Tales from the Wilderness Canoe Expedition – Free Adventure Talk Webinars

Expedition leaders and founders local based, Canoe Trail, Richard Harpham and Ashley Kenlock are no stranger to canoe adventures and expeditions. They have covered over 11,500 miles and canoed many iconic locations particularly in North America and Canada. Their adventures have regularly been featured in various media outlets and at national shows and they regularly give talks at local schools, Scout groups and corporate events so they are no stranger to sharing their stories.

This Tuesday, 26th Jan between 7 and 8 pm (including some time for questions), you can join their inspiring and action packed adventure talk webinar – Up a Creek Without a Paddle – Tales from the Wilderness. Joining the adventure is completely FREE but you will need to register via the following link Tales from the Wilderness beforehand.

So grab a drink, get your PJs on and settle onto the Zoom to enjoy the adventures and hair-raising moments! Featuring stories of incredible wildlife, including bears, wolves, and lynx and even covering some bloopers and other misadventures along the way.

This first talk on 26th Jan 2021 is focussed on their Canadian Wilderness expeditions including the Yukon River, Ontario, Temagami and the North Seal River Expedition to map the river in Manitoba

Talks are all FREE but don’t forget to register!

Rich and Ash will be sharing  stories from canoe trips on the Yukon River (8 different expeditions) from the trail head to Circle Alaska, North Seal River and some of other Canadian wilderness trips.  Highlights include 10 mins with a wild lynx, Northern Lights, running huge rapids, getting stranded and even racing the Yukon from Whitehorse to Dawson in under 60 hours.

Save the Date: Tuesday 9th February 2021

Canoe Trails next talk will be by Helen Reeves, Olympic Kayaking Medalist and BBC commentator on Tuesday 9th February 2021. Tune in for Helen’s inspirational talk about her Olympic journey and life after the Olympics…

The animals went in zoo by zoo…

With the latest lockdown, ZSL Whipsnade Zoo has sadly had to close their doors again. like many of you, we have membership at the zoo, we love visiting their and miss it when it isn’t open so its always nice to see what the keepers and animals have been up to!

If you can spare a few pennies, please consider making a donation to the zoo to help them to look after their animals in these difficult times.

Here’s what they have been up to this week!

Zookeepers conduct first lockdown stocktake at ZSL Whipsnade Zoo  

Thousands of animals stood up to be counted on Thursday, at ZSL Whipsnade Zoo as zookeepers kicked off the biggest task of the year behind closed doors – the first lockdown annual stocktake. 

 While the rest of the country is in lockdown, Whipsnade’s dedicated keepers continue to care for the animals at the UK’s largest zoo and this week began to take stock of each and every invertebrate, bird, fish, mammal, reptile and amphibian – a compulsory task required as part of the Zoo’s license.  

 Home to almost 4,000 animals and 280 species, ZSL Whipsnade Zoo saw many new arrivals in 2020 – boosting the numbers of threatened species, including some which are Extinct in the Wild. Despite being closed for a total of 18 weeks in 2020, the zoo’s vital conservation work continued behind closed doors.  

 Nilo, an endangered red panda cub was born to mum Tashi, seven Chinese water deer increased the numbers of the herd at the Zoo, and 14 Pere David deer, a species which is extinct-in-the-wild, were born in the summer.  

 Chief Operating Officer Owen Craft said: “Despite everything that 2020 threw at us and the huge challenges we continue to face, it’s so encouraging to take stock and highlight the positives in the last year.  

 “Our dedicated animal carers – zookeepers, vets, service teams – ensured our vital conservation work continued despite repeated closures and the financial pressures that created for us. As we now face another prolonged period of closure, we’re asking for support once again – any donation makes a huge difference.”  

 As part of the international conservation breeding programme, two new female Southern white rhinos – Jaseera and Fahari – were moved to the Zoo in Autumn and its hoped that their introduction to Whipsnade’s male Sizzle will encourage a further increase in the population’s numbers.  

 ZSL Animal Manager, Matthew Webb said; “As well as being a legal requirement for our zoo license, the stocktake gives us a chance to look back on the remarkable results of the past year. We’re so proud to have played a part in many conservation breeding programmes and to have helped increase numbers of threatened species, and we’ve been able to add some wonderful animals to the tally.  

 “The last year presented us all with so many challenges. Here at Whipsnade we had to get used to new ways of working and saw some of our plans altered or paused – we were not expecting to be counting the sea lions again this year but we’re looking forward and determined to make 2021 another success for conservation.” 

 A requirement of ZSL Whipsnade Zoo’s license, the annual audit takes keepers almost a week to complete and the information is shared with other zoos around the world via a database called ZIMS, where it’s used to help manage the worldwide conservation breeding programmes for endangered animals. 

 Reliant on income from ticket sales to care for the animals and fund their global conservation efforts, repeated enforced closures have put the charity zoo under huge financial pressure. Vets and zookeepers continue to provide the highest level of care for the animals, working throughout the lockdowns. ZSL, the international conservation charity behind the Zoos, is calling on the public to help ensure they remain open by donating to ZSL at www.zsl.org/donate