Animal Edventure Park and Safari | January 8 2023 | Ep 303
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Welcome to Animal Adventure Park and Safari in Sub-Saharan Miami.
Yes, Sub-Saharan Miami.
Proven by my friends here.
We have had time to get to know each other, as you can see.
Very friendly.
This is Bobby right here.
Bobby is extraordinarily friendly.
So is Carl, who's bigger and somewhat older.
They sort of work in a trio.
With a third one here, Chloe.
But Chloe... See how they... See?
Look.
There you go.
Oh, yeah!
Yeah, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
So if I did that with Chloe, I am told, my fingers might come off.
Well, we don't want that to happen.
Now here's one that was a rescue.
Hey, Magnus.
You were saved, huh?
Magnus wants to make friends, look!
Magnus, we love you also.
No, don't push away.
Oh, you want attention from humans?
Now, how was Magnus ignored?
What happened to Magnus?
He was just super, super skinny when we got him.
Was he abandoned?
Pretty much, yeah, you could say that.
For about two weeks he wasn't taken care of properly, so the owner's animals had to be taken away, and we were one of the places that they called to take in a certain amount of his animals, and we were able to house him.
What was the worst situation?
The worst condition?
I'd say the camel was in the worst shape.
They came with two skunks as well.
The skunks weren't a decent... They were okay, but he was pretty skinny.
He had no hump when he got here.
Had no hump?
Yeah, no hump.
Can you imagine him with no hump?
Wow.
So what did you have to feed him certain food?
I mean, you do this all the time.
Yeah, feed him some extra food, give him some extra supplements to make sure he stays nice and healthy.
So this wasn't one of your tougher cases?
No, no.
Yeah, you've had some really tough ones.
We'll talk about those later.
Oh, Magnus.
See, Magnus?
Magnus.
You got a pretty good situation here, huh, Magnus?
Well, we'll be back.
The Coley trio and Magnus.
And in the background is a somewhat shyer camel, who also was saved.
A rather big camel, it looks like to me.
And that camel's named Maggie, like Maggie Thatcher.
Now Maggie is still shy, right?
Was Maggie mistreated?
And where did she come from?
I see, I see.
She just came with a lot of health problems. She had a lot of bacterial problems. I'm going to work through and drain
some persists And where did she come from?
Icy Icy and they abandoned her no shoes in a a pasture with cows actually and that's how the bacterial infection
So what my guess would be is she could have got horned by a cow, which is perfectly normal.
Yeah, sure.
And it just was never taken care of.
So now you would say that, I know we've talked about this many times, but you say the camels are very smart.
Very smart.
And loving.
Yep.
As long as you treat them right and you treat them with respect, they'll give you that love and respect right back.
I can see that.
These are incredibly affectionate animals.
Look at this guy.
Look at him looking up.
They seem very smart, too.
All right.
Now we're going to move on because the name of this place is Animal Adventure.
How's it going, guys?
I'm Sean from Animal Adventures, and this is Eleanor, our spider monkey.
And this is my daughter.
Oh, wow.
We got all giants stuff going today.
That is awesome.
Getting ready for Sunday.
Yep.
And that is Franklin and my son, Sean Jr.
So Franklin, you got both of them together.
We got both of them together.
One was in deep trouble and the other was okay.
Yeah, she was fine.
Franklin was in really bad shape.
He was only 0.39 kilograms when we got him.
About a third the size of what we're looking at right now.
Yeah and very very rough all over his face.
He had lesions growing inside of his mouth.
He wasn't eating and he was losing hair and thankfully we had a vet that was able to help us out. We still aren't sure exactly what was wrong
with him, but he is 98% better. The only issues he has now is he's regrowing some of the hair around
his face and his back. No, it'll be fine. It'll probably take a couple of months for it to regrow
all that hair, but he's doing great.
He's tripled his weight since he's been here. He's eating.
Over a month? Yeah, just about a month.
So would you consider that a lot of progress?
Yes, unbelievable.
We were convinced he was probably not going to make it.
I have to say this, maybe this is just a silly human reaction.
They look very smart.
They look smart.
So look, when I'm looking at this one here, it looks like she completely understands me.
Yeah, so what's funny is I've been kidding around that at five months old these guys are smarter than any of my children were for the first few years.
Humans are the slowest developing animals.
But we're the most complex, too.
You're looking at me a lot, aren't you?
Maybe you're the one that wants to go on camera when you get yourself together.
Oh, you're scratching yourself, huh?
Okay, well, that's alright.
People do that, too.
They only have four fingers, no thumbs on their hands, but they do have thumbs on their feet.
They have opposable thumbs, which is pretty awesome.
So with their feet, they could use it just like we use our hands.
Franklin, he had to spend a lot of time with him while he was getting his meds, while he was getting his IVs, and he's pretty good, but he'll cry if he leaves him.
She's really attached to me, but she'll go to her and hang out with her a lot.
They have a love-hate relationship where she will hang out with her no problem,
but the second she sees me, she might bite her and run down and jump to me, which is pretty funny.
So we don't know if they're related.
No, we don't think they're related, but when we got them, they were together and they were super close.
They, you know, were very difficult to pull apart.
And that was... Was this one sort of taking care of that one?
Because that sounds like... No, but they would hug each other and kind of hold on to each other.
But he was in rough shape and we were really scared that whatever he had... Of course, yeah.
Age difference?
They're about the same age.
But you could also see there's a huge difference in size, right?
So that sound you guys just heard is from our rough lemur troop that we have right here.
Rough lemurs are actually the second loudest primate in the world.
They come from Madagascar.
They're critically endangered.
They do not have prehensile tails like our New World monkeys do.
But their hands work just like our hands.
So if you get a nice close look at their hands, they have hands just like us.
They have fingerprints just like us as well.
This is one of their favorite things to do.
This is how they show affection is grooming one another.
So for a lemur to like you, you actually have to work for them.
Lemurs do not like being held, but they love holding on to you.
So if they're holding on to you and you're giving them some belly scratches, they will stay with you until you're done with those belly scratches because they feel like you're grooming them.
And this is Mars here.
He's a red ruff lemur.
There's only about 900 of them left in the wild.
His wife back there, that's Melody.
She came to us about a week after COVID started.
Her owner can no longer take care of her or afford her.
The black and white ruff lemurs, there's about a thousand of them left in the wild.
This is Katrina.
She's an F1 Savannah cat.
She's the largest breed of cat in the world that you can own.
She comes from an African serval and a domesticated Savannah cat.
She's about 75% serval, which is a wild African cat.
So this horse here, you'll see his name is Gunner.
If you look at his ears, his ears are brown.
That's going to be known as a medicine cap.
And what's really cool about that is years ago, in the Native American tribes, when they would appoint their medicine man, He would only ride on a horse that had a medicine cap and that would be the easiest way for other tribes to identify who was riding a horse towards them to make sure that it wasn't somebody that was going to be stealing from them or hurting them.
It would just simply be the medicine man coming to distribute whatever they needed within the tribes, which is super cool.
It's a really awesome and easy identification for them.
These are red kangaroos, the largest marsupials on the planet.
The difference is they're females.
So females only grow up to be four and a half feet.
And the males?
And males are six feet.
So the males are the ones that will grab you, they can do some damage.
The females would rather hug you and kiss you.
Are all the males aggressive?
It's not that they're aggressive, but they're like, imagine an MMA fighter practicing every single day.
So from our viewpoint, it looks like they're aggressive, but they're actually just playing with each other and educating each other on how to fight.
And what do they fight?
Breeding rights?
So they fight who's going to be the alpha of their mob.
So when you are an alpha, you wake up every morning waiting for somebody to test you.
And if you're not an alpha, you wake up every morning practicing until the day you feel comfortable enough to test the alpha.
That's a male?
Yeah.
And the females, all they really do is they take care of their kids.
They eat, they feed them, they groom each other.
They are the most docile, friendliest animals on the planet.
Yep, these are all females.
We put our male in there when anyone comes out.
How often do they breed?
And these guys have one to two babies a year.
And the male, how often does he?
As many every day.
He would?
Yeah, he drives.
Does he?
Yeah.
So what's incredible...
They don't get pregnant every day.
So a kangaroo is pregnant for only about 30 days.
So their babies are born premature.
They're born with no arms, legs, no tail.
They're born blind, deaf, and the size of a little jelly bean.
Um, so, yeah.
When you said jelly bean, are you being... This big.
The thing coming out of there three and a half months ago was this big.
So now what is it?
Now it's about that big.
Has it come out yet?
No, not yet.
When will, when will this... Two, two, three months from now, this kangaroo will be out.
So it'll be in there about six months?
Yeah, six to nine months in total.
Are we getting this information?
It's, uh, yeah, it's, it's in, it's the most incredible thing ever.
So what she's doing right now is actually cleaning her baby.
She has a baby that's only a week old and see how she's hunched over like that?
She's licking the inside of her pouch cleaning her baby.
That one is?
Yeah.
No.
Yep, she just finished.
So her name is Colosso.
She's been out of her mom's pouch for about three to four weeks now, which is super cool.
But now she can pretty much do everything on her own, but she still gets bottles of milk.
Does she go to the mom for milk also?
No, so her mom pretty much kicked her out of the pouch and was like, oh, I'm done.
I want to be on my own.
Mom's working on other ones now.
She's perfect.
Yeah, she lives in the house with my family and I.
Are you kidding?
Yeah.
Yeah, this is Chloe's baby.
Will she eventually join the other kangaroos?
Eventually, yeah.
Once she's a little bit bigger, she'll go out there with all of them.
But will you have her come back in the house?
If she wants to, yeah.
We usually try and keep them in the house for as long as possible, because we love hanging out with them in there.
But some of them will stay in the house as long as they want, and others will just let us know, like, hey, I'm ready to move out.
I have the feeling that kangaroos may be your favorites.
Yeah.
What's his name?
Duke.
Of course.
Hey Duke!
Duke!
Hey Duke, those all your babies out there?
How many of the babies are yours, Duke?
Duke, do you pay child support?
Oh yeah, let's go over here.
Let's look.
This guy is muscular.
Whoa!
Much different than the females.
Do the two males ever go at it?
We separate them.
Is one more alpha than the other?
No, they don't even know.
They've never hung out with each other.
So this little group here is his group.
So the ones that were taking care of the babies In the pouch were his babies.
Duke's babies.
Hey, Duke!
Hey, Dukey!
Oh!
Dukey's going right for the girls.
Well, there's a little baby there, right?
Hey, Duke!
Who's the little baby there?
Is that your little baby?
Is that your little baby Duke?
See your baby Duke?
Bye.
You made a nice baby there.
Is that a male or a female baby?
Looks like a male.
The whole group is going?
Where's the baby?
Where's the baby?
That's the baby right there?
So now what were the others all excited about?
about.
Just because we were around.
Look, see the umbilical cord still hanging out of the mother?
She just dropped it!
She's remarkably agile for just being born.
She was on the ground.
And typically when the mom rejects the baby, it means that she senses there could be something
Like an illness?
Yeah, an illness that we don't see or know about, but that could happen.
Or first-time moms also will reject because they're scared and they don't know.
There she goes.
She's in there again now.
She's pushing.
Yeah, mom definitely is... I think she may.
Oh, she made a real stab at it.
Look at that.
Did you see that?
The stab she made at it?
I don't think she's in there yet, but she she's getting there.
Larry, what are you gonna say?
Yeah, I know there should be a Speaker of the House, Larry.
Look, okay, you want to tell me you guys are better organized?
Yeah, I think that's right here.
Yeah, very good.
I agree.
We'll try.
Well, it was quite a day to be at the Animal Ed Venture Park Safari.
Right near Palm Beach.
Not too far from Boca and...
Fort Lauderdale, not too far from Miami, just a little ride on the highway.
You go a little west, and there you are.
And you're going to meet some of the most interesting animals.
I think it's much more interesting than a zoo.
You learn more.
The Kalin family, who have started it and run it, and now it's quite an enterprise, are like what you want an American family to be like.
They're wonderful.
They're wonderful just as human beings and they're wonderful to these animals and they understand them and explain them so well that it is an education.
The kangaroo was the one I was most interested in because I've been talking about kangaroos for a long time because when I was in Australia I met up with some kangaroos and I was told they were dangerous and They could get vicious, and they could impale you, I don't know, rip you, and stuff like that.
They told me, no, no, no, the kangaroos are sweet, and they're wonderful, and they're beautiful animals, particularly the females.
The males are always practicing fighting, so that's how you can have problems with them, but not out of maliciousness, but they're dangerous, because they're constantly practicing fighting.
But the females are like dolls, they're terrific.
The way they give birth, of course, I never understood either.
And they described it to me because a couple of them had little babies in their pouches.
And I was a little confused when they described this at first, but let me see if I described this correctly.
When the female gives birth, She gives birth to a little thing that, you know, that comes out of the vagina like this.
It's about this big.
They say it looks like a jelly bean.
If you look carefully, you can see the outlines of a creature, right?
You can see a little bit outlines.
But it then crawls along or moves along the fur from the vagina to the pouch.
It stays connected, I guess, to the hair or something, or the body, and it makes its way into the pouch.
Now, this is even more remarkable.
In the pouch are four teats.
One, two, three, four.
And it finds the right one for baby.
New baby.
Because there are four.
New baby, coming along baby, pretty well-developed baby, and baby that's already out but coming back for a little milk from mommy.
When somebody has moved along, let's say here or here, she can give birth again and another one comes, and then this all closes down, and this one takes priority for a while.
They have a lot of babies.
And, second, the mothers, the female kangaroos, are so sweet.
You'll see the pictures.
And then we learned about camels.
Always want to know about camels in case you're in the desert and need one, right?
And man, the monkeys, do they make noise.
But are they fun and are they smart?
I mean, you look at them and you feel like we can have a conversation.
Come on.
We were there in the middle of this whole thing going on in the House of Representatives and a bunch of them seemed like maybe they should be going to vote.
I hope you really enjoyed this particular episode because it is, you know, different and every once in a while it's kind of fun to do something different like we did when we went to Desert Rescue, you know?
It's also fun for me, I hope it's fun for you.
You let me know.
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Hmm?
For the winter?
You got them for your friends?
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That's taking care of your friends.
So, talking about taking care of your friends, if you're anywhere in the vicinity, the only way you can get to Animal Adventure Park and Safari is by reservation, to see what I'm telling you about, because this is interesting, really interesting, and I'm not going to say it's complex stuff, but it's a good lesson in biology, let's face it.
Given the way education has fallen apart, come on, take your kids here.
It's at 8545 U.S.
Highway 441.
8545 U.S.
Highway 441.
Boynton Beach, Florida, which is between really Palm Beach, Boca Raton, those areas.
North of Fort Lauderdale, south of Palm Beach.
The phone number to call is 561-475-4441.
That's 561-475-4441.
Make a reservation, and they'll take you on a tour, and you'll get to see what I got to see.
We even saw a mommy give birth to a baby sheep.
We got there right, I didn't see the actual, but within seconds.
of the little baby coming out and standing up and trying to stand up and then getting rid of the placenta and the mother encouraging her and showing her how to take the milk with her.
This is what you gotta do.
We have hard times right now in terms of people depressed.
Take them to see things like this.
They get to see what God's world is really all about.
So, hope you enjoyed this one.
A little different.
Go to RudyGiulianiCS.com.
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