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Special


IN NUMBERS


“It does feel like we’ve been through so many different adventures this spring – some real highs and some real lows.”


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From Jerry the alpaca to Fernando the capybara, and who can forget the escapades of our mischievous meerkat, Steve McQueen, who became the star of the show by giving our team the run-around? T e nation witnessed the birth


of rare Cameroon lambs, including our gorgeous Little Foot, who had to be hand-reared by staff aſt er being rejected by his mum. T ere was the building of a love


shack for our amorous prized pigs, Boris and Barry, a donkey spa day and essential work to reinstate a dam for our tapirs and enhance an enclosure for our cuddly capybaras. Other highlights included the


hatching of ducklings, a camel weigh-in, the release of rehabilitated hedgehogs into their natural environment and having to fend off a


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pesky heron hell-bent on stealing fi sh from our lake. As it is with nature, there were


also some very sad moments during fi lming, none more so than the tragic loss of our much-loved capybara, Fernando, who had to be put down aſt er becoming terminally ill. T e programme gave viewers a


glimpse of the huge dedication, care and love that goes into looking aſt er our animals every day, regardless of what’s happening in the world outside. “It does feel like we’ve been through


so many diff erent adventures this spring – some real highs and some real lows,” Jimmy concluded in the last episode. “But I wouldn’t change it for the


world - despite coronavirus and all the lockdown. Dealing with the animals – it’s what I love doing and it’s why I do it.”


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Capybaras spend much of their time in water. They can stay submerged in water for around fi ve minutes – helping them to avoid detection by predators such as jaguars, anaconda snakes and caiman crocodiles.


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Cameroon sheep are a domestic breed. It is believed that there are less than 1000 left in the world, including our gorgeous brood here at Jimmy’s Farm & Wildlife Park.


Alpacas can live for up to 25 years. They are a domesticated species originating from Peru in South America, mostly


valued for its fi ne fleece. They also make excellent guard animals for chickens, sheep, and even baby emus!


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Tapirs are predominantly solitary in the wild, coming together to mate. Females are pregnant for 13 months and give birth to one


stripy brown and one cream coloured baby, camouflaging them from predators. They love nothing more than a good belly and chin scratch!


Our Bactrian camels, Alice and Arthur, have two humps and originate from the steppes of central Asia to the Mongolian deserts. They live at Jimmy’s Farm & Wildlife Park to highlight the plight of their wild counterparts, which are critically endangered with fewer than 1000 individuals left.


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