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Peter Hamilton: Closure of Stanley Park petting zoo is victory for animals

By Peter Hamilton,

In spite of a misleading information campaign by the pro-zoo lobby, the Vancouver park board has decided to finally close the Stanley Park “farmyard” in January 2011. The shutdown could help stop the petting-zoo-industry cycle of abuse and will end the board’s last zoo-animal business in Stanley Park.

The pro-zoo folks have repeatedly said that animal families would be broken up if the petting zoo closes. In 2009, lead animal attendant Shirley Schebel told a local newspaper, “They’re our babies, all of them. Most of these animals have been born and raised here. This is their home. They don’t know anything else.”

However, Lifeforce obtained the park board’s “Stanley Park Children’s Farmyard List of Acquisitions & Dispositions”. As we suspected, most zoo “homes” were not forever and numerous “families” were broken up. In addition, according to staff, there were “no specific written or oral agreements” to prevent abuses when animals were disposed of. The animals can be sold, traded, and given away for free. Their future safety is not guaranteed!

Between 2000 to 2009, the “farmyard” acquired 42 animals plus six bunnies in 2008 that were not on the list. They disposed of 65 animals. That is at least 113 animals that changed hands.

Park board staff would not provide animal inventories from 1990 to 2000. In 2009, Schebel said that there were approximately 150 animals. But there was no accurate accounting.

It was 1988 when Lifeforce told park commissioners of animal abuse at the Fraser Valley Auctions. FVA was where the park board sold petting-zoo baby animals. The board said that the sales would be stopped. In 2008, Lifeforce did a yearlong investigation of FVA and found sick, injured, abused, dying, and dead animals.

The 2000-2009 list of acquisitions and dispositions revealed that the park board continued to do business with a petting-zoo operator and breeder that sells animals to FVA. Albert Anderson, owner of Aldor Acres petting zoo, received one Barbados sheep in 2002 and nine chickens in 2000. In addition, the zoo received six bunnies from him in 2008 (the ones not recorded in the list).

In view of this history, one can only conclude that there were never any happy families of animals at this petting zoo. The frightened animals were continuously chased and poked at by endless visitors. Some were isolated for breeding.

Shockingly there were no contracts to guarantee humane retirement homes for their “babies”. How many ended up at the auction after their cuteness was exploited? How many were abused? How many ended up on dinner plates?

In order to protect these animals and parkland, Lifeforce has asked the park board:

1. To provide written agreements that will guarantee that all of the animals will be given to humane, permanent retirement homes.

2. To guarantee in writing that the animals shall not be sold or given to any animal businesses such as petting zoos.

3. To guarantee that these animals will not be slaughtered for food.

4. To return the petting-zoo area to natural parkland and/or to use it to promote the ecology of Stanley Park. This land must not be given to the Vancouver Aquarium for more expansion to promote marine wildlife imprisonment.

As the sun finally sets over this animal menagerie, we look forward to the day when the suffering of captive and performing animals has ended. Petting zoos are baby production businesses and pose serious health threats to unknowing people. They also misrepresent the harsher reality of inhumane food animal production. Zoo and aquarium prisons are remnants of a Victorian era in which animal collections were to amuse the rich and entertain the poor.

In an enlightened world, all wildlife will be treated with mutual respect and their freedom shall be protected in their natural habitats. Captivity is a failed education and conservation ploy by the entertainment industry. We will only save animal communities when we understand the importance of their natural lives.

Peter Hamilton is the founding director of Lifeforce, a Vancouver-based nonprofit organization promoting animal rights and ecological responsibility.

Comments

Sue S
Thank you Peter for exposing the truth about animals used for entertainment and profits, under the guise of education. You've enlightened the public. I fully support each of your four recommendations. Thank you to the Park Board members for closing the Stanley Park farmyard and I urge you to follow Peter's excellent recommendations.
 
Taffy Williams
Well said, Lifeforce! The Stanley Park petting zoo grounds should NOT be given to the Vancouver Aquarium where - over the years - we've seen so much agony and suffering by the dolphins and belugas in their undersized, human-trash-filled tanks! Further, the petting zoo must guarantee to the public, with independent oversight, that the animals now housed there go to permanent sanctuary!
 
Ashoke Dasgupta
I'm glad to hear it has closed, and hope all zoos will, some day. Birds, fish and animals who, left to their own devices, migrate thousands of miles if not around the world, must find it tortuous to be sentenced to life imprisonment unnecessarily, and to be petted by dozens of strangers in a day.
 
Fantasy Land
Wow. I feel sorry for extreme animal right activists such as this. The drive to rid the world of all animal-related education is only promoting what they say they are fighting against.
How people do not see the educational value and connections made with LIVE animals blows me away. Good for the aquarium and I am looking forward to seeing their expansion and continuation of great education / conservation work.
 
Tricia Holford, Born Free Foundation
Oh dear, Fantasy Land, what an appropriate name! Petting zoos, zoos and aquaria are surely MISeducational. They give our children a distorted view of what an animal is. The connections you refer are only one-sided and twisted. Animals are not commodities for our entertainment and to help parents while away an afternoon. They are active, sentient beings. I've seen too many animals, from rabbits and chickens to orca, living impoverished lives with children and adults having no empathy for their plight, and no understanding of their natural behaviours and biology. Petting zoos reinforce this misunderstanding, and, from an animal welfare persepctive, they are cruel.
 
Shaynie Aero
This is great news for the animals!Many congrats Peter!You worked long and super hard
for this!
 
loveanimals
@Fantasy Land - keeping animals in captivity is no way to learn about animals or how to respect them. I recommend you watch a film called "The Cove" which shows how the opinion of someone who truly loves dolphins changed their minds about aquariums, even though their job was working at one to train dolphins. Animals should be observed in their own natural habitat if anything, and to truly respect an animal, means to respect their right to freedom. Humans used to cage "different people" in this manner to learn from them up close, just like zoos do with animals, but eventually our barbaric race evolves and learns that captivity and suppression is wrong.
 
Ashoke Dasgupta
Fantasy Land, the article and comments may prove educational for you. If not, it's unlikely zoos will.
 
Family Man
Zoos allow families to enthusiastically discover new animals and facilitate discussion with the next generation. Some may even go home to research more and discover how our everyday actions and choices affect animals they've just seen. It's an affordable educational alternative to many families that don't have time or money to experience these animals in their natural habitat. Is this worth a couple of animals in captivity if they're treated right?
 
Britt Lind
Thank you Peter for your incredible work to end this abomination in Stanley Park, and I applaud the park board for their decision.
 
Vegan in Vancouver
Wonderful news that FINALLY this will come to an end. Thank you Peter!!! You've worked very hard trying to ban animals kept in captivity for "educational" purposes. It's such a relief to know it's over!!
 
Theresa Nolet
I hope you can get the authorities to agree to placing these animals in long term homes and not send them to slaughter. I have learned so much about meat animals in the last few months I am now a vegetarian. I do not disagree with eating meat, I am appalled at the cruelty our farm animals endure during life and slaughter. Hats off to you Peter. If we treated the animals humanely and with respect from the start we would not have to protest these things. I have horses and gladly welcome children to visit and learn but I would never breed them just to have "babies" as I am to well aware of the over abundance of unwanted animals. If you really want to educate children let them watch baby male chicks be put into a meat grinder alive because they have no value to the egg industry. Lets truly educate the children about where their food comes from, and not sugar coat it in a petting zoo atmosphere where reality is not discussed or encouraged.
 
Roslyn Cassells
As a former park commissioner I would like to extend my deepest thanks to the outstanding investigative work done by Peter Hamilton on this and many issues relating to human misuse, abuse, and neglect of our animal relations. Thank you Peter for never giving up on justice and freedom for our furred, feathered, scaled, and finned sisters and brothers. I encourage everyone to write the park commissioners at pbcomment@vancouver.bc.ca to ask they adopt the 4 recommendations of Lifeforce regarding the disposition of these defenceless souls. Each and every individual should go to a forever home where all their needs are met, and they never again suffer the exploitation they endured at this outmoded facility in Stanley Park. If only they could talk!
 
Taxpayers R Us
Peter,

Are you sure you want to go down in history as the guy who shut down Stanley Park Children’s Farmyard? And where is this "pro-zoo lobby?" Who is it made up of - a number of parents who've never met?

This is truly bordering on completely insanity.
 
Duf
I find it sad that the Farmyard in Stanley Park, a place we took our children to is being shut down.

It was a tool that parents could use to educate their kids and let them see animals they would not normally see.

I wonder how long it will be before we are instructed that keeping animals in the home is wrong and borders on animal abuse?
 
Amanda D
I would highly recommend that parents who wish to educate their children about farm animals visit a Farm Sanctuary ( http://www.farmsanctuary.org/ ) . Farm Sanctuary rescues animals who have lived a miserable life and are destined for slaughter and now have a chance at living a beautiful life.

Teaching about the truth teaches compassion to eager minds who are willing and want to learn. Children have a natural love and a deep desire to connect to animals. However teaching them that they can pet them on one hand and then sit down to a tortured being on their dinner plates, creates painful confusion at a young age.

This does not teach compassion. It creates a disconnection. The same disconnection which is so deeply harming our planet today.
 
Karami
The attacks against the Vancouver Aquarium are irriating, people continusly attack it for imprisoning animals and keeping them confined. I love animals and I am for protecting them, which is what activities I see going on at the Aquarium. What animal activists fail to recognize is that this facility is actually a safe haven for those animals that would surely parish if returned to the wild.
It drives me nuts to hear people describe the aquarium as an Animal prison when they rescue and release animals all the time. Unfortunatly sometimes animals cannot go back.
For example Helen whose fins were damages by fishing nets could never survive in the wild... she has a better life being protected in the Aquarium then out in the wild where she could be prey instantly.
 
EricW
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/story/2012/02/12/bc-park-...

I hope all the overzealous activists who claimed closing the petting zoo was a good idea are happy now. You just threw all these poor animals under the bus to promote your cause. Maybe you were going after the wrong people to begin with?

I agree with the posters who above who stated that alot of these supposed animal "prisons" are actually taking care of animals that would have no chance to survive in the wild, due to previous injuries and whatnot. It is disgusting that some of these activists take their cause to unnecessary extremes. While it is true that there are zoo organizations out there that are guilty of animal abuse, too many of these overzealous activists end up attacking organizations that DO NOT fall under that category, such as the Vancouver Aquarium and this petting zoo. What an absolute travesty.
 
 
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