I had a great day at the zoo today. I had some lovely visitors come along on my
talks. One family travelled from Guildford especially to come to our zoo for
the day, which was lovely. I was asked some very delicate and sensitive
questions, especially regarding the size of the enclosures compared to the
space that these magnificent predators would have as a territory in the
wild. As I said then, tigers are being
squeezed into smaller and smaller territories by man and they are hunted for ancient
oriental medicines, often before they have matured. Our tigers have been born into human care
environments: they don't know what it feels like to be hunted or hungry. If
they are unwell we call our vet, Matt, in to care for them straightaway. They are encouraged to express natural
behaviour and often show their feelings of enthusiasm and excitement. They are so loved by all that work here and
their adoring public. Our cats treat
their spaces just like their territories, marking and spraying, and patrolling the
perimeters. So I guess that one of the
most important things that I've learned whilst working at the zoo is that our
cats are the ambassadors of their species. We are privileged to work alongside
them - predators in smaller safer 'territories'. Here is a photo of the lovely 'Lola' (an ex-circus
tiger) showing her lovely physique stretching up to get her meat at the Big Cat
Feed today at 4.30pm. Thanks for reading
this.... I'm here every Monday!!
This is one exciting reason to come and visit the place. There are more things to discover and Isle of Wight holiday cottages is one more.
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