Posts Tagged ‘Elephants’

Animal Enrichment: It’s an Elephant’s Life

Posted by in Elephants,Enrichment,Events

Enriching the herd of Asian elephants here at the Houston Zoo  is a very important part of our day.  Elephants are highly intelligent animals (probably the most intelligent at the zoo) and they need many different types of enrichment. 

Training is one of the most important parts of an Elephant keeper’s day, and is extremely enriching for our elephants as well.  It allows the Elephant keepers to get very close to each animal and inspect their body condition and care for them, but it also helps to form a strong relationship between each keeper and each elephant.  Training new behaviors encourages our elephants to think critically to receive the reward of food and praise — and also helps to keep the elephants active. 

Along with mental stimulation, physical enrichment, such as toys, scents, spices, leafy browse and musical instruments are all vital to keeping our elephants active, enriched, and engaged.  When you visit the Houston Zoo, it is easy to spot the items that are placed daily in the yard.  These commonly include small and large tires, bells, bowling balls, large rubber balls, large hanging chimes and large logs.  Of course, all of these toys are elephant proof and safe for our two calves, Baylor andTupelo, to play with as well. 

What you may not be able to see are the various spices and areas scented with extracts or perfume, which encourage the elephants to walk around the yard to find and taste new and different items. Leafy browse, such as Mulberry and Bamboo, is also vital for elephants. Found in their natural diet, leaves and bark are nutritionally important and they also provide a fun toy. 

Our elephants are commonly seen using large sticks to scratch their backs and behind their ears.  New or novel substrates like sand and dirt are also used as enrichment. Baylor and Tupelo especially seem to enjoy a nice pile of fresh sand or a mud wallow. The pool in the new yard will be an excellent addition to the facility and will be enriching to the herd for years to come.  

Hopefully, the elephants will be moving in to the new exhibit in September. It is really just up to the keepers to challenge ourselves to find ways to keep the elephants enriched and think of new ideas.

Written by Andrea Pohlman, Elephant Keeper

Enrichment Day at the Houston Zoo is Saturday, September 24th.  This is a great opportunity to come and join in the fun.  Come out and see all of the animals enjoying special enrichment, hear keeper chats and loads of  fun games for kids of all ages!  Enrichment Day celebrates the meaning and joy of enriching our animals and visitors!

Find your favorite animals and see what they’re wishing for at Amazon.com. Then just sit back, shop, click and send your animal of choice a wonderful gift to enrich their life!  They really do appreciate it and so does the Houston Zoo!

Animal Enrichment: Yummy for the Tummy

Posted by in Commissary,Enrichment,Events

The Commissary at the Houston Zoo works like a five star restaurant!  The staff prepare animal diets daily, consisting of fresh produce, fruits, meats and an assortment of many other foods.  But who doesn’t like a special treat now and then….many of the animals certainly do and the Commissary makes sure they get a favorite treat. 

Some of those treats are also part of the animal’s enrichment.  Those include ice pops, from 8 oz cups to 5 gallons!!

Now, I know you’re thinking who would get a 5 gallon ice pop!!!  Those lucky animals would be the bears and the elephant herd.  The bear’s pops are filled with fish or fruit.  The elephants’ pops are fruit filled with apples, pineapple, pears, mangos and grapes. 

Primates get the smaller ice pops.  Their pops contain fruit juices and another item such as currants, sunflower seeds, grapes, etc.  Here’s a picture of Rudi enjoying his ice pop, although it looks like he’s dreaming of a 5 gallon ice pop!

The Carnivores enjoy an assortment of bones once a month.  Watch the video below, they really seem to love stalking and capturing their “prey”.

Holiday food enrichment is also something different for the animals.  Putting something new and different in their habitat helps to enrich their lives by finding something unexpected, something unknown.  One of those items is pumpkins at Halloween.  Most animals receive pumpkins and have a great time playing and foraging through them.  Watch the Meerkat search for yummy treats in their pumpkin.

Enrichment Day at the Houston Zoo is Saturday, September 24th.  This is a great opportunity to come and join in the fun.  Come out and see all of the animals enjoying special enrichment, hear keeper chats and loads of  fun games for kids of all ages!  Enrichment Day celebrates the meaning and joy of enriching our animals and visitors!

Find your favorite animals and see what they’re wishing for at Amazon.com. Then just sit back, shop, click and send your animal of choice a wonderful gift to enrich their life!  They really do appreciate it and so does the Houston Zoo!

 

Houston Zoo and Amazon.com

Posted by in Enrichment,Events

Do you love to shop?!  The Houston Zoo animals now have a wishlist on Amazon.com!  We all enjoy buying that perfect gift for someone special…..and who’s more special than the animals at the zoo!  I know you’ve often wondered, if I were buying a gift for Jonathan the lion what on earth would he want?  And where would I go to buy it?  What about a baby gift for Aurora the orangutan?  Well today’s your lucky day and you don’t even have to leave the comfort of your air conditioned home, yes shopping in the summer without breaking a sweat!!

All of the animals now have brought their needs and wants to you through Amazon.com, just a click away.  Here’s an example of some of the items you can purchase and enrich the lives of your favorite animal.

The Carnivores are asking for boomer balls, catnip and many other items, you know how cats love to wind themselves up on catnip, then start chasing everything in sight!   Like this Jolly Ball available at Amazon.com, peppermint scented!

Horseman's Pride Jolly Ball

The Primates are asking for a Look Lous feeding mirror….hmmmm is that so Rudy orangutan can make sure there are no crumbs on his face when he finishes his favorite breakfast??  Just a click away!

Looky Lou Feeder 14" X 10" Acrylic w/ 3/4" holes (.125 wall) Mirror on one side: 4 in.

Find your favorite animals and see what they’re wishing for at Amazon.com. Then just sit back, shop, click and send your animal of choice a wonderful gift to enrich their life!  They really do appreciate it and so does the Houston Zoo!

Enrichment Day at the Houston Zoo is Saturday, September 24th.  This is a great opportunity to come and join in the fun.  Come out and see all of the animals enjoying special enrichment, hear keeper chats and loads of  fun games for kids of all ages!  Enrichment Day celebrates the meaning and joy of enriching our animals and visitors!

 

FOTO Friday Winner of the Week

Posted by in Contest,Elephants,Funny

Welcome to the Houston Zoo’s FOTO FRIDAY Caption Challenge results post from Friday, July 8!

Last Friday, we posted a photo on Facebook and asked you to leave your best caption in the comment section. Then readers could “like” each caption comment to vote for their favorites. Their votes, combined with those of our own panel, determined the caption to appear under the picture right here on the Official Houston Zoo Blog this week. We hope you’ll come back for the fun EVERY FRIDAY.

YOUR VOTES HELP DETERMINE THE WINNERS!

Here is the picture that was posted on Facebook last Friday, with the top voted caption by Shannon Krugman!!! Let’s all trumpet for Shannon!

WELL, YOU OBVIOUSLY DON'T USE CHARMIN

FIRST RUNNER UP:

Eric Burington:I’m not touching you!!!!

  A TIE FOR SECOND RUNNER UP:

Alan G. Pallister:  Phew. I don’t get why dogs greet each other this way?

Cassidy Lentsch: So how does this “leapfrog” thing work again?

And some elephant-sized HONORABLE MENTIONS:

Neisa Villegas: it was just a peanut…come on you drama Queen!!!

Rachel Bright: Crying won’t bring back the shuttle program…we’ll all miss it.

Jeff Austin: Junk in the trunk!


CONGRATULATIONS TO ALL!

Thanks for joining in the fun!  And please come on back for next Friday!

Did you know that elephants can swim? Baylor and Tupelo love their baby pools and all the adults enjoy their daily baths, which you can come to see every day at 10:00 AM in the McNair Elephant Habitat. It’s just one way they keep cool during TXU Energy Presents Chill Out at the Houston Zoo!

In the mean time, see these same babies, Baylor and Tupelo, trying hard to share their playpool!

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Check out our Facebook page to see the rest of the entries. We hope this brought a smile to your face. And stay tuned for next Friday’s photo! Tell your friends, share this on Facebook, Twitter or your own blogs, and start your office pools to see who can come up with the best lines. (To show the picture and link on your social media, just click the little icons under the title SHARE THIS on the lower left of this post).To find us on Facebook, type in Houston Zoo Inc. in the search field or go to http://www.facebook.com/houstonzoo and become a fan.


Big Daddy

Posted by in Babies,Elephants

Elephants live in a matriarchal society meaning that herds of elephants generally consist of adult females with their calves.  Baylor and Tupelo spend every day with Shanti and Tess (their mothers) and the rest of the Houston Zoo herd.  Thailand, the zoo’s 45 year old bull elephant, is the father of both calves.   Thai often spends his day in one yard with the herd in the other yard.  Adult bull elephants are generally solitary creatures.  But, sometimes zoo guests can see Thai in the same yard as the herd. 

Thai and Baylor

That is one of the many things that makes Thai a very special bull elephant.  Thai is very good with baby elephants and seems enjoy socializing with the herd.  Baylor and Tupelo also seem to love spending time with Thai.  The calves follow him around and mimic many of his behaviors.  Thai will even sometimes play with the calves and share is hay!  Thai is an excellent father!

Thai and Tupelo

Celebrate Dad by giving him a memorable Father’s Day gift this year – name a Houston Toad after him! With your gift, you help us support Houston Toads, a critically endangered species native to Texas. Click here to learn more about Houston Toads and how you can further the Houston Zoo’s conservation efforts that help ensure their survival. (www.houstonzoo.org/name-a-toad )

Thai, Baylor, Tupelo, & Methai

Come visit the newly-named toads on June 19 from 10 a.m. – 3 p.m. as we celebrate a TOAD-ally Awesome Father’s Day at the Houston Zoo. This fun, family event will be filled with crafts, activities, Houston Toad info and much more! This event is FREE with your paid Zoo admission.

Written by: Kim Klein, Houston Zoo Elephant Keeper

FOTO FRIDAY Winner of the Week!

Posted by in Contest,Dogs,Elephants,Funny

Welcome to the Houston Zoo’s FOTO FRIDAY Caption Challenge results post from Friday, May 20!

Last Friday, we posted a photo on Facebook and asked you to leave your best caption in the comment section. Then readers could “like” each caption comment to vote for their favorites. Their votes, combined with those of our own panel, determined the caption to appear under the picture right here on the Official Houston Zoo Blog this week. We hope you’ll come back for the fun EVERY FRIDAY.

YOUR VOTES HELP DETERMINE THE WINNERS!

Here is the picture that was posted on Facebook last Friday, with the winning caption by Mark Biggs!!! (trumpet or bark it up people… your choice)

 

CAN WE WATCH DUMBO NEXT?

 

FIRST RUNNER UP:

*Tricia Nicole Mulkey McClelland:

Dog: “WOWEZZZ Where can I find me a Babe like that? Dumbo..”

Dumbo: “I don’t know Lucky but if you find a bowl like that let me know”"

HONORABLE MENTIONS:

There were so many to choose from!

*Christine Forisha: “This is a trunk…not spaghetti…don’t get any ideas!”

*Sheila Livingston: “Max and Methai didn’t know what they did to warrant the All Disney All Day punishment but vowed never to do it again.”

*Dub Rika: “So which one of us is the tramp?”

* Leonor Soto Leal: ” Some guys get all the luck. He gets the girl and spaghetti. I get dog chow and an elephant.” 

*Sofia González: “Dog: Tramp gets a Lady and I’m stuck here with Dumbo! Not gonna happen!”

 

CONGRATULATIONS TO ALL!

There were many great captions. Thanks for joining in the fun!

And please come on back for next Friday!

DID YOU KNOW:  Our elephants have their very own blog called Trunk Tales!  It’s chock-full of adorable pictures and videos of the babies and great stories of our growing elephant herd.

And they aren’t the only thing growing. Their habitat is being expanded into where the giraffes and cheetahs used to call home.  We’ve added 1.5 acres which will include an 80,000 gallon pool, a demonstration and interpretation area with bleachers on two sides, and a separate area with an unobstructed view of the yard. The habitat is slated to open in Late June and, added to their existing home will make for a total of 3 acres for our elephant family to roam. Be sure to swing by and pay them a visit!

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Check out our Facebook page to see the rest of the entries. We hope this brought a smile to your face. And stay tuned for next Friday’s photo! Tell your friends, share this on Facebook, Twitter or your own blogs, and start your office pools to see who can come up with the best lines. (To show the picture and link on your social media, just click the little icons under the title SHARE THIS on the lower left of this post).To find us on Facebook, type in Houston Zoo Inc. in the search field or go to http://www.facebook.com/houstonzoo and become a fan.

Borneo is Burning, But You Can Help

Posted by in Conservation,Endangered,Primates

Why do we care?

The clearing of rainforests poses a threat to hundreds of animal species, including the Asian rhinos and elephants, Sumatran tigers and the orangutan. If nothing is done in the near future these species could be extinct in the wild by 2025. 

 What is the reason that we are clearing the forest?

Palm Oil. Palm oil is used in at least one out of every 10 supermarket products, including food, cosmetics, bath and cleaning products.  The kernel of the palm oil plant is also used to make animal feed. The problem occurs when rainforest is cleared away to make room for the palm oil plantations. 

Oil palms can be planted on land that is not forested, but some companies choose to use the rainforest to make a larger profit in two phases.  The can cut the trees down and use that for timber and then the plant the fields to grow the palm oil plants.

How can you help?

1. When purchasing wood, wooden furniture and paper products look for the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) stamp of approval.

 2.  Discuss your concerns with local governments about the lack of labeling of palm oil on packaging on products in the supermarket and household cleaning supplies. 

3. Support companies that are members of the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO)

 4. Donate to the Houston Zoo Conservation Fund to help endangered animals all over the world.

5.  The most important thing that you can do is reduce your palm oil consumption and encourage your family and friends to do the same.

For more information visit the Houston Zoo Palm Oil page at www.houstonzoo.org/palm-oil

Written by Primate Keeper Tammy Buhrmester

FOTO FRIDAY WINNER OF THE WEEK!

Posted by in Contest,Elephants,Funny

Welcome to the Houston Zoo’s FOTO FRIDAY Caption Challenge results post from Friday, March 4!

Last Friday, we posted a photo on Facebook and asked you to leave your best shot at a caption in the comment section. Then readers could  “Like” each caption comment to vote for their favorite captions. Their votes, combined with those of our own panel, determined the caption to appear under the picture right here on the Official Houston Zoo Blog this week. We hope you’ll come back for the fun EVERY FRIDAY.

YOUR VOTES HELP DETERMINE THE WINNERS!

Here is the picture that was posted on Facebook last Friday, with the winning caption by – are you ready? - Connie Quinn-Reese

MARCO!!

First Runner Up:

Brad Orr, who was our winner last week. (The man has a fan club):

“ Why do they call me a Navy Seal when I’m an Elephant?”

Second Runner Up:

Rachel Lundy:  “MAY I have some PRIVACY PLEASE! I don’t WATCH you in the SHOWER!”

Third Runner Up:

Oliver Patricia: “Up periscope!”

And an honorable mention goes to: Richard Anderson for: ”I think its time to get out… my trunk is getting wrinkled”

_________________________________________________________________

Thanks to everyone for participating

and

CONGRATULATIONS TO ALL!  

DID YOU KNOW:

This is Tucker, our “teenage” male Asian elephant, having some fun, as elephants are wont to do  in the water. Just take a look at this video of his little sibs, Baylor and Tupelo.

These highly intelligent creatures are an endangered species. Scientists estimate that there are less than 50,000 wild Asian elephants; they live in India, Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia. The Houston Zoo’s Conservation efforts are involved wtih more than one elephant cause. Click here to read about one of them.

 To learn all about Asian elephants like this one, visit their page on our website http://www.houstonzoo.org/elephants/

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Check out our Facebook page to see the rest of the entries. We hope this brought a smile to your face. And stay tuned for next Friday’s photo!Tell your friends, share this on Facebook, Twitter or your own blogs, and start your office pools to see who can come up with the best lines. (To show the picture and link on your social media, just click the little icons under the title SHARE THIS on the lower left of this post).To find us on Facebook, type in Houston Zoo Inc. in the search field or go to http://www.facebook.com/houstonzoo and become a fan.

 

Essays on Rwanda

Posted by in Birds,Carnivores,Lynn Killam's Rwanda National Parks,Mammals

Today begins a new series, written by Houston Zoo Primate Supervisor Lynn Killam, who took a November trip to Africa to visit the national parks in Rwanda. Sit back and settle in, as through these blog posts, we can almost feel as if we’ve gone there too.

African air has a distinctively unique scent: earthy, slightly smoky, full of humanity and diesel, with notes of forest and swamp. The aroma hit me immediately upon disembarking from the plane in Kigali, the bustling capitol of the tiny, landlocked country of Rwanda. I had come to visit all of the National Parks with two traveling companions (former Zoo Primate Curator Barbara Lester and former Reptile Supervisor Paul Freed, married years ago and now retired together) during a two week stay.

Starkly black and white Pied Crows were the first birds to greet us as we met our guide, also named Paul, and began our journey through this most remarkable land. It was quickly apparent that Rwandans welcome foreigners: children waved excitedly and gave us the thumbs-up sign as we rode over newly paved, fastidiously clean streets. One would never guess until speaking with the local populace that genocide had occurred here in 1994; but it permeates the national psyche and history is referred to as “before” and “after”. Still, this place is healing, and undergoing a quiet transformation as the people and the natural environment recover from the damage.

To get an idea where we were...

Akagera National Park was our first stop. This savannah-and-forested plane in the northeastern part of the country adjoining Tanzania had been devastated during the genocide, with wildlife being indiscriminately slaughtered. Recovery has been slow, and still continues; giraffe and zebra have been reintroduced and lions will soon follow. But, sightings of hoofstock from oribi (small klipspringer-like antelope) and waterbuck to buffalo and eland were frequent and hippopotami were plentiful in the lakes.

Eland in Akager National Park

Birding was spectacular here, and the elusive shoebill stork is a resident, although very difficult to see. Troops of Olive baboons (Papio hamadryas anubis) were commonplace and their antics entrancing to watch, and Vervet monkeys (Chlorocebus aethiops) wandered through the savannah and were equally easy to observe. One daytime trip in a small boat turned enthralling when two rival hippos decided to fight just meters from us, and another unnerved us by coming precarious close to the boat!

Hippos fight near our boat

Night game drives brought some unexpected finds: a close up view of a lone serval on a hunt, as well as several glimpses of hippos on land, feeding nocturnally on grass.

Serval on the hunt

Our last day brought a jolt of adrenaline when we came upon a large herd of elephants with several tiny calves. A huge bull stopped us in our tracks by placing his body sideways in the road, as if to make it firmly clear that we were not to pass.

The bull makes his point

An indignant cow, teats full of milk, came charging past him towards us, as Paul hit reverse…fast. We stopped at what we thought was a safe distance away, only to have another bull tear through some bushes directly on our left side, his enormous bulk approaching at an alarming speed as our car was again forced to retreat.

We sweated through a few tense minutes while realizing that we were surrounded on 3 sides by the herd; all of us silently contemplated probably futile evasive action should we be charged again. All was quiet after nearly a half hour wait, and Paul cautiously proceeded ahead, this time with only a juvenile giving us a good head toss and mock-charge as we passed, as if to say “and the horse you rode in on!”

Editors note: This is the first in Lynn’s multi-part blog series. Check back for the next installment, to be posted later this week!

Written by Lynn Killam, Primate Supervisor
Photos by Barbara Lester and Paul Freed

Memories of Christmas and the Houston Zoo

Posted by in Elephants,Memories

There can be no denying that a childhood enriched by the Houston Zoo is one filled with wondrous and vivid memories, a first glimpse into the beauty that is the natural world. Many keepers can tell stories of their first memories of zoos and aquariums, explaining how the animals they observed helped shape their desire to care for them, and emphasized the importance of preserving nature to any who would cross their path. I am not exempt from this; it just happens that my most vivid memory is also one that reflects the magic of the holiday season.

Most animal-lovers will acknowledge that they possess traits that many others would call “eccentric”; having been a biophile (someone with an affinity for living things including plants and animals) all of my life, I expressed these traits at a young age by writing my Christmas letter and wishlist to Rudolph.

My intent was actually quite logical: Rudolph didn’t get as many letters as Santa, so he would be better able to read and address them. Pointing out that reindeer can’t read only causes me to point out that NORMALLY reindeer can’t fly. Obviously Santa’s magic reindeer are an exception… Plus, Santa had to go wherever his reindeer took him, so it only made sense to butter up the reindeer with a bit of extra recognition.

On Christmas Eve, the cookies for Santa were left out with carrots and celery because I was asking for something BIG.

I wanted an elephant. My grandma absolutely loved elephants, and watching them interact with each other at the Houston Zoo was one of our favorite things to do; We could spend hours just watching them. My plan was that Santa would bring MY elephant to live at my grandma’s house. We would drain her pool and the elephant would be able to live there happily, cared for by my grandma and myself.

Now, my mother recognized the problem of trying to provide an elephant for Christmas and pointed out a few of the obvious problems. Our elephant would be lonely without any elephant-friends, and neither myself nor my grandma knew how to take care of one. My mother’s suggestion was that I write and ask for my elephant to be delivered to the Houston Zoo. Not only would there be plenty of elephants for my new friend to play with, but there would also be a number of qualified people ready to take the best possible care of the elephant I would surely get for my good behavior.

Christmas day came and went, and there was absolutely no mention of my elephant on the news. I felt completely cheated by Santa and the reindeer. Hadn’t I been well-behaved the entire year? And for what? There was no mention of this new arrival to the Zoo, and certainly every news station would want to cover the story of an elephant that arrived at the front of the Zoo with a bow on it’s head! Perhaps it was even wrapped in colorful paper, possibly even laughing as keepers tried to shake the package to guess what was inside…

My mother, being the ever-capable storyteller that she is, came up with a wonderful explanation. Even if it is just a baby, an elephant is a BIG present to wish for. Obviously there wasn’t enough room in the sleigh for Santa to accommodate my elephant in addition to all the other presents good little girls and boys wanted. She assured me that Santa would return to the North Pole and (perhaps after a hearty meal and long nap), return with my elephant. Years later, she revealed that her goal was to distract me long enough that I would give up thinking about it. She would point to a random elephant the next time we went to the Zoo and insist that it was the one Santa delivered specifically for me. If only she had known this would not be the case…

Singgah, the Asian Elephant, was born at the Houston Zoo on December 29, 1993. Her birth was a bit of a surprise, and as I expected, every news station was covering the birth of this Christmas miracle. We promptly planned our trip to see MY elephant, and certainly were not disappointed when we got there. A temporary graphic had been put up for the baby elephant, explaining it’s name meant “fell from the sky.” Apparently the birth had been so sudden that the infant almost fell on a keeper. At least that’s what everyone else thought; I was one of the few people who knew that Santa had actually delivered an elephant to the Houston Zoo for me, because I had been brave enough to ask Rudolph for such a BIG present.

The holidays may mean many things to many people. Traditionally people mention a sense of goodwill and joy associated with the brightly colored lights and ornaments of Christmas. The same is true for me, but I also remember the sense of wonder at what the natural world is capable of that I felt while watching MY elephant run around the yard.

It has gotten much easier to give the gift of an animal at the Houston Zoo. If you know someone who would appreciate it, why not give the gift of an animal adoption to a special little boy or girl who has been particularly good? There are a wide variety of animals eagerly awaiting you! Not only does your support help take care of that animal here at the zoo, it also helps fund conservation projects to help take care of the natural world on a much grander scale.

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