Current:Home > NewsAs fire raged nearby, a tiny town’s zoo animals were driven to safety -ProgressCapital
As fire raged nearby, a tiny town’s zoo animals were driven to safety
View
Date:2025-04-23 06:20:00
BIG BEAR, Calif. (AP) — With a major wildfire burning near his mountain town east of Los Angeles, Cowboy the barn owl was unaware of the danger and instead having the adventure of a lifetime.
Perched in the front seat of a truck, Cowboy — along with nearly 50 other animals — was being evacuated Sept. 12 from the Big Bear Alpine Zoo in the face of the advancing Line Fire, which blazed through more than 60 square miles (155 square kilometers) of the San Bernardino National Forest.
“He just had the greatest time,” said Mike Barnes, Director of Animal Care and Health at the Living Desert Zoo and Garden in Palm Springs, where Cowboy was being taken. “They said he was probably going to be a handful on the ride down and he was the biggest sweetheart.”
In less than 48 hours, two-thirds of the zoo’s animals had been safety evacuated. About a week later on Thursday, Cowboy and the other animals returned home.
“They just had this little kind of holiday, if you will, down here in the desert,” said Heather Downs, animal curator at the Living Desert.
It was the second time that Big Bear Alpine Zoo animals were transported to the Living Desert during a wildfire. Each time, lessons are learned.
The Line Fire spewed out billowing clouds of smoke, turning the skies orange and filling the air with hazardous particles. For birds and smaller mammals, who have higher respiratory rates and are especially sensitive to air quality, they needed to get out of there fast.
The residents of the Big Bear Alpine Zoo are not your usual zoo inhabitants. The sanctuary houses rehabilitated animals that are unable to be released into the wild, many of which are elderly and have injuries.
One of the eagles is blind in one eye after suffering from DDT poisoning, which means staff had to add perches and stumps lower to the ground in its enclosure and move logs that could be tripping hazards, Barnes said. The sanctuary houses many other birds who can’t fly, as well as a three-legged kit fox who also needed special accommodations.
Left behind in Big Bear were the bears, bobcats, mountain lions, snow leopards and wolves, who were moved inside where they were protected by HVAC systems and air-scrubbers.
The animals that were transported couldn’t go on a full stomach, but zoo staff made sure everyone was fed that night when they arrived at the Living Desert.
There was one arthritic sandhill crane that looked “a little down, a little dumpy,” but a veterinarian determined it was simply grumpy from the change in temperature, Barnes said.
During the evacuation, Big Bear zoo curator Jessica Whiton transported two foxes who left behind a memorable scent in the back of her car, but it was mostly a stress-free experience for them, she said.
“We had them positioned so they could see out the window, and they curled up and watched the drive down the mountain,” Whiton said.
The Living Desert regularly drills and prepares for scenarios where they have to take in or transport large numbers of animals. The nonprofit zoo partners with government agencies to hold confiscated wildlife and help rehabilitate animals, and had more than enough holding space to take in visitors.
Barnes’ Thursday began at 6 a.m. as he loaded up an array of birds — cranes, hawks, barn owls and a pelican — and made the winding two-hour drive back to the animals’ mountain home.
Back at the Living Desert, Piper the red fox was getting ready for her ride home.
The one-year-old orphaned kit stood on top of her crate and sniffed at it curiously in her enclosure. Staff train the animals to get used to their crates by repeatedly placing treats inside, which is helpful in emergency situations like these when they have to be transported for a long period of time, explained Big Bear animal keeper Alex Palmer.
“Today we’re going to be crating her back up, hopefully voluntarily, getting her loaded up in one of our transport shuttles and getting her back up to the zoo,” Palmer said. “She’ll be a lot happier, a lot more comfortable hopefully, and back with her neighboring foxes.”
veryGood! (2)
Related
- Olympic disqualification of gold medal hopeful exposes 'dark side' of women's wrestling
- Missouri governor commutes prison sentence for ex-Kansas City Chiefs coach who seriously injured child in drunken-driving wreck
- How are big names like Soto, Ohtani, Burnes doing with new teams in MLB spring training?
- Texas wildfires map: Track latest locations of blazes as dry weather, wind poses threat
- NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
- Q&A: Maryland’s First Chief Sustainability Officer Takes on the State’s Climate and Chesapeake Bay Cleanup Goals
- Federal officials will investigate Oklahoma school following nonbinary teenager’s death
- USWNT rebounds from humbling loss, defeats Colombia in Concacaf W Gold Cup quarterfinal
- 'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
- Actor Will Forte says completed Coyote vs. Acme film is likely never coming out
Ranking
- NCAA hands former Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh a 4-year show cause order for recruiting violations
- Transgender Afghans escape Taliban persecution only to find a worse situation as refugees in Pakistan
- Nikki Haley wins the District of Columbia’s Republican primary and gets her first 2024 victory
- Inside the story of the notorious Menendez brothers case
- Everything Simone Biles did at the Paris Olympics was amplified. She thrived in the spotlight
- Trump escalates his immigration rhetoric with baseless claim about Biden trying to overthrow the US
- Why Joey Graziadei Is Defending Sydney Gordon After Bachelor Drama
- Patient and 3 staffers charged in another patient’s beating death at mental health facility
Recommendation
'Most Whopper
U.S. official says there's a deal on the table for a proposed cease-fire, hostage release deal with Hamas
Organizations work to assist dozens of families displaced by Texas wildfires
Texas firefighters battle flames stoked by strong winds as warnings are issued across the region
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
32 things we learned from 2024 NFL scouting combine: Xavier Worthy sets 40 record, J.J. McCarthy builds buzz
Resist Booksellers vows to 'inspire thinkers to go out in the world and leave their mark'
Head Start preschools aim to fight poverty, but their teachers struggle to make ends meet