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snowleopard

Alberta Game Farm - Guidebook Cover

Guidebook from the late 1970's. This park was later named the "Polar Park", and opened on August 1st, 1959 and closed to the public in 1998. The list of species was close to the best in the world at the time, and this thread has more information on the animals at the park: http://www.zoochat.com/223/edmontons-polar-park-11902/index2.html

Alberta Game Farm - Guidebook Cover
snowleopard, 21 Jun 2009
    • snowleopard
      Guidebook from the late 1970\'s. This park was later named Polar Park, and opened on August 1st, 1959 and closed to the public in 1998. The list of species was close to the best in the world at the time, and this thread has more information on the animals at the park:

      http://www.zoochat.com/223/edmontons-polar-park-11902/index2.html
    • snowleopard
      Alberta Game Farm (later renamed Polar Park) = now closed.

      Complete list of species at the park (approximately late 1970's). This list is not a total of what the park had from its August 1st, 1959 opening to its 1998 closing...but rather a list of what was there AT ONE TIME in the late 1970's. Incredible collection, but mainly in huge, fairly basic wire/wood paddocks. I visited at least a couple of times ever year for the first 10 years of my life, and this species list is from a 74-page guidebook from the late 1970's. It is amusing to see some of the names given at that time, but it almost seems as if this is a listing of species at the Berlin Zoo!

      HOOFSTOCK: 90 species

      Grevy's Zebra
      Damara Zebra
      Chapman's Zebra
      Grant's Zebra
      Hartmann's Mountain Zebra
      Woodland Caribou (only park with all the caribou species in the world)
      Barrenland Caribou
      Peary's Caribou
      Osborn Caribou
      Reindeer
      Bighorn Sheep (the first zoo in the world to have Bighorn, Dall + Stone Sheep)
      Dall Sheep (the Brookfield Zoo is the only other zoo with this species)
      Stone Sheep
      "Fannin" Sheep (hybrid mix of Dall + Stone Sheep)
      Barbary Sheep (Aoudads)
      Moufflon Sheep
      Himalayan Tahr
      Rocky Mountain Goat (the only captive breeding herd in the world)
      Yak
      Moose
      Muskox (approx. 20 at the park and largest herd in captivity)
      Wapiti
      White Elk
      Przewalski's Horse
      Onager (Persian Wild Ass)
      Sicilian Donkey
      Poitou Donkey
      Mule Deer
      White-Tailed Deer
      Fallow Deer (white, black + spotted colour variations)
      European Red Deer
      Pere David's Deer
      Indian Sambar Deer
      Roe Deer
      Chinese Water Deer
      Muntjac Deer
      Eld's Deer
      Japanese Sika Deer
      Peking Sika Deer (also called Dybowski's Deer)
      Formosan Sika Deer
      Barashinga Deer
      Axis Deer
      Prairie Bison
      Wood Bison
      European Bison (Wisent)
      Chamois
      Markhor
      Caucasian Tur
      Siberian Ibex
      Asian Elephant
      Reticulated Giraffe
      Bactrian Camel
      Dromedary/Arabian Camel
      Llama
      Alpaca
      Guanaco
      Vicuna
      White Rhino
      Pygmy Hippo
      Malayan Tapir
      Brazilian Tapir
      White-Tailed Gnu
      White-Bearded Gnu
      Blackbuck
      Blesbok
      Gemsbok
      Addax
      Scimitar-Horned Oryx
      Beisa Oryx
      Nilgai
      Dama Gazelle
      Thomson's Gazelle
      Grant's Gazelle
      Goitered Gazelle
      Defassa Waterbuck
      Common/African Waterbuck
      Pronghorn Antelope
      Saiga Antelope (wow!!!)
      Cape Hartebeest (1st cape hartebeest born in Canada)
      Ankole Cattle
      Eland
      Greater Kudu
      Cape Buffalo
      Asian Water Buffalo
      Roan Antelope
      Sable Antelope
      Nyala
      Gayal (1st gayal born in North America in March of 1976)
      Gaur
      Banteng

      FELINES: 14 species

      Siberian Tiger (approx. 8 at the park)
      African Lion
      Snow Leopard
      Amur Leopard (North Chinese Leopard)
      Cougar
      Asian Golden Cat (Temminick's Cat)
      Leopard Cat
      Pallas' Cat
      European Wildcat
      Cheetah
      Bobcat
      Canadian Lynx
      European/Siberian Lynx
      Caracal

      CANINES: 8 species

      Grey/Timber Wolves (approx. 18 at the park)
      Coyote
      Arctic Fox
      Kit Fox
      Korsak Fox
      Fennec Fox
      Blue Fox (colour variation??)
      Silver Fox (colour variation??)

      OTHER CARNIVORES/OMNIVORES: 8 species

      Grizzly Bear (3 Swan Hills Grizzlies)
      Polar Bear ( 6 at the park - 2.4) - the enclosure has a 600,000 gallon pool
      Wolverine
      Fisher
      Marten
      River Otter
      Raccoon
      Raccoon Dog (almost nonexistent in North American zoos)

      GNAWING MAMMALS: 10 species

      Prairie Dog
      Richardson's Ground Squirrel
      Columbia Ground Squirrel
      Golden-Mantled Ground Squirrel
      Parry's Ground Squirrel
      Pika
      Arctic Hare
      North American Porcupine
      Muskrat
      Beaver

      OTHER:

      Gorilla (Sultan + Zakula)
      Wallaby
      Red Panda
      Baikal Seal (these seals were turned loose in a mile and a half long lake)

      BIRDS:

      Ostrich
      Pheasants - 10 species
      Cranes - 8 species Sandhill, Sarus, Demoiselle, Stanley, East African Crowned, West African Crowned, Lilford and Wattled.
      Great Grey Owl (only San Diego and the Bronx also have these owls)
      Snowy Owl
      American Hawk Owl
      Chilean Flamingo
      Caribbean Flamingo
      Peacock
      Marabou Stork
      European Stork
      Grouse - 5 species
      Swans - 5 species
      Geese - at least 15 species
      Ducks + Gulls - at least 15 species
      Wisp O' Mist likes this.
    • ungulate nerd
      That list is making me salivate, especially the Hoofstock
    • elefante
      I second that. I wonder why that places closed down.
    • snowleopard
      It was due to a lack of funds. The entire time that owner Al Oeming ran the Alberta Game Farm (later called Polar Park) he received absolutely zero government support. Times have changed with some North American zoos receiving up to 40% of their budget directly from the government/tax payers. The collection at the Edmonton zoo was just about the best on the planet, but with hardly any visitors in the bitterly cold winters it was always a struggle to maintain the facility each year.
    • Westsong
      Moose at Polar Park/Alberta Game Farm?

      The moose that became the iconic critter (fetchingly named Chocolate) of Northwest Trek Park in Washington State probably came from the Alberta Game Farm. He arrived at Trek in 1971 at about 4 years old, so was born about 1967. I'm writing a non-fiction children's book about him but lack a sense of his life in Canada before being trucked South.
      I'd love to hear from a keeper from the 1960s or early 1970s. Wondering if the AGF baby moose were brought in as wild orphans, or born on-site? What was the feed? Were antlers removed from feisty bulls? Etc.
      Actually, recollections from anyone who visited the AGF and remembers moose are welcome. You would know, for instance, What the enclosure(s) were like: Chain-link fence? Hard-packed dirt? Trees? Were more than one moose kept together? Were there flies about? Did you see piles of hay? Did the moose come forward, or hide at the back? Etc. etc. Anything along these lines will help me put the young reader "there."
      Many thanks, "Westsong" of Seattle
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  • Category:
    Polar Park (Closed)
    Uploaded By:
    snowleopard
    Date:
    21 Jun 2009
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