Saturday, November 6, 2010

Tilburg Nature Park, now Burgers Zoo. Continued from Thur. Nov. 4th thread.

Burgers Zoo in Arnhem is the biggest zoo in the Netherlands. Arnhem is a city that lies within the Veluwe, a nature park in the east of the Netherlands. The zoo is popular with both Dutch and German people.

It has 8 theme sites:

1. Dierenpark (the original zoo),
2. Safari (Afrikan-safaripark),
3. Bush (indoor, tropical rainforest),
4. Mangrove (indoor, mangrove swamp),
5. Desert (indoor, the Sonoran Desert),
6. Ocean (seawater aquariums),
7. Rimba (Southeast Asian rainforest),
8. Avonturenand (zoo's playground),

Apart from presenting many of its animals in simulated habitat in spacious indoors ecosystems, Burgers Zoo also has facilities for conservation and captive breeding of animals nearly extinct.
The Socorro Dove (Zenaida graysoni) for example does not exist outside captivity at present; it was wiped out by introduced mammals on its home island.
The species is being bred in Burgers Zoo for eventual reintroduction into the wild.

Tilburg Nature Park, now Burgers Zoo. Continued from Thur. Nov. 4th thread.



Tilburg Nature Park, now Burgers Zoo. Continued from Thur. Nov. 4th thread.



Tilburg Nature Park, now Burgers Zoo. Continued from Thur. Nov. 4th thread.



Tilburg Nature Park, now Burgers Zoo. Continued from Thur. Nov. 4th thread.



Tilburg Nature Park, now Burgers Zoo. Continued from Thur. Nov. 4th thread.



Basel Zoo

Above is the proposed construction site of Basel Zoo's new ape facility. Below is their current gorilla house.


Zoo Basel is Switzerland's oldest and largest zoo (by number of animals). It is a major tourist attraction with nearly 1.7 million visitors per year making it the most visited paid tourist attraction in Switzerland.

Zoo Basel was ranked as one of the fifteen best zoos in the world by Forbes Travel in 2008 and in 2009 as seventh best in Europe by Anthony Sheridan from the Zoological Society of London.

The zoo had the first worldwide Indian Rhino birth and Greater Flamingos hatch in a zoo. It also has had repeated breeding successes with Cheetahs (18 births), Okapi (22), Pygmy Hippos (53), flamingos (over 400 hatches), and many others. Furthermore, every Somali Wild Ass in a zoo is related to the population in Basel, where this species zoological breeding program was started

Basel Zoo's New 20 Million Euro Ape Facility






The monkey house and the surrounding area are undergoing an extensive construction. This includes the tearing down of the small monkey house (home of the Ring Tailed Lemurs), the Macaques rock, the children's play ground, the old bear exhibits, and several paths.

In summer 2011 the enlarged monkey house will open. While visitors will have the same amount of space available, the apes' space will more than double from 340 square metres (3,700 sq ft) to 700 square metres (7,500 sq ft). The old outer walls will be torn down and the living quarters will be extended in depth and height. There will be additional compartments with no public access, a service tunnel, worker quarters, and restrooms added. All pictures were made public by Zoo Basel and Basler Zeitung.

In summer 2012 five large outdoor "cages", the remodeled monkey house roof, a new ape playground, and several new paths will open. The outdoor cages will have a double net layer. They will be 16 metres (52 ft) high for the Orangutans and 11 metres (36 ft) for the other apes. The children's playground is planned to go along with the jungle theme - similar to the one in the Etosha exhibit. The paths on the monkey roof, around the new cages, by the main entrance, and the former bear exhibits will be adjusted and/or newly constructed.

Goma--The first Gorilla born in a European Zoo.

Above is Goma on Sept. 23, 1959 the day she was born and below is Goma in 2009 when she was 50 years old. Jambo, who gained fame in 1986, when he pulled a boy out of the gorilla moat at the Jersey Zoo, was also born at the Basel Zoo.

Prof. Dr. Ernst Lang and Goma






A few years ago, my brother Mike told me how lucky I was to have met Richard Nixon. I reminded him that he, if not luckier, was at least as lucky because he got to dine with Ernst Lang and I didn't. Prof. Dr. Lang was a great friend to the circus, in addition to being a great man to the zoo field.

Maddi Robinson


This is Maddi Robinson, on her first birthday 6/11/10. This cutie is the daughter of Darling Down Zoo's Steve and Steph Robinson. She is the next generation of circus animal trainers to take the good fight to the animal right's nit wit's. If she had waited for 3 months to make her appearance, she would have been born in the "animal magic" month of Sept. along with, GGW, Charly Baumann, Henry Schroder, and Goma from the Basel Zoo.

Chester Zoo--Rothschild's Giraffe






Most babies measuring 5 ft would be considered big, but newborn giraffe, Margaret, at Chester Zoo, UK, is seen as unusually small for her species. She is one of the smallest giraffes ever born at Chester Zoo but pint-sized Margaret will soon be an animal to look up to.

Little Margaret, who is the first female Rothschild giraffe born at the zoo, is being hand-reared by her dedicated keepers. The first calf for six-year-old mum Fay, Margaret, who was born two weeks early, tipped the scales at just 34 kilos (75 lbs) and is a mere 5 ft tall.

Tim Rowland
's, team leader of the Giraffes section, said: 'Margaret is one of the smallest giraffe calves we have ever seen. Fay isn't the largest of giraffes and Margaret was also early which might go some way to explaining her size. 'Margaret was having difficulty suckling so our keeping team are now hand-rearing her’.

Courtesy of John Goodall


John Shirreffs

http://video.aol.com/aolvideo/fanhouse/zenyatta-feature/652400546001

A horse named Giacomo won the 2005 Kentucky Derby as a 50-1 shot, the second-longest odds to win horse racing's most famous race. The man who trained Giacomo, and who has overseen Zenyatta for her entire career, is John Shirreffs, a low-key, bespectacled man who could pass for an insurance executive. He did not grow up around thoroughbreds, and got into the sport after volunteering to serve in Vietnam as a marine. "I kind of fell into it," says Shirreffs, 65, who apprenticed for years at the Kentucky horse farm owned by media baron Marshall Naify. He became a full-fledged trainer about 15 years ago.

Shirreffs doesn't have the pizazz of Baffert, the silver-haired Arizonan who's famous for his quips, or the gravitas of D. Wayne Lukas, who's the winners of 13 Triple Crown races and is usually easy to spot in his trademark white cowboy hat. But he has also never been penalized for using illegal drugs on his horses -- and with Zenyatta in particular, he's shown remarkable patience in a sport that is obsessed with youth and precocious prospects. Shirreffs did not believe Zenyatta was ready to race until late in her third year, after the lucrative Triple Crown events had been run.

"John is always cautious, he wants a horse to be in absolutely great shape, because you want the race to be a pleasant experience for the animal," says owner Jerry Moss. "It's just like with humans -- you want to feel good when you come to work."

Zenyatta Rock n Roll to Date With History at Breeders' Cup

It reads like a cliched Tinseltown script. There's a music mogul, a model, a Vietnam vet, a salty sidekick, and a God-fearing, battle-scarred best friend who's looking for one last hurrah. They all orbit around one majestic female, a superior athlete whose dramatic flair and camera-friendly personality has energized a downtrodden sport. And in the final act, our heroine faces off against the world's best competitors -- all men -- in a showdown with history.

Of course, it's all true. And fittingly, Zenyatta -- the star of this tale, and horse racing's best story in decades -- lives at a place called Hollywood Park.

In a Deadspin era of loutish athletes, lewd text messages and litigious team owners, Zenyatta's climb to the top of thoroughbred racing feels out of place, like a relic from a more innocent sports world. There's no drug scandal or cheating accusation lurking on the periphery. There are no agents, marketing representatives or corporate sponsors involved. And even rivals admit that they'll be supporting her Saturday in what will likely be her final race, the $5 million Breeders' Cup Classic at Churchill Downs in Louisville, Ky. Zenyatta has been tabbed as the 8-5, morning-line favorite from post eight in the 12-horse field.

"We all want to win, but we don't mind getting beat by her," Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert told reporters last week.

Horse racing will likely never enjoy the popularity it once had in American life, but even for those who could care less about the so-called "Sport of Kings," Zenyatta is worth knowing. She is, quite possibly, the greatest female racehorse of all-time, an undefeated champion who has won all 19 races she's entered, including 13 "Grade 1" events, the highest rung of racing. Her winning streak is the longest in horse racing history, a feat no other thoroughbred -- including legends such as Secretariat and Man O'War and more recent champions such as Smarty Jones or Sunday Silence -- can match.

She has beaten girls and she has beaten boys. Last year, she became the first female to win the Breeders' Cup Classic, which unlike the Triple Crown races is open to horses older than three years old and is generally considered the world's premier competition. Zenyatta has also never had to pull out of a race, a remarkable achievement in a sport where horses enter fewer races than ever -- and where the slightest injury can lead to death on the track.

On the track, Zenyatta is the rare horse with a distinctive style. She always comes from behind. Like Michael Jordan's outstretched tongue or Fernando Valenzuela's skyward glance, Zenyatta's late-charging runs have become her athletic signature, a defining trait that has become part of her mythology. In nearly every race of her career, she appears sluggish -- almost indifferent -- until the absolute end, when she darts to the outside and goes for broke. It's a habit that's exasperating and exhilarating, even for those who know her best.

It has all come together -- the team, the winning, the style -- to create a phenomenon that has propelled Zenyatta beyond the insular thoroughbred world and into the upper reaches of mainstream media. She's been spotlighted by "60 Minutes" and Oprah Winfrey, whose magazine recently featured Zenyatta in its rundown of the most powerful women in the world. (Also making the list: Julia Roberts, Vera Wang and Diane Sawyer.) Zenyatta is likely the first 1,200-pound animal with a Twitter feed, a Facebook profile (31,000 and growing) and a commemorative stein.

JerryMoss and his wife, who own Zenyatta had a special feeling about her. They first met her just prior to the September 2005 Keeneland yearling sale, one of the industry's biggest auctions. "We just fell in love with this long silky horse. We were just looking at her and she put her head on my wife's shoulder -- that's very unusual," said Moss.

The average sale price that year for a one-year-old horse was $471,872. Jerry and Ann Moss bought horse No. 703 -- later known as Zenyatta -- for $60,000. "When the price stopped, we were thrilled," says Moss, who gave the horse another Sting-inspired moniker, naming her after "Zenyatta Mondata," The Police's 1980 album. To date, Zenyatta has earned just over $6.4 million, ranking her 15th all time. (Curlin, the 2007 Preakness winner, is the all-time earnings leader with about $10.5 million in winnings.)

At the time of her sale, Zenyatta's value was somewhat diminished because she experienced a case of ringworm around the time of the auction, and it also wasn't clear whether her father Street Cry, who had won the Dubai World Cup in 2004, would be a reliable sire. The market forces were clearly wrong. Zenyatta's rash healed fairly quickly, and Street Cry has proven to be a rock star in the breeding shed. In the same crop that produced Zenyatta, he also sired Street Sense, the 2007 Kentucky Derby champion and runner-up in that year's Preakness Stakes.

As great as she is, Zenyatta is not a savior for the sport, no matter how well she performs on Saturday. By just about every measure, thoroughbred racing is dying. With the exception of one or two venues, racetrack attendance is plummeting, and overall wagering on horses -- the lifeblood of the business -- has dropped dramatically over the last four years. So far in 2010, total U.S. pari-mutuel "handle," the industry term for wagers, is down 7.2 percent, following last year's decline of nearly 10 percent. Since 2003, total wagering has dipped nearly 25 percent, and tracks are sharply reducing their number of races.

The breeding and sales market has also been hammered by the broader economic recession. As recently as two years ago, top sires such as AP Indy or Storm Cat could fetch as much as $300,000 per mating, In 2008, the owners of Big Brown, that year's Kentucky and Preakness champion, sold an ownership stake in the horse to Three Chimneys Farm, a top breeding facility, in a deal that reportedly valued the thoroughbred at nearly $50 million. Times have changed: The top sires are now lucky to fetch $100,000 per mating, and the auction market has dropped off a cliff: Overall sales at the 2010 September yearling auction at Keeneland were about $200 million, down nearly 50 percent from 2006.

On top of all that is the byzantine oversight of horse racing, which has no central governing body or commissioner. There are competing organizations for racetracks, breeders, trainers, and jockeys, with little coordinated promotion and advertising. "It's upside down and it's got to change," says Jess Jackson, the wine mogul and horse breeder who owns Curlin, the all-time money leader. "If you can market poker and NASCAR, you know you can market thoroughbred racing -- it's a far more beautiful sport."




Zenyatta, above, before the 2009 Breeders Cup Classic. This magnificent, amazing animal is torqued, wired, and ready to "kick some a**!!!!" Who owns you, bag of bones!!!!!



Keep a close eye on the Zenyatta, the horse with the yellow pad, who come's out of the gate dead last, bidding her time. She know's who she is. She know's what she has. You do not teach/train an animal to have "heart". They are born with "heart", or they are not. It is that simple. The few rare individuals who are born with "heart", will take your breath away, each time they show it to you.

Gary Payne, it seem's even the "elite" are having problems right now, and I suggest the circus will gain more ground, if we stop taking things personal. If they can market professional wresting, why not circus. It is a far more beautiful entertainment industry, to borrow a quote from Jess Jackson above. Horse racing, an animal industry is in the spot light at the moment lead by an animal, Gary and folks. What is the equivelant of Zenyatta in the circus today? Why not? It has been suggested that, the "lack of or making of a star figure" has been responsible for the decline in interst in the circus, from days of gone by. I knew an animal once named Karma, who had the "heart" of Zenyatta. She could have been the "circus Zenyatta". Who, what, where is today's "circus Zenyatta?" Hanging the high powered paper for her/his prospective industry.

Atlanta/Fulton County "ban the circus" legistation flushed down the donniker.

A big thank you to all who helped get the word out that extremists were working to ban the elephant guide tool - thus the circus - in Fulton County (Atlanta) Georgia!
Thank you to the circus fans who personally attended the meeting in Atlanta...and to the dozens who wrote letters, sent emails and faxes, and made phone calls.
American circus goers (and there are millions of us) won the right to "choose" to attend (or not) a circus featuring our favorite stars - the elephants! How sad that we live
in a society that has created profitable businesses around allegations of abuse, seldom backed up with empirical evidence.
We will campaign against destructive legislation again, likely in Atlanta, and elsewhere, as long as there are those who would take away our rights to enjoy a circus with performing animals. We must be vigilant and steadfast. We advocate for the circus, for the welfare (not "rights") of animals and for elephants, by putting the facts forward to contrast with the fiction. Common sense and logic usually prevail.
WE THE PEOPLE must not allow an elite few to legislate our rights away. In San Francisco this week, the elite few legislated HAPPY MEALS out of existence. The people no
longer have the right to choose! What's next? Will we ban high school football? (injury is inevitable) Swimming has to go... (too dangerous) Ixnay Birthday Cake (all that sugar)
YOU deserve the thanks for answering the call to action! YOUR participation is swift and effective. YOU have made a difference again!
Gary C. Payne
Eastern Vice President
Chairman - Nat'l Animal Welfare Committee
Circus Fans Association of America
ptgcp@aol.com www.circusfans.org 860-833-7925

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Congratulations to Gary Payne, OABA and others who helped with this matter. A great victory that has been over due. I am concerned at the use of the term "elite" to describe the opponents in this matter. That sounds a bit, "cry baby, boo hoo, why is everybody picking on us" to me. Being an objector to you beliefs, doesn't necessarily make someone a monster. Let the French peasant's keep that term for their next revolution. I am very troubled by the statement "injury is inevitable" in regards to high school football, and remind Mr. Payne that the "injury is inevitable" statement has been updated recently to "deaths that may occur." As a father of two son's who played high school football, that is of great concern to me, and I suggest that it is of greater importance, then sugerless birthday cake or toyless happy meals. If that makes me "elite", so be it. Again, great victory but I think we need to temper our enthusiasm with a bit of dignity and grace. I am just saying........