Jane Goodall creating reason for hope  
The silence following Dr Jane Goodall’s speech was deafening – and then came the rapturous applause. Her words were greeted with warmth and passion by the audience who were in Hong Kong for Jane’s Roots and Shoots conference and who themselves, as per the title of the conference, were the Reason for Hope.

An audience of students 700 strong hung on to her every word and left, tenacious, resolved and determined to heal this suffering, suffocating world.






I spoke just before Jane and was able to tell the audience about Jane's very own bear, whom she named "Mandela"






Two days later, after an exhausting round of more talks and interviews, Jane was back on stage – this time at the Roots and Shoots gala dinner at the Grand Hyatt in Hong Kong where, once again, she inspired tears and laughter and the largest dose of optimism for the safety of the planet – which is in our hands.

Thank you Jane, for your wisdom and compassion – and for the road you travel which must leave you hungry for your family of chimps, dogs and humans, but which inspires a whole world of change.

Our love to you.........

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Maggie wins first prize at our latest tree party 
Swaying up there on a tree that no one thought she could climb, there was naughty Maggie who arrived at our Vietnam sanctuary in April 2009 weighing less than 3kgs and now topping the scales at 83kgs!






What a time she had, pulling off branches for Angus and Taurus on the ground below, who could only look up in envy at her tree-climbing skills. Sitting high on a branch for a good 20 minutes, and causing us all to wonder if she was stuck, she soon climbed down with ease when bear worker Nguyen called her over for tea.

Needless to say, the tree in question has now been protected from a bear just a little too ambitious for her own good.

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It's rainin' bears 
Well, as Jude, our Australia Donor Development and Administration Manager said this week, “It’s rainin’ bears!”. And it is.

The latest lucky bears to leave the horrors of bile farming are, in China, a male moon bear, “Jonah”, whom we rescued from an illegal farm in Dandong, Liaoning Province - and in Vietnam, two females, “Clover” and “Mary”, and a male, “Soo”. Please see our Rescue Diary for more about Jonah in China and our new Vietnam bears.

Well done China and Vietnam teams for bringing another four farmed bears safely home to our door.

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Dyeing dogs ..... to death 
I looked with disbelief at a story that has recently appeared in the media here in China - dogs being dyed to resemble wild and exotic animals.

This is a trend that could prove deadly if inappropriate dyes are used - and stories abound of puppies, especially, losing their lives in agony in China at the hands of traders who dye them with toxic colours to make them look "cute". Many of the dyes on the market are poisonous to animals and see them dying in agony a few days later as the toxins enter their system and slowly and painfully poison them.

Please, please anyone reading this - don't be tempted to dye your dogs. Apart from the stress caused to the dogs during the process, and the terrible indignity of trying to change an animal so beautiful in its own right, you could be risking the life of your pet.

See the story here.

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Our beautiful boof brown bears 
Just seconds after returning to my room after enjoying seeing Oliver outside in his grassy enclosure, I heard a message on the walkie talkie from Bear Manager Anna inviting me back again to House 10 where brown bear Rocky was being let out into a den for the first time. So much excitement in one afternoon!

I called Sailing to see if she could help with some pictures and she ran over with her camera and took the most beautiful images of them both.

Oliver, if you remember, was the bear needing surgery on the way back from the farm in Shandong. A hideous metal coil was removed along with his gall bladder in a surgery of several hours performed by Heather and Monica on the back of the truck. As if that wasn't enough, poor Oliver had stunted limbs and a body grossly deformed from his time in the cage - he had languished on two farms no less than 30 years.




Well .... the sight of him literally swaggering out into the enclosure - stretching his stiff old body high into the air to retrieve juicy tomatoes from the tops of the hanging logs, was not to be missed. Every so often he glanced over as if to say "it's pretty good here", before wandering off again to retrieve another tasty treat.






There are simply no words in the English dictionary that can adequately describe how my heart lurched with love and affection for a bear in his twilight years who was so much enjoying his freedom at last. The sun shone, the pool glistened and Oliver smiled for China as his feet got wet.




And then it was on to see Rocky run out of his cage into a den. Except it didn't happen that way at all. This humungous brown bear with the enormous head simply stood and stared when his cage door opened. Confused, cautious and not really understanding what to do with all the space in front of him - it was several minutes before he plucked up the courage to take a cautious step forward, and another couple of minutes before he was brave enough to go the whole way and walk for the first time into his den.





From then on, there was no stopping him - he stretched his face and nose over to the jam and yogurt smeared on to his new hanging-basket bed, or stopped to plunge his soft lips into his drinking bowl and then check out his neighbours next door.

Finally confident enough to walk into the outside section of his den, Rocky looked out in to the enclosure, blinking into the brightness at Oliver as if understanding that his turn outside would be next.

Anna told me later in the evening that Rocky had done a fantastic job of turning his large water bowl into a swimming pool as he repeatedly plunged his head into the depths and tried to wiggle his giant body in too. With a little patience, Rocky will be experiencing the delights of a proper pool later this week.

This blog is dedicated to them both - our handsome, joyous brown bears with fortitude and forgiveness that belies their lives on the farms.




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