Showing posts with label Johnston Zoo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Johnston Zoo. Show all posts

Sunday, March 31, 2019

A Few Things For My Birthday-PT 2!

Hey Gang!

It's been a while since I added another animal to the zoo. I saw this guy at Walmart
this September. They only had the one. So I had been eyeing this guy for a while!
I was going to purchase him back in early December but he must have sold.  I didn't
think that they would get another in. But when I walked down the toy aisle the other
day, what did I see?  Him!

Adventure Force Soft Gorilla Toy!


 He is pretty big but light!  He is 10 inches tall and about 7 inches from shoulder to
shoulder. He reminds me of the gorilla Shabani, I saw on the web that women
are going crazy over!
So he need a large enclosure. I started on this room-box for something else but I think it will work for him too!
I am calling him Shabani and he is an Eastern lowland gorilla! His size and coloring tells
us that.  His pictured here with Lucy!
I might repaint his eyes. I am not feeling the red.  They should be more of a cream
with brown iris.
Lucy's eye are closer to what the eyes on Shabani should look like. I might paint
over her silver to black.
Shabani weights  a little over 500lb! This is on the high end of the scale for an Eastern
lowland gorilla but not out of the norm for this type of gorilla.  Here, like in the wild,
he is an Alpha male in this little group!
Shabani is thing-No I don't want a banana!
I like the way he can stands. It adds to his look of strength! If he stand up straight,
he will be looking Ken in the eye!
 What is up there?
 Side view!
 Oh Lucy!
Lucy normally stays in his shadow! She isn't as outgoing as he is. I found her
in a thrift store.
 I should have given them a window and door!
There is something separating them from the public!  I worked on this fence before the
Flower show too but didn't finish it until after.

OK, Thanks For Looking!

Friday, February 27, 2015

Kola the Koala!

Hey Gang!

Kola has just arrived at the Johnston Zoo!  She is a adolescent Koala and is not
quite breading age!  There is a lot of excitement about her being here.  There is
hopes for a good size Koala population.
Here Is Kola!

 She is very playful!
 A little shy...
 and very cute!

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia The koala (Phascolarctos cinereus or, inaccurately, koala bear) is an arboreal herbivorous marsupial native to Australia. It is the only extant representative of the family Phascolarctidae, and its closest living relatives are the wombats. The koala is found in coastal areas of the mainland's eastern and southern regions, inhabiting Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria and South Australia. It is easily recognisable by its stout, tailless body; round, fluffy ears; and large, spoon-shaped nose. The koala has a body length of 60–85 cm (24–33 in) and weighs 4–15 kg (9–33 lb). Pelage colour ranges from silver grey to chocolate brown. Koalas from the northern populations are typically smaller and lighter in colour than their counterparts further south. It is possible that these populations are separate subspecies, but this is disputed. Koalas typically inhabit open eucalypt woodlands, and the leaves of these trees make up most of their diet. Because this eucalypt diet has limited nutritional and caloric content, koalas are largely sedentary and sleep for up to 20 hours a day. They are asocial animals, and bonding exists only between mothers and dependent offspring. Adult males communicate with loud bellows that intimidate rivals and attract mates. Males mark their presence with secretions from scent glands located on their chests. Being marsupials, koalas give birth to underdeveloped young that crawl into their mothers' pouches, where they stay for the first six to seven months of their life. These young koalas are known as joeys, and are fully weaned at around a year. Koalas have few natural predators and parasites but are threatened by various pathogens, like Chlamydiaceae bacteria and the koala retrovirus, as well as by bushfires and droughts. For more info click here!

OK! Thanks For Looking!

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

News In The Penguin Pen

Hey Gang,

There is some big news at the penguin pen at the Johnston zoo!  There is a new penguin 
that arrived!
If you read this post anywhere other than
 I-Luv-Dolls@blogspot.com
It is a fake!!! Run!!

OK, so that you know while your reading this, Moe sounds like Bullwinkle from
Rocky and Bullwinkle.  Izzy sounds like Boo Boo from Yogi Bear.  Charlie
sounds like James Cagney and Herman sounds like Bart Simpson.  So use
you imagination when you read!

Izzy and Moe are hanging out in front of the snow cave!
Izzy: I'm hungry!  You hungry?
Moe: I could eat a whole Tuna!
Izzy: Here come Charlie! 

Charlie hums to himself as he walks along!  Charlie: Dum dee dum!


He slides down at this point!  Woosh!
 Charllie:  Guess what fellahs!  I got some news, some real news!  I got some news for you!
Charlie: I said I got some news! I got some hot news to tell ya!
Moe: They have been adding chicken to our diet! I knew it!
Charlie: No, it not about our diet and they are not adding chicken!  I would know it!
I'm allergic to chicken!
Izzy: OK, then what is it!

 Herman:  Hey, what did I miss?
 Charlie: I was just about to tell 'em the news about the new penguin who came in. 
He was injured! He came in with a shark!  Maybe...like the shark did it!  They
tangled and he gave that shark a left and a right!  Tthe penquin survived but he is
injured like! 
 Charlie: The Doc fixed him up and gave him his own blood! The all say WOW!
Look here he comes! Play it cool as ice!

The Group: Hello!

OK, Thanks For Looking!

Monday, January 14, 2013

Nanuk/Nanook!

Nanuk/Nanook

In northern Canada and Alaska there is small culture of Native peoples who told legends and myths about creatures of the North. These are the Inuit people, and they have many legends about bears, Nanuk in particular. In Inuit mythology, Nanuk/Nanook (the Polar Bear) was the master of bears, meaning he decided if hunters deserved success in finding and hunting bears and punished violations of taboos. The word was popularized by Nanook of the North, the first feature-length documentary.


Nanuk was known as the Bear God, He was a great Polar Bear, and the Inuit hunters would worship this great bear because they believed that he decided if the Hunters would be successful or not that day. “In the past, the Inuit ate polar bear meat and used the fur to make warm trousers for men and kamiks (soft boots) for women. Respect was given to Nanuk when a Bear was killed by the hunter hanging the bear’s hide in a special section of his igloo and it would stay there for a few days. They would also offer the bear’s spirit weapons and other hunting tools to the bear if it was a male. If the bear was female however, it would be offered needle cases, scrapers used to scrape the fat off of the hides, and knives. “Native people believed that polar bears allowed themselves to be killed in order to obtain the souls of the tools (tatkoit), which they would take with them into the hereafter. Legend says that if a dead polar bear was treated properly by the hunter, it would share the good news with other bears so they would be eager to be killed by him. Bears would stay away from hunters who failed to pay respect.


Nanuck was found undernourished and sick at a traveling circus.  He was rescued by Dr. Weeks and the Johnston Zoo.  He is now happy and healthy and a great attraction to the zoo.


Facts about Polar Bears:

The polar bear or the sea/ice bear are the world's largest land predators.  They can be found in the Arctic, the U.S. (Alaska), Canada, Russia, Denmark (Greenland), and Norway.  Each of these countries either banned hunting or established rules for how many polar bears could be hunted within its own boundaries. These rules help keep polar bear populations stable. Today, 25,000 to 40,000 polar bears roam the Arctic

Despite what we think, a polar bear's fur is not white.  Each hair is clear hollow tube.  Polar bears look white because each hollow hair reflects the light. On sunny days, it traps the sun's infrared heat and keeps the bear warm at 98 degrees F (when they're resting).
Polar bear fur is oily and water repellent. The hairs don't mat when wet, allowing the polar bears to easily shake free of water and any ice that may form after swimming.





Male polar bears may grow 10 feet tall and weigh over 1400 pounds.  Females reach seven feet and weigh 650 pounds.  In the wild polar bears live up to age 25.


Polar bears have wide front paws with slightly webbed toes that help them swim.  They paddle with their front feet and steer with their hind feet.  Paw pads with rough surfaces help prevent polar bears from slipping up on the ice.
Polar bears have been known to swim 100 miles (161 kilometers) at a stretch.



Polar bears primarily eat seals. They often rest silently at a seal’s breathing hole in the ice, waiting for a seal in the water to surface. Once the seal comes up, the bear will spring and sink its jagged teeth into the seal’s head.
Sometimes the polar bear stalks its prey. It may see a seal lying near its breathing hole and slowly move toward it, then charge it, biting its head or grabbing it with its massive claws. A polar bear may also hunt by swimming beneath the ice.



Around the age of four or five the female polar bear can start having babies. They usually only have two cubs and they have these babies in a cave they've dug in a large snow drift.  They stay there over winter and come out in spring with the babies.
The babies are much smaller than human babies when they're born.  They are the size of a rat and weigh little more than a pound.  They can grow to full man size in a year if they have lots of food.

Humans are the polar bears only predator.  Baby polar bears often starve.  In fact, 70 percent do not live to their third birthday.  Sometimes seals are hard to find, especially in the summer when the ice has melted.  All across the Arctic, man is moving in to mine oil and coal and there is less space for the polar bear to live.  Oil spills can be very dangerous.  A bear with oil on its coat cannot regulate its body temperature properly.  If the bear eats the oil while grooming it could die.
Man made pollution is also a cause of death.  At each stage of the food chain, pollutants get more concentrated.  By the end when the polar bear eats the seal and it could be lethal.

Joey:  WOW!  I didn't know that!

So that is something to think about!

Thanks For Looking!

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Baby Ga Ga!

Baby Ga Ga!

The newest member of the Johnston Zoo is Baby Ga Ga!

Baby Ga Ga tries to lick the camera!

Baby Ga Ga is a Somalian giraffe. The name search for the new baby giraffe took place during it’s mother’s, “ Bee”, pregnancy of 15 months.
Baby Ga Ga is just a few days old and it’s ossicones are standing up. There has been much excitement at the zoo behind the birth of the baby giraffe. The grand reveal of the new baby is set for next week with many groups scheduling a visit in hopes to see the baby.

Dr. Weeks comes in to observe the mother and new calf. It looks like mother and baby are doing just fine. Dr, Week is the Chief Veterinarian at the Johnston Zoo and oversees the division that provides all veterinary medical care for the Zoo’s animal collection... He also has another job that we will tell you about later.

He just loves animals! He went to see The Day of the Dolphin as a child and it was all over for him. He knew what he wanted to do!

Baby Ga Ga is curious about Dr. Weeks and wants to give him a sniff.
Bee bellows at her calf and he comes back to stand by her side.
Dr. Weeks has cared for Bee since she was a calf. He has often hand fed her too.
He will try to hand feed her now. He is careful because he knows that new mothers can be protective!
Come on girl! That’s right, have a taste! Baby Ga Ga uses this opportunity to get a sniff.
Fa has been brought into the indoor giraffe quarters. This is Fa’s, the father, first time seeing the calf. Baby Ga Ga stands with its’ mother for protection. Ga Ga makes a sound that sounds like a combination or a moo and meow.

Please comeback to see Ga Ga welcomed by the public.

OK, Thanks for looking!