Archive

Archive for the ‘People helping ANIMALS helping People’ Category

La Vista Rescue Center ~ May 29

May 30th, 2010 Ms. Diaz No comments
 

african python

Our trip to La Vista was incredible! ES Animarvelous, MS and HS students, parents and teachers arrived at the La Vista Center in Laguna just after 9am on Saturday. We were instantly attracted to the bearcats and surrounded them with our wonder and cameras. After touring the grounds, Dr Donato arrived with the rest of the My Zoo Volunteers. We were grouped into 3 teams to 1) clear the future bearcat enclosure 2) cut fruits and vegetables to feed the monkeys, birds, turtles and bearcats 3) do landscaping and cleaning.

We were so overwhelmed by the presence of all the animals that it was hard to concentrate on our “jobs”, but we tried our best. Two pet cockatoos were visiting the center with their owner. Many of us took turns to carry them around on our arms and heads. We also became good friends with a pet gibbon. He generously allowed us to play with him, hug him and feed him. Some of us also walked around with a baby African python (not poisonous). 

We ended our wonderful day at the center with joining Teresa’s birthday party (7 years old) who visited the center with her family. The bearcat enclosure is now 50% done and soon the caged bearcats will be moved to the enclosure where they will have more space with their families. 

It was a perfect way to end the school year. See our photos. 

Thanks to everyone! 

Please enable Javascript and Flash to view this Flash video.

ANIMARVELOUS SALE

March 7th, 2010 Ms. Diaz No comments
Bake Sale ~ March 4

Bake Sale ~ March 4

A big thank you to everyone who supported our bake sale last Thursday, March 4. We raised 7800 pesos! At 4pm our table was left with almost nothing. Animarvelous students will decide whether they will use the money to support the PARC Shelter and / or the La Vista Rescue Center to build an enclosure for the bearcats.
 
We had some questions posted during our bake sale. Naturally, the cookies and cupcakes drew more attention than our questions. Please answer some of them and leave a reason for your answer by commenting to this post. Sharing your thoughts sparks a lot of conversation in our group!
 
Thanks for all your support! 
 
Would you buy a wild animal?

Do animals need us? (Irene)

Do we need animals? (Layla)

Is it fine to buy pets from a pet store? (Angelica)

Is it fine to keep animals caged or chained? (Liz)

Do we need to treat animals the way we want to be treated? (Nicole)

Can we live without animals? (Nanami)

How do animals communicate with us? (Seo Young)

How do you treat animals? (Ines)

What do you think about animals? (Nana)

Which are more harmful, TIGERS or HUMANS? (Ruchira)

Bella’s return to Africa

February 16th, 2010 Ms. Diaz No comments

Bella the lioness returns to Africa and shares a special moment with Born Free Founder, Virginia McKenna. Bella spent most of her life in a ZOO in Romania but found a new home in a wildlife sanctuary in Malawi.

YouTube Preview Image

1) Do people only take lions from their natural habitat or also other animals? Could you name a few?

2) Does our natural environment need all the animal species to succeed? What happens to the systems in nature when an animal specie disappears forever?

Born Free

February 8th, 2010 Ms. Diaz 12 comments
Grade 3 Art 0910

Grade 4 Art 0910

Although most wild animals are born free (on land and in the ocean), they don’t always stay free to live their lives in their natural habitats.

Each year, countless animals are taken from the wild and end up at the mercy of people who use them for different reasons. Not all wild animals are born free. Many wild animals are often born in captivity. This means that their parents or their parents’ parents were taken from the wild or their natural habitat.

These wild animals end up in zoos, circuses and other animal shows. Many of them end up us “products” in the illegal wildlife trade. Yes, even endangered species!

There is also good news. There are organizations and foundations (like the Born Free Foundation) that work hard to rescue wild animals from their captive circumstances. These people do their best to return these animals to the wild where they could live freely. Animal sanctuaries and protected areas become the animals’ new home to protect him/her from human harm. Read the following story about Christian the Lion. Christian’s parents spent their lives in a zoo, but Christian was given a chance to live freely.

In 1969 a young Australian, John Rendall and his friend Ace Bourke, bought a small lion cub from Harrods pet department, which was then legal. ‘Christian’ was kept in the basement of a furniture shop on the Kings Road in Chelsea, the heart of the swinging sixties.

Loved by all, the affectionate cub ate in a local restaurant, played in a nearby graveyard, but was growing fast… A chance encounter with Bill Travers and Virginia McKenna led to a new life for Christian. He came to live in a huge enclosure and to sleep in a caravan at their Surrey home.

Then in 1971 he was flown to Kenya, his ancestral home, and returned to the wild by lion-man George Adamson. Nine months later in 1972, John and Ace returned to Kora in Kenya. This clip is of their reunion at that time. It was an emotional reunion: “He ran towards us, threw himself onto us, knocked us over and hugged us, with his paws on our shoulders.” ~ John Rendall

Source: Born Free Foundation

YouTube Preview Image

1) What does it mean to live your life freely?

2) How does Christian’s behavior in the wild compare to his parents’ behavior in a zoo?

3) Complete the following sentence with your thoughts: Wild animals . . .

 

What would you do about it?

January 26th, 2010 Ms. Diaz 8 comments

Mood Painting Grade 4, 09/10 ~ Serene

Mood Painting Grade 4, 09/10 ~ Serene

Look at the following situations. Choose one and share with us what you would do about the situation. How would you be able to change this situation?

1) At a local zoo or circus, you see a bear circling aimlessly, without shade, on a very hot day. What would you do about it?

2) You see many people hurry past a bird with a broken wing who has fallen onto a busy sidewalk. What would you do about it?

3) On your way both to and from school one day, you notice a dog tied up on a short chain, with no food or water in sight. What would you do about it?

4) You see your best friend remove a turtle from a riverbank. What would you do about it?

5) During playtime, your friends take worms and caterpillars from the garden boxes. What would you do about it?

Source: Share the World Program ~ www.teachkind.com

Jane Goodall ~ The Chimpanzee Lady

January 26th, 2010 Ms. Diaz 7 comments

Jane Goodall

Jane Goodall is well-known for her 45-year study of chimpanzee social and family interactions in Gombe Stream National Park, Tanzania, and for founding the Jane Goodall Institute.

Jane Goodall was born in London, England in 1934. As a child she was given a lifelike chimpanzee toy named Jubilee by her father. Jubilee started her early love of animals. Today, the toy still sits on her dresser in London.

Goodall is best known for her study of chimpanzee social and family life. She began studying the Kasakela chimpanzee community in Gombe Stream National Park, Tanzania in 1960. In 1977, Goodall established the Jane Goodall Institute (JGI), which supports the Gombe research, and she is a global leader in the effort to protect chimpanzees and their habitats.

With nineteen offices around the world, the JGI is widely recognized for innovative, community-centered conservation and development programs in Africa and a global youth program, Roots & Shoots, which currently has over 10,000 groups in over 100 countries.

Today, Goodall devotes virtually all of her time to advocacy on behalf of chimpanzees and the environment, traveling nearly 300 days a year. Goodall is also a board member for the world’s largest chimpanzee sanctuary outside of Africa, Save the Chimps in Fort Pierce, Florida.

Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jane_Goodall

Jane Goodall played an enormous roll in helping people to understand chimpanzees better. Her projects have contributed to the conservation of the chimpanzees habitat. Truly inspiring!

Watch the videos ~ Helping Point the Way to a Better World, Introducing Twins Golden and Glitter. To watch the videos, click on the link “Jane Goodall Institute” under the Blogroll.

1) If you could make a difference through studying the way of life and behavior of an animal, what animal would you study?

2) Why did you choose this animal?

3) How would your study help in protecting the animal and their habitat?