Lots of time in transit this week, so I’m just going to share a few quick photos of the Baby Panda breeding center in Chengdu.
The baby panda nursery is the highlight of the center, but they don’t allow photos. You do have the opportunity to take a photo of yourself holding one of the babies for $150. In price and as an activity, something just didn’t feel right about pretending the baby pandas were toys, so I declined.
The babies in the nursery were one of the most adorable things I’ve ever seen in person. There were 5 of them in a crib. The nurse would pick them up, feed them, clean them off and then return them to the crib. When she sets them down, they don’t sit up, they don’t roll over, they don’t do anything except collapse into an amorphous ball of fur with a face, flowing out on the table as though they were made out of furry, black & white Nickelodeon slime.
As part of their natural birthing process the babies are born prematurely, weighing only 1/1000th of the weight of their mother. An offering on the tour was a film about the panda life cycle and it showed how the mothers are woefully unable to care for something so small. In one clip, the mother was pawing at the baby with her enormous fingers, essentially beating it to death without really meaning to. She just had no clue how to treat the tiny offspring. (pssst. Don’t worry, the staff was able to separate them and rescue the baby).
As if it wasn't bad enough they eat all day, they don't even get off their backs if they don't have to.
Once the babies hit a month or two old, they are returned to the mother to care for them until they grow old enough to head out on their own.
The species is going extinct, not only because of the difficulty in getting adults to breed, but also because the babies rarely survive in a natural environment. It’s actually astounding they didn’t go extinct centuries ago with their poorly evolved survival abilities.
There were also red pandas at the center. I think they added these because they’re much more spry, running around and playing like weird mutant raccoons.
Trivia time – it’s a little known fact, but in the movie Kung Fu Panda, Shifu is a red panda. Could be why he was so resentful of the big guy and yet was able to develop a kinship with him. (unabashed plug from my past life: If you haven’t seen the movie, go buy it and look for my name
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The red pandas also have an odd habit of finding a small plant, backing up onto it and then scratching their butts with it by wiggling back and forth. Like many places in China, they evidently don’t believe in toilet paper.
I was disappointed I didn’t get photos of the babies in the nursery, but overall, it was an amazing experience and I highly recommend a visit.






