anything weird.

I had today off but I checked up on her and when they came in this morning she was standing up and though still wobbly on the back end, walking around a bit. I guess she also FINALLY ate this evening, took her meds really well, and drank like half a trough of water.... soooo good!

That's my girl! She's a fighter.

Holy cow of all cows!!!!

I have my DEGREE!!!!!!!!
Got it in the mail today. It is a GD MIRACLE!!!!
Praise Oprah!