The carousel, seats, pyramid, and slide were all made out of heavy steel. Manfred was the only one strong enough to move the carousel, excerpt perhaps little Ursula herself. Also all day long Manfred would walk the bears back and forth one by one up and down the shoots to condition the pads on the bear’s paws.
I remember when they first got there that we had to knock each bear down and trim the hairs between their toes. We also had to doctor their pads from the sores that was caused by the long hairs. Dr Martin Dinnes, DVM from California did the work and I really don't remember Ursula or Manfred hanging around while we did it. I can to this day still remember the smell of formaldehyde and some other smells of those days.
Seems to me that one of you enterprising souls should start collect and packaging these paint removers and sell them to the public. This would eliminate the wimpy removers that we now have.
The EPA should not have a problem with the chemicals since they are a natural product of some of the most beautiful animals on earth.
Of course, the elephant stands head and shoulders above them in beauty. However, the elephant poo is about the best fertilizer (properly aged) that one can obtain. Bob Kitto
6 comments:
The carousel, seats, pyramid, and slide were all made out of heavy steel. Manfred was the only one strong enough to move the carousel, excerpt perhaps little Ursula herself. Also all day long Manfred would walk the bears back and forth one by one up and down the shoots to condition the pads on the bear’s paws.
I remember when they first got there that we had to knock each bear down and trim the hairs between their toes. We also had to doctor their pads from the sores that was caused by the long hairs. Dr Martin Dinnes, DVM from California did the work and I really don't remember Ursula or Manfred hanging around while we did it. I can to this day still remember the smell of formaldehyde and some other smells of those days.
She claimed that the pads sores
were due to the chemical reaction
between the urine & the zinc in
the galvanizing of the cages that
the bears haden't encountered
in any previous situation
Slightly off topic
The shop in Tampa where we had
the cat cages galvanized each
year (by dipping the entire
cage in a tank of hot zinc alloy)
said they had never seen any
corosion as serious as that in
any other previous situation
Yeah Chic, bear wiz will eat the paint off anything, as a matter of fact so does Lion and Tiger piss! :)
Seems to me that one of you enterprising souls should start collect and packaging these paint removers and sell them to the public. This would eliminate the wimpy removers that we now have.
The EPA should not have a problem with the chemicals since they are a natural product of some of the most beautiful animals on earth.
Of course, the elephant stands head and shoulders above them in beauty. However, the elephant poo is about the best fertilizer (properly aged) that one can obtain.
Bob Kitto
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