海角精品黑料

Keeper: Bao Bao enjoying new life in China

WASHINGTON 鈥 A聽keeper with the National Zoo said Bao Bao聽had a smooth trip to her new home in China, and is adjusting just fine to her new surroundings 鈥 she鈥檚 even learning Chinese, or the panda equivalent anyway.

The giant panda born at the National Zoo in 2013 and brought to Chengu, China, last month 鈥渁te and slept the entire way,鈥 said keeper Marty Dearie in a statement released by the zoo Thursday. 鈥淎ll the weeks of acclimating her to her travel crate paid off.鈥

When her new keeper opened her travel crate at the Dujiangyan panda base, Bao Bao was out and exploring in about one minute.

鈥淪he immediately started exploring and was very relaxed,”聽Dearie said in the statement.

She began eating food from her new keeper, chowing down on bamboo right away (Dearie said she has more types of bamboo there than in D.C.) and even carrots, which Dearie said she wasn鈥檛 very in to at the National Zoo.

And Bao Bao very quickly picked up on the hand signals and gestures of her new keepers, including the Chinese words that go along with them. Dearie said she stayed on in Chengdu for three days in case Bao Bao needed to see a familiar face, but by the time she left, Bao Bao 鈥減referred to interact with her new keeper, which is what I was hoping would happen.鈥

Dearie said Bao Bao 鈥渟eemed very comfortable鈥 when she left to return to D.C., and the keeper hopes we鈥檒l be hearing about Bao Bao becoming a mother in a few years.

Meanwhile, at the National Zoo, Bao Bao鈥檚 little brother, Bei Bei, who was recently separated from mother Mei Xiang, is starting to settle in to independent life. Dearie said the two spend less time vocalizing to each other, which is normal under the circumstances, but both are doing just fine.

Dearie said that Mei Xiang has been 鈥渄isplaying some pre-estrus behaviors鈥 over the last few days, including wandering, water play and what the keeper called 鈥渟cent-anointing,鈥 what one wants to think is the reaction of a proud mom celebrating a successfully emptied nest.

Rick Massimo

Rick Massimo came to 海角精品黑料, and to Washington, in 2013 after having lived in Providence, R.I., since he was a child.聽He's the author of "A Walking Tour of the Georgetown Set" and "I Got a Song: A History of the Newport Folk Festival."

Federal News Network Logo
Log in to your 海角精品黑料 account for notifications and alerts customized for you.