Exhibits (NAV) Posts

by , Keeper
I'm extremely excited to be working at the Museum since October 2010. My favorite part of this job- besides working with the animals- is listening to all of the Keeper stories, I hear a new one each day. In my spare time I enjoy hiking, belly dancing, and vegan cooking.
I work Sunday through Thursday. I can be found mostly behind the scenes or training the Ring Tail Lemurs.

A bowl full of mashed chow and banana…

May 15th, 2012
 

…Helps the medicine go down!

Keeper Jill wrote a post “Time for your medicine” about all the tricks we use to get animals to take their medicine. She posted pictures of the Red Ruffed Lemurs taking some meds.

The Ring Tailed Lemurs aren’t so easy! But I found a very easy mix of mashed lemur chow and banana that seems to mask their dewormer enough for them to eat it.

 

Here's the mashed chow

Add mashed banana

Add the dewormer

Mix it all together

 Cross your fingers and hope they eat it all 

Cassandra (in front) and Satyrus eating their dewormer mix

Lycus eating his dewormer mix

 

 
 
 
 

Join the conversation:

  1. My dog had to take a liquid dewormer once. I mixed it with cooked mashed liver. It smelled awful but he loved it! I’ve learned a lot about how to enrich my dog’s life through the keeper blog!

    Posted by leslie

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by , Director
I've been at the Museum sooooo long - almost as long as Erin's been alive. I do a little bit of everything as part of my job: care for the animals, work with the keepers and other staff, spend time with guests. Lucky me!
I spend a lot of time behind-the-scenes, or here after hours, but if you really want to see me, I am often in the bear yard scooping poop Thursday mornings.

QuikPost: Interesting wolf article

May 12th, 2012

It’s an interesting read- take a look at this interesting yet sad –  report of a wolf in Alaska who apparently died of starvation.

http://www.alaskadispatch.com/article/why-lone-alaska-wolf-traveled-thousands-miles-only-die-starvation

******************************************

And don’t forget, you can still help out red wolves until 11:59 PM on May 15th:

The Red Wolf Coalition- the only not-for-profit whose only goal is to advocate for the long-term survival of the red wolf – is part of an Earth Day Fundraiser through Crowdrise. Right now through May 15th, the Coalition is part of Crowdrise’s Earth Day Challenge. Any dollar amount large or small would help. Donate in honor of the Museum’s wolves, an animal keeper, or just because. An extra $25,000 could be won to help red wolves!

Join the conversation:

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by , Keeper
I'm extremely excited to be working at the Museum since October 2010. My favorite part of this job- besides working with the animals- is listening to all of the Keeper stories, I hear a new one each day. In my spare time I enjoy hiking, belly dancing, and vegan cooking.
I work Sunday through Thursday. I can be found mostly behind the scenes or training the Ring Tail Lemurs.

QuikPost: Bear Enrichment

May 10th, 2012

I had to make peanut butter pinecones for the Bear’s enrichment the other day and tried something a little different. I rolled the peanut butter pinecones in shredded carrots, added just a few raisins and drizzled with a little honey. Gus Bear loved them! The grass was too high that day for me to get a good picture of him eating them though.

Bear Enrichment

Join the conversation:

  1. It’s like carrot cake but with pine cones!

    Posted by leslie
  2. Let me know the next time you give these to the bears. I’d love to come down and watch!

    Posted by Shawntel
  3. Keeper Comment :

    The next time the bears are scheduled to get peanut butter pine cones is Wed the 23rd. I’m off that day but I believe Aaron will be working in ETW- give him a radio call in the a.m.

    Posted by Kimberly Lawson

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by , Director
I've been at the Museum sooooo long - almost as long as Erin's been alive. I do a little bit of everything as part of my job: care for the animals, work with the keepers and other staff, spend time with guests. Lucky me!
I spend a lot of time behind-the-scenes, or here after hours, but if you really want to see me, I am often in the bear yard scooping poop Thursday mornings.

Groundbreaking for Red Wolf Center!

May 8th, 2012

 

Kim breaks ground!

Kim Wheeler, the Executive Director of the Red Wolf Coalition, sent me some photos of groundbreaking for the new wolf exhibit out in red wolf country. This will be the only facility located in the heart of red wolf country- where red wolves roam free – where people can actually see a red wolf. The enclosure will be finished sometime this summer, and I’ll keep you informed as to when wolves will arrive for viewing. It’s exciting!!

truck loads of fencing materials arrived May 7.

 

Installation begins.

 

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by , Director
I've been at the Museum sooooo long - almost as long as Erin's been alive. I do a little bit of everything as part of my job: care for the animals, work with the keepers and other staff, spend time with guests. Lucky me!
I spend a lot of time behind-the-scenes, or here after hours, but if you really want to see me, I am often in the bear yard scooping poop Thursday mornings.

QuikPost: Red Wolf Quarterly Report

May 3rd, 2012

Here’s the 2nd quarter report from the red wolf recovery program. Please ask if you have questions.

RedWolf_QtrReport_FY12-02

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by , Director
I've been at the Museum sooooo long - almost as long as Erin's been alive. I do a little bit of everything as part of my job: care for the animals, work with the keepers and other staff, spend time with guests. Lucky me!
I spend a lot of time behind-the-scenes, or here after hours, but if you really want to see me, I am often in the bear yard scooping poop Thursday mornings.

Crowdrise challenge: help raise money for red wolves

May 1st, 2012

The Red Wolf Coalition- the only not-for-profit whose only goal is to advocate for the long term survival of the red wolf – is part of an Earth Day Fundraiser through Crowdrise. Right now through May 15th, the Coalition is part of Crowdrise’s Earth Day Challenge. Any dollar amount large or small would help. Donate in honor of the Museum’s wolves, an animal keeper, or just because.

Consider donating:

$25. One dollar for each year the red wolf has been restored to the wild at Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge.

$20. One dollar for each year the Museum has housed red wolves.

$13. One dollar for every red wolf pup born at the Museum

$10. One dime for each wolf that roams free at Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge.

The link to the fundraiser is below: 

http://www.crowdrise.com/redwolfcoalitioneart

Join the conversation:

  1. Hi Sherry- We have a question: A friend saw an animal at the museum that she says looks like a rabbit but isn’t a rabbit. What could it be? I haven’t seen whatever it is so I couldn’t help! Thought I’d go straight to the source!

    Posted by Galia Goodman
  2. Director Comment :

    Galia- give me more info please? was it a wild animal? An exhibit animal? Inside/outside?
    Happy to help if I can have some more identification markers…
    maybe a chinchilla?

    Posted by Sherry Samuels
  3. …..wondering if there is an address where I can mail a donation. I’m an old school fool in regards to donating via the internet. :)

    Posted by dj
  4. Director Comment :

    Red Wolf Coalition
    Post Office Box 96
    Columbia NC 27925

    THANKS!!

    Posted by Sherry Samuels

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by , Keeper
I have worked in the animal department for about 5 years. Some of my favorites include ferrets and birds. I am also known for my weird obsession with things relevant to the 80's.
I work Tuesday-Saturday and can be seen training our pigs on occasion.
Tags: ,

Chicks are here

April 29th, 2012

That’s right. We got a whopping 2 chicks out of the 42 we tried to hatch. Lots of different factors attributing to such a low hatch rate. Humidity and temperature mostly.

Here they are waiting for their cage to be cleaned. The black ones name is Joker and the one behind it is Penguin.

Join the conversation:

  1. Holy Chicks Batman! Nice choice for names!

    Posted by Shawntel

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by , Keeper
I have worked in the animal department for about 5 years. Some of my favorites include ferrets and birds. I am also known for my weird obsession with things relevant to the 80's.
I work Tuesday-Saturday and can be seen training our pigs on occasion.
Tags: ,

Candling the eggs

April 24th, 2012

The other week we had a candling session with some of our staff. Candling is when you take the egg, shine a light underneath it in the dark and are able to see a shadows from inside the egg.

If you were to candle an egg from the supermarket you would see

NOTHING!

However, if you were to candle a fertile egg you would see

Something!?

That picture there is of a fertile egg.

In the video below you can see some blood vessels and the embryo moving

YouTube Preview Image

I tried to get images and video of our own eggs but, it didn’t come out really well. All of these images are from Backyard Chicken Forum which is an eggcellent source of information all things chicken!

When we candled our own eggs a different time we were able to see the embryos moving and we all became very eggcited (sorry its too tempting not to use the word egg). When we first candled them on day 8 we could tell that some were not even fertilized and some had developed. Candling another time proved that some of those fertile eggs had stopped developing which is not uncommon when incubating eggs.

We just wont know the whole truth until hatching day which is just around the corner.

I am still working on a blog about the chicks parents so look for that too.

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by , Keeper
I have worked in the animal department for about 5 years. Some of my favorites include ferrets and birds. I am also known for my weird obsession with things relevant to the 80's.
I work Tuesday-Saturday and can be seen training our pigs on occasion.
Tags: ,

Operation H.A.T.C.H- Days 14,16 and 17

April 22nd, 2012

Fourteenth day – embryo is in position suitable for breaking shell

Sixteenth day – scales, claws and beak becoming firm

Seventeenth day – beak turns toward air cell

 

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by , Keeper
I'm extremely excited to be working at the Museum since October 2010. My favorite part of this job- besides working with the animals- is listening to all of the Keeper stories, I hear a new one each day. In my spare time I enjoy hiking, belly dancing, and vegan cooking.
I work Sunday through Thursday. I can be found mostly behind the scenes or training the Ring Tail Lemurs.

Shrimpcicle

April 21st, 2012

I grabbed the camera when I saw Keeper Jill walking down the hall with a shrimpcicle. What the heck is a shrimpcicle, you ask? Shrimp frozen into an icecube = enrichment for the water turtles.

Jill holding a shrimpcicle

Below are several pictures of 3 of our water turtles enjoying their afternoon enrichment

 

                                                                                                                    Click on the picture below to see it closer up

Join the conversation:

  1. What a brilliant idea

    Posted by Jill

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