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  1. #26
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    I was back at the zoo again last week, still dirty, crowded and small cages. But what do you expect for 40 cents per person?






    Anyway, there is a slight jewel in the crown, so to speak, the Schmutzer Primate Centre. It is at the back of the ragunan zoo, and you are required to pay 5000 rupiah more (50 cents)



    Firstly a guard checks your bags, no food or drinks is allowed inside the centre, since you are not allowed to feed the animals. You then walk across a 7 metre high bridge, to observe animals that may be in the open.






    There are also a series of swing bridges and ropes through trees, but a lack of maintainence has meant that they are now closed.

    In theory it is a rehabilitation centre and the animals are supposed to be released into the wild, once rehabilitated.




  2. #27
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    Nice thread KW but how bloody depressing !
    Is this the national zoo or a privately run local one ?

  3. #28
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    National Zoo.

    Possibly the schumtzer primate centre was privately funded/run, i suspect that the Dutch built and paid for it, since it is so much better than the rest of the zoo. But they (current zoo management) have let it get run down now.

    An arguement for Capitalism if I ever saw it.

  4. #29
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    poor mites.

    Three Sumatran tiger cubs born at Ragunan zoo

    Hasyim Widhiarto , The Jakarta Post , Jakarta | Wed, 11/25/2009 7:34 PM | Jakarta
    A Sumatran tiger gave birth to three cubs at Ragunan Zoo, South Jakarta , on Thursday, zoo chief Enny Pudjiwati says.

    “The delivery was successful and all three cubs are now in a healthy condition,” Enny told reporters on Wednesday.

    However, the sex of the newborns was not known because the mother was very protective and would not let anyone near them.

    “We hope we can introduce the cubs to the public after a month,” she said.

    With the three new additions, Ragunan Zoo now has 35 Sumatran tigers.

    The Sumatran tiger is classified as an endangered species and is protected by law.

    According to the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), there are less than 500 Sumatran tigers in the wild, and this number is declining due to massive illegal logging and deforestation.
    Three Sumatran tiger cubs born at Ragunan zoo | The Jakarta Post

  5. #30
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    Quote Originally Posted by kingwilly
    Possibly the schumtzer primate centre was privately funded/run, i suspect that the Dutch built and paid for it, since it is so much better than the rest of the zoo. But they (current zoo management) have let it get run down now.
    A bequest from a Dutch lady.

    Tasa Nugraza Barley
    The Schmutzer Primate Center, located inside Ragunan Zoo, has created an environment that aims to emulate the natural habitats of the animals. A bridge and a tunnel have also been installed for visitors to get a better view. (JG Photo/Tasa Nugraza Barley)
    Monkeying Around at Jakarta's Schmutzer Primate Center

    The zoo keepers who take care of the apes and monkeys at Ragunan Zoo have a problem: Their wives get jealous of the time they spend caring for their charges.

    “All I can say to her is that it’s my responsibility to look after these animals,” said Dwi Suprihadi, who has worked at the zoo since 1994, transferring to the Schmutzer Primate Center when it opened in 2002.

    Dwi and 22 other zoo keepers are tasked with keeping the center’s primates healthy and happy.

    Zoo keeper Namin, who has worked at the zoo for seven years, said taking care of monkeys was like taking care of babies. “Primates are like humans and need love and care,” he said.

    Namin said that primates, especially the apes, also feel emotions like anger, sadness, even jealousy. Sometimes, he added, the older primates get angry or jealous if he gives food to the younger ones first. “For that reason, a zoo keeper has to remember each primate’s character traits,” he said.

    The center is named after a Dutch woman, Pauline Schmutzer, a painter who lived in Wonorejo, East Java. Schmutzer proposed the idea of opening the first primate center in Indonesia. She also donated much of her wealth to make such an undertaking possible.

    Schmutzer, an active member of The Gibbon Foundation, an organization that campaigns to preserve endangered animals in Indonesia, died in 1998, four years before she saw her dream become a reality.

    The center, which opened in August of 2002, occupies 13 hectares of the zoo’s 140-hectare facility at Ragunan and proudly claims to be best primate center in Southeast Asia, citing its size and the fact that it is the only center in the region to host gorillas.

    Aburizal, 25, and his friends recently visited the center for the first time.

    “I was shocked to see that the primate center was this good,” he said, adding that he had expected it to be similar to other tourist attractions in Jakarta, by which he meant poorly maintained.

    He said he also was surprised by the size of the gorillas.

    “They look kind of scary, but it looks like they’re actually quite nice animals.”

    The Schmutzer Primate Center has six species of primates: orangutans, gorillas, chimpanzees, macaques, gibbons and leaf monkeys.

    Dwi said that over the past seven years, the center’s staff members have worked hard to create facilities that resemble the natural habitats of the primates in an attempt to create the best possible enclosed environment for the animals.

    “In some of the enclosures, natural food is grown so that the primates can feel like they are living in the real jungle,” he said.

    Visitors to the Schmutzer Primate Center are prohibited from bringing food or drinks with them.

    If you happen to be carrying even a bottle of mineral water, you have to store it inside one of the lockers provided at the entrance gate. The idea behind these strict measures is to make sure that visitors aren’t tempted to feed the primates.

    “We strictly implement this policy because we monitor the diets of all the primates very carefully,” Dwi said.

    He added, however, that there were still some visitors who would badger the animals.

    “Some visitors like to make funny sounds or throw things at them. The gorillas don’t like that, they can get stressed,” Dwi said.

    For that reason, the zoo keepers are always encouraged to conduct routine patrols during busy hours.

    Of all the primates at the Schmutzer Primate Center, it is the gorillas that receive the most attention from the visitors.

    Namin said the center was proud to be the only place in Southeast Asia that kept gorillas. Currently, there are three male gorillas at the Schmutzer Primate Center.

    The gorillas were donated in 2002 by the United Kingdom’s Howllets Wild Animal Park.

    They are low-land gorillas originally from African countries such as Congo and Gabon.

    The three gorillas are named Kumbo, Kihi and Komu . All weigh about 170 kilograms. Both Kumbo and Kihi were born in 1995, while Komu was born in 1997.

    “Gorillas can live up to 40 to 50 years. These gorillas that we have can grow up to 200 kilograms,” Dwi said.

    Due to their size, and the influence of such Hollywood films as “King Kong,” there is a general misconception among the public that the largest of the primates are killing machines.

    “That’s not true,” Dwi said.

    He explained that a gorilla was highly unlikely to attack unless provoked. “That’s why we sometimes refer to them as gentle giants,” he said.

    However, Dwi emphasized that gorillas were still considered wild animals and even the zoo keepers had to be careful not to make direct contact with them.

    Rusdi Indradewa, 25, another visitor to the ceneter, said he had suffered from a phobia of monkeys for a long time and that he had come to the Schmutzer Primate Center to overcome this fear. He said he had never liked monkeys and that just being around them left him shaking.

    “Those gorillas look so big and scary,” Rusdi said. But he was surprised to find out that gorillas only ate fruit and vegetables.

    “I have to say that it wasn’t easy, especially being so close to those big and scary gorillas. It took me an hour to work up the nerve to go inside the complex,” he said.

    The Schmutzer Primate Center has worked to provide comfortable enclosures for the animals and also to give visitors the opportunity to view the apes, gorillas and monkeys from different angles in enclosures resembling as much as possible their natural habitats.

    A seven-meter-high bridge crosses one section of the gorilla enclosure, and visitors are able to watch the animals interacting with one another from above.

    A walk through a tunnel in the orangutan enclosure allows visitors to get up close and personal with the “man of the forest.”

    Dwi acknowledged that, as a zoo keeper, a strong emotional attachment had grown between him and the gorillas.

    “I see them as my friends and family,” he said. “I always get angry when people try to harm or annoy them.”

    Monkeying Around at Jakarta's Schmutzer Primate Center - The Jakarta Globe

  6. #31
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    Zoo map


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