Monday, January 13, 2014

Happy, happy Hippo hunting grounds

This has nothing to do with the outdoors as such (unless you're planning an African safari - the real thing and not one of those lame "photo safaris where the greatest danger lies in being stampeded to death by other guests rushing for the breakfast buffet).

Anyway, North America's oldest hippo in captivity is now the former oldest hippo in captivity.

The Cleveland Metroparks Zoo released a statement today (Monday, Jan. 13) that reads:

"Blackie, the oldest Nile hippopotamus in North America, was euthanized in his off-exhibit enclosure in Cleveland Metroparks Zoo’s Africa barn today due to advanced age-related ailments. He was estimated to be 59, and it is believed he set the record for the oldest male Nile hippo ever recorded.
 
"He sired three offspring, all males, during his time at the Zoo and he was a favorite of many guests and staff members.

"Due to his advancing age, the Zoo built a special addition with a heated pool onto the Africa barn for him in 2008. He lived out his last several years contentedly eating copious amounts of produce and floating lazily in a pool he didn’t have to share.

"Blackie came to the Zoo from Africa in 1955 when he was about 1, and generations of Clevelanders grew up seeing him in the former Pachyderm Building.
 
"He was born at the Mount Meru Game Sanctuary in Tanzania and brought to Cleveland by Zoo officials and board members, including Vernon and Gordon Stouffer, who were gathering animals on a safari, which was an acceptable method of acquiring zoo animals prior to the passage of the Endangered Species Act.

"Hippos typically live between 30-40 years in the wild and can live a few years longer in captivity. They are herbivores, and in the wild they graze mostly on grasses. They eat a wider variety of foods in the zoo including hay, vegetables, fruits and other produce.
 
 
"Despite the name, however, the hippo’s closest biological relatives are whales and dolphins.
 
"Hippos are classified as 'vulnerable' by the International Union for Conservation of Nature. Hippo populations are declining due to habitat loss and poaching but are still found over a large range of eastern and southern Africa."
 
What makes this release interesting from an outdoors standpoint is the most recent issue of "Guns & Ammo" magazine includes a story by firearms/hunting expert and retired Marine Corps General Craig Boddington on hunting Africa's dangerous game animals.
 
While that list includes such shoe-in species as the water buffalo, lion and elephant also on the list is the hippo, widely regarded as both intelligent as well as a nasty-tempered brute that annually kills scores of people.
 
Boddington says hippos are true trophies and hunting them should only be done when the hunter gives the animal the proper respect it deserves.
 
- Jeffrey L. Frischkorn

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