Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Waldo Wild Animal Retirement Village?

To better understand what makes a good sanctuary and what makes a bad sanctuary, maybe Henry, Ryan or others might tell me which this place was, although it recently closed when the owner died. I have never heard of it.

By AMY REININK
Sun staff writer
Article published Nov 12, 2006

WALDO - For years, the Waldo Wild Animal Retirement Village was noted for its high-profile animal hijinks, from the elephant that pushed a disabled car down Waldo Road and liked to drink beer to the chimpanzee that got loose and wreaked havoc in a neighbor's yard.

Robert Stephens, 66, of Gainesville, hadn't heard about an animal escape for a while, and wrote to Since You asked wondering why the animal village went quiet.

"What is the current status of the Waldo Wild Animal Retirement Village?" Stephens asked. "The Sun used to have stories about it occasionally, but there has been nothing for some time. The gate is still open but there appears to be little traffic there, as well as a lack of signs. Are they open? Are the animals still there?"

Gene Schuler, the village's owner, died earlier this year at age 75.

Three years earlier, when he fell ill, his wife, Rusti Schuler, made the decision to close the village that had been open to the public since the mid-1980s.

The village housed unwanted or abused exotic pets and circus animals, including an elephant, a bear, four chimpanzees, several cougars, a lion and a baboon, among others.

The bear went to Texas, Schuler said. The cats went to Ocala. And the chimpanzees went to a woman in Bushnell who already had some chimps of her own. Schuler, who's almost 70 herself, said knowing that her animals went to good, loving homes only made it a little easier to part with them,

"I tell you, I miss my chimps," she said. "For a while, I was calling down there and talking to them once a week or so. She would hold the phone up to their ear and I'd talk to them. But then, she told me when they'd talk to me, they'd lose their appetite for a week or so after."

The facility drew both praise and criticism while it was open for its treatment of animals, and was the subject of scrutiny from the Fish and Wildlife Commission and other agencies.

It was also the subject of the television show "Hard Copy," which visited the village in 1991 after two chimps, Joe Bananas and Chipper, broke out of their cages and played in a neighbor's yard.

In 1989, Zeta, a 10,000-pound elephant, netted national attention when she helped push the Schulers' disabled car off of U.S. 301.

Schuler still lives on a mobile home on the property. Signs her husband made by hand reading "Bears" and "Tigers" still hang outside their home, the animals are gone.

She does have 10 dogs, mostly Yorkies or Yorkie mixes, to keep her company, and has taken a job with an agency called Comfort Keepers. Schuler said her job is to keep older or sick people company, and to make sure they eat well and take their medicines.

She said the caregiver role fits her well, though she hasn't gotten over the loss of her original charges.

"We still get calls from Boy Scout troops, Girl Scout troops, you name it, and people who drive up to ask if we're open," she said. "I wish we were open. I didn't enjoy anything better than I enjoyed that."

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

Wade, according to Dan Koehl's site, the elephant's name was actually Zetta. She died at the Waldo Wild Animal Retirement Village in 1992 at the age of 55. She was previously owned by William Buckles Woodcock.
Mary Ann

Anonymous said...

Wade, the link to Zetta's page is:
http://www.elephant.se/database2.php?elephant_id=1869
Mary Ann

Wade G. Burck said...

Mary Ann,
Who is Zetta? I was only asking about Waldo as I had never hear of it. I think there was a Zetta on Hubert Castle Circus?
Wade

Anonymous said...

Wade, the article in this post says that "In 1989, Zeta, a 10,000-pound elephant, netted national attention when she helped push the Schulers' disabled car off of U.S. 301." So I looked up Zeta, and found that her name was actually Zetta. By the way, what kind of sanctuary owners use the animals in their care to push their disabled car off the highway?"
Mary Ann

Anonymous said...

Wade, there is only one Zetta in the studbook. She was a wild-caught Asian, went to the Tarzan Zerbini Circus, from there to the Miami Metro Zoo, from there to William Buckles Woodcock, and from there to the Waldo Wild Animal Retirement Village, where she died.
Mary Ann

Wade G. Burck said...

Mary Ann,
Hubert Castle Circus became Tarzan Zerbini Circus, that's why she would be listed as Tarzan Zerbini. I don't think there was a book when it was Hubert Castle. I always thought Tarzan still had her.
I don't think there is any thing wrong with using the elephants for manual labor, but if you are a sanctuary I guess it goes against your mission. I don't know if "Retirement Village" is classed as a sanctuary though.
Wade

Anonymous said...

I'm retired but still cut the grass and do a little cleaning and cooking -- even work at Disney a few days a week. Often I think it's good for me. The fancy zoo management term is called enrichment.

Casey McCoy Cainan said...

Pushing a car off the road with an elephant, is in my opinion far better then, raising babies for photo sessions, which some tiger "sanctuaries" have done in the past.