One of the most constant questions that I get from zoo
visitors is, “What do you all do with the animals during the winter?” It’s a question that I can get so tired of
answering that I have to remind myself that it really is a legitimate question,
one that a lot of guests wonder about.
My zoo has a decent number of tropical animals, we don’t have any indoor
exhibits, and we’re in a part of the country that can get pretty cold in the
winter (not “Fargo” cold, but cold).
Even though we are open year round, not many guests come by in the dead
of winter to see the animals. I suppose
it’s easy for them to suppose that we crate everyone up and ship them all down
to Florida or someplace. That WOULD be
nice…
In truth, most of our animals handle the winter weather just
fine. Some, like bison and bears, don’t
even seem to notice the cold (or if they do, it’s while thanking heaven that
summer is over). Others, like the
reptiles, can’t stand the cold and have to be moved inside. Most of the animals are in between these two
extremes. Some might be locked inside at
night or in the worst of the weather, but most will be fine as long as they’ve
got shelter. “Shelter” means different
things to different animals; for some it might be a block-building with a gas
heater and heat lamps, for others it might be a wooden lean-to. At any rate, all will be given lots of
bedding, fed extra well, and be under the watchful eyes of the keepers, who
will make sure that everyone is warm and safe, and adjust the animals’ care as
needed.
A better question?
What do the KEEPERS do in the winter.
The answer: suffer.
I should have stayed a reptile keeper. That’s what I remind myself every winter;
every year, I feel a little less capable of handling the cold. In the good old days, I could wear shorts
year round – all I needed to do was make the thirty yard dash from the car to
the 80 degree, tropical paradise in which I worked. Now I have to wear so many winter clothes
that the simple act of going to the bathroom is preceded by a fifteen-minute
ceremony of removing four or five layers until I can even find my fly. In comparison,
the animals have it easy – even the ones who stay outside year round can just
hunker down in a nest box or doze under the heat lamp. We HAVE to be out and about…
It’s not just the cold, either – every aspect of the job in
winter makes life harder. Locks freeze;
you have to squeeze them in your bare hands or breath in them or hold a lighter
under them to melt the ice inside of them.
Water bowls freeze up (to be fair, in the summer this headache is
replaced with algae), and the ice has to be chipped out, and then removed from
the exhibit so that animals don’t cut their feet on it. Poop is frozen to the ground. Heavy snowfall can damage exhibit roofs. Tools become brittle and break. Heat lamps have to be tended to endlessly: is
the bulb burning out? Is it too close to
something flammable (like, say, your bird’s right wing)? Animals are pooping and peeing in their
bedding more, which needs to get cleaned out more.
Of course, there are advantages to the winter as well. Peace and quiet is nice; on those rare days
when it’s cold enough to keep the crowds away but not too cold to work outside,
a lot of projects can get done. A lot of
the animals seem to prefer the winter to the summer, being more comfortable in
snow than heat. This is obvious for a
lot of the North American and Eurasian animals, but even a lot of the tropic
species aren’t the wusses that guests seem to think they are. This is especially true after a snow fall –
it’s amazing to watch kangaroos, lions, and zebras playing in the white
stuff. Plus, snow has awesome enrichment
opportunities – hide food in it, make snowmen for your animals to pounce on,
stash some in the freezer to bring out in the summer… and it’s fun for keepers
too! Provided that it doesn’t come down
in six foot increments and threaten to collapse every structure in the zoo…
See, he doesn't look TOO miserable!
So winter at the zoo isn’t ALL bad. It can actually have it own charms, which
are, of course, best appreciated from inside the break room, especially if your
zoo is lucky enough to have a working coffee/hot-chocolate maker, and especially especially if someone was wise
enough to bring in donuts that day. As
long as the animals are okay and no keepers lost fingers to frostbite, it’s all
good. Besides, spring (and the crowds…
and mulching… and weeding… and all of those other jobs) will be there before
you know it.
Happy first day of Winter!
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