Tag Archive Qingdao zoo

ByGD

Forbidden Panda

People behave badly at Chinese zoos. China just doesn’t have the same standards for animal welfare, and most people aren’t as familiar with wildlife as we are in the U.S. It’s out of ignorance not malice that people feed animals through the bars and toss rocks into enclosures to make animals “do something.” That’s part of what we need zoos for – to educate people about animals.

Despite the low standards that so distressed me at the zoo in Qingdao, I got in trouble for using flash near the pandas. I didn’t mean to – my camera was set to auto, and the building wasn’t at brightly lit as I thought. But when my flash went off, a security guard came over and told me I would have to leave if I did it again. We protect what we value.

ByGD

Mall Walrus

Mall Walrus

I’ve mentioned before that animal care standards in China are not quite the same as in the U.S.

And I’ve mentioned their shopping malls that put ours to shame.

These two facts collided on the third day that my daughter and I returned to the brand-new MixC mall in Qingdao. She wanted to go ice skating. The mall had only been open for a couple of weeks, and on this Sunday it was celebrating the new ice rink. So, while she and dozens of others skated, a corner of the Olympic-sized rink was walled off from the skaters. Shoppers piled up along the rink wall to watch the show. First some penguins were trotted out on the ice to run around. Then a trained walrus from one of the city’s multiple aquariums was brought out. Among the walrus’ many tricks, he was trained to dance to the then-top hit “Gangnam Style.”

My daughter and hundreds of local shoppers were charmed. I was so shocked I didn’t even think to complain that it should have been the Lobster Quadrille.

 

 

 

 

 

ByGD

Swimming in a Fish Bowl

goldfish pond

One of the main benefits of travel is learning what life is seeing for yourself that there are many different ways to exist. It can be hard, though, to know how much of your judgement to leave at home, and which values to hold on to wherever you are.

In a country that doesn’t have enough room for all of its people where human rights are not protected, how can we expect them to meet our animal care standards? At the same time, an animal in distress is no less distressing for that knowledge.

I knew better than to visit a zoo in China. But when you’re traveling with a 10-year-old, it’s nearly impossible to pass up a zoo. It was as bad as I expected. Even the goldfish pond was overcrowded.