A zoo is like a microcosm of nature itself. So many different species living together, only in close quarters and with the added complication that they constantly have to interact with humans. What could possible go wrong?
These zoo keepers and others who work with animals all around the world recently went online to share their favorite stories and anecdotes about their furry friends from work. If you're an animal lover, this is definitely for you.
40. Don't mess with chickadees
39. Take your Advil, long neck!
38. Monkeys on the loose
37. Tucking tail
36. Arms race
35. Taste the rainbow
34. I now want a manatee
33. They're seriously smarter than many humans
32. Oh yeah, they'll rob you
31. Poor Wallace Montgomery
30. A very big kitty
My favorite animals to work with were the ferrets. Super playful and sweet. The only sad thing was that they don’t have a very long lifespan.
The skinks were super cool and chill. They loved when I rolled my sleeves up and let them rest on my warm arms (they are cold blooded).
The bobcat was really sweet and honestly just like an overgrown house cat except for the huge teeth and claws. We tossed boxes into her enclosure and she would play with them just like a domestic cat. She also purred really loudly. It was super cute.
29. Don't take my baby
28. Later gator
We have a children's zoo at our local jail. (The animal's (most are rescue or seized) are cared for by the inmates and a full time farmer.)
We once had two alligators in a pen together. When we got them, they were both about three feet long. As they grew, one got a bit larger than the other (about four feet). One morning, the farmer and the inmates found only the larger one and, um, "leftovers" of the other.
Apparently, the is natural behavior for gators. You don't want to be the runt of the littler.
27. He's giving you a free lunch!
We had a kookaburra who would catch lizards, snakes, frogs, and even earthworms so he could feed them to you. You would be standing around doing your job and all of a sudden he shows up on your shoulder trying to force feed you a lizard he whacked on the ground 30 times.
Oh by the way if you covered your mouth, why not try the ear? The ear is a great place to put a dead lizard or live earthworm...
26. Get ready to do your touchdown dance
I worked at a zoo a few years ago. I used to dread having to deal with the ostriches a little bit. The reason was because every time they'd lay eggs we'd have to gather them. As expected they don't like it very much and chased us every time. It's like carrying a football, running for the end zone and being pursued by 250 pound linebacker who is perfectly capable of killing you.
25. The legendary Harambe
So no one here will believe me but... I literally worked with Harambe.
I interned at the Cincinnati zoo in the primate department. I helped prep diets, clean enclosures, develop and deploy enrichment etc. I didn't get to work directly with gorillas because they were deemed too dangerous for non-employees but I walked by their enclosures often and could see them through the housing. We had two family groups, one usually hung outside for part of the day and when they came in, the other would go out.
Well Harambe was in a group with two females and he usually was separate from them when they were indoors and hung out at the far end of the indoor enclosure. Well I had to walk by his enclosure to get to another animals' to clean it and EVERY SINGLE TIME I walked by his enclosure he would charge the enclosure door closest to me and slam it with his fists. Every single time. Scared the crap out me every time.
Apparently he came from a zoo where the keepers were less than kind and they were all guys so he associated guys with bad memories. A good portion of keepers at Cinci Zoo were ladies so he loved them just fine.
Probably just a product of bad experiences.
24. Bad bats, bad bats, whatcha gonna do?
I'm an intern in a well known zoo. We have a wet cave filled with probably 1000 short tailed leaf nosed fruit bats. The door is surrounded by a wire cage. When we go to feed them we just let the door open and let the bats fly in the cage. When we leave we have to herd them back into the cave. As an intern I'm not allowed to touch them. So I put my hand up by them to guide them.
Except they don't like that and they'll fly right in my face and hover there for a few minutes to send some kind of message.
One day I was by myself doing it and one of the little troublemakers would not get in the damn cave. I stood there for like 10 minutes doing jazz fingers and he just hung there.
Bad boys.
23. You're not going to move 5o0 pounds of turtle
I work with some Aldabra tortoises. They have an outdoor pen, but obviously they are stuck in a smaller indoor enclosure during the colder months.
They won't leave you alone. I was watering the plants at one point, when two big males came up behind me and pinned me to the wall. I pinwheeled my arms and fell onto one's back...sort of got to ride him.
Other times, they decide to sit RIGHT IN FRONT OF THE DOOR. So you're stuck until you convince them to move. You certainly aren't going to move 500 pounds of turtle on your own.
If you put a squeegee against the wall, they simply HAVE to knock it over and sit on it.
Got the hose out? Yup. Gotta sit on it.
Bringing out food? Sit right on the feed troughs.
In fairness they live a long time so they’re basically grumpy old men. But still, guys… come on.
22. My funny looking dog
My first 'proper' job, between high school and college was at a Zoo (South Lakes Wild Animal Park, in England). My favorite animal to work with was the babirusa; we only had one and he used to 'escort' me around the perimeter of his enclosure whenever I was in the area. If I stopped, he'd stop, if I walked backward he would turn around and follow. He would crazily wag his tail and make, what I assumed to be, 'happy' snorts. He seemed to genuinely enjoy seeing me, and when I didn't have much of anything to do I'd make my way over to his pen, just to rub his back. He was like an old, happy, doggo.
21. Silverback breakout
As a current zookeeper, having two silverback gorillas escape into the keeper area was the single craziest and most terrifying thing that has happened to me.
Two adult male gorillas got into the keeper hallway due to keeper error. The two keepers got out by going onto the gorilla exhibit and climbing out by a ladder (brought over by another keeper). I was part of the team that helped get them secured. Basically we used fire hoses to force them out to their exhibit and then sprinted down the hallway and locked the door. It took about 3 hours total and I was pumping adrenaline like crazy the whole time, especially running to lock a door with nothing but like 100 yards between me and the gorillas.
20. Why I otter
I work at an aquarium. We have one male sea otter who likes to play with himself right in front of the glass in the most prominent spot. His junk is bright red and he just strokes it and nibbles at it in front of everybody. Every single day. Lucky for me, I’m the one who stands by the exhibit, so I'm the one who has to field all the awkward questions from the guests.
19. Chimp or treat
18. Hungry hungry hippos
17. Birds of a feather
16. Rafiki tricked you
15. Getting a free bath
14. Future Cy Young winner
13. Early dentists
12. Sir Winston Churchill
11. White ferret privilege
I volunteered at a Zoo (well, the Children's Zoo part of a Zoo) when I was a teenager. Nothing too crazy ever happened that I saw, but we did have a ferret there that would bite black kids. No one else, just them. And yes, it was a completely white ferret named Snow.
Guess they didn't want to put up a "Warning: The white ferret is racist" sign because they eventually got rid of it.
10. Creepy crawlies
I volunteered at the Smithsonian National Zoo for a summer back in high school! But I worked in the invertebrates hall. I got to play with Madagascar Hissing Cockroaches, ctenophores, spiders, mantis shrimp... Okay, didn't play with the mantis shrimp, but I watched it a lot.
Best creature: Great Pacific Octopus. I got to clean her tank and she loved to try and get out. She was beautiful and brilliant and just generally awesome to see in action.
Worst: Creepy golden orb spiders. They never left their web so we didn't have glass over their exhibit. I haaate spiders. One of the scientists told me a horror story about their babies once. Usually when they found an egg sac they put it in a special hatchery, but once they missed one and opened the doors in the morning to an exhibit FULL OF SPIDERS and they had to put them all in the right spot.
Ironically, the octopus was a total jerk who tried to escape all the time (she got my hand twice, although I was never injured) and the spiders were the chillest creatures in there.
9. You talking to my girl?!
8. I wish I could slap that owner
Former zoo employee here, worked reptiles. Well-socialized reticulated pythons are awesome to work with. The facility where I worked had an 18 foot female that had been abused by her previous owner. (When he sold her to the park he slapped her across the face to prove she was tame.)
She was only a few years old and 8 feet long at the time, and just recoiled and tried to escape when he hit her. It took the park nearly a year and a half to get her comfortable with being handled, and now she's extremely docile and comfortable around people.
The zoo I worked at regularly held a giant snake show, where guests could pet and take pictures with our biggest snakes. This retic is the park's biggest snake, and best show snake by far.
7. One ill tern
6. Just like dealing with toddlers
5. You lost, kid
4. Friends with a tiger
I used to be a zoo keeper and animal trainer! I mostly worked with large carnivores so my experience is with them.
Tigers and lions, of course. Tigers are just intense while being cuddly at the same time and it's amazing. We had a 3 year old female that would rub against my legs just like a house cat and nearly knock me over. They are seriously the best and there's nothing in the world like having a bond with a 400 pound apex predator. You have to be careful though, the really sweet ones make it easy to get too comfortable. Most maulings are because of things that ultimately stem from forgetting the dangers.
Lion cubs are adorable. I raised these two that would lay in my lap when they ate. I would put a bowl of meat down, they would grab a piece then plop in my lap to eat it, and repeat. They're at a big place in California now doing great.
Lemurs are cool too. I've never worked with them, but I took a girl on a date once to play with some. I was working to buy a roadside zoo and turn it into a sanctuary, and I convinced the owner to let me bring a girl in with two ringtail lemurs. It was on a day they were closed so it was just the two of us in the whole place giving blueberries to lemurs.
Bears are filthy animals. They have no instinctual hygiene habits it seems.
Leopards are rad but you can't trust them. Their predator switch flips faster than any other big cat and of you don't watch for behavior changes really closely you won't catch it.
I once threatened to quit if I had to work with primates. I hate monkeys, and great apes push the captivity line for me. Unless you have a very good reason like a sanctuary or are actively contributing to conservation, there is no reason for an ape to be in captivity. Education is not enough,
Sometimes I miss that life.
3. The great escape
2. Tuna, tuna, tuna, EXPLOSION
My time to shine! My favorite story is when I was doing audience shows at an aquarium in New Jersey. We had yellowfin tuna in the ocean tank which was 780,000 gallons IIRC maybe 70ft x 70ft wide from overhead. Now yellowfin are some of the ocean's best and fastest swimmers. They can get up to 45mph underwater, which is cool when you would see the small school of them zip back and forth in the tank, but they'd have to stop every 70ft or so because of the wall or make a quick pivot and try to circle around the tank.
So one day I'm helping out with a dive show where divers are in the ocean tank behind a 50ft tall window and there's ampitheater seating in front of it. The ampitheater is packed with kids on field trips and they're watching as the tuna are zipping back and forth from one end of the tank to the other. The show people are yakking on about sea creatures, and the school of tuna are coming back this way full blast. And one of them didn't make the turn fast enough. So I was looking right at it as it slammed into the thick acrylic window at full speed. It went:
Tuna, tuna, tuna, EXPLOSION.
now there are other carnivorous animals in this tank namely 11 sand tigers, sand bar sharks, a couple 17ft long stingrays and some loggerhead turtles (not carnivorous but they'll eat whatever) and lunch has been served!
It's a feeding frenzy and the amphitheater of school kids are screaming. Chaos erupts! everyone is shock. some kids are trying to run away and climb over each other. The girl with the mic has no idea what to do. The diver in the tank just looks up as the swarming mass of ocean fury is taking place over his head. After about a minute it's more amazing than horrifying and people are glued to their seats.
Eventually the sharks tear the tuna up into so many pieces every thing dissipates and chunks of tuna sail around the tank all day and you can see the turtles biting at a tuna head. Best day at the aquarium ever!
1. Fick thinks he's a camel