Toronto Zoo gives sneak preview of giant pandas - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 05:37 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Toronto

Toronto Zoo gives sneak preview of giant pandas

Dignitaries and politicians were among those who got a sneak preview today of the giant panda exhibit that will formally open at the Toronto Zoo this weekend.

Exhibit open to the public this Victoria Day holiday weekend

Panda preview

11 years ago
Duration 2:06
A sneak-peek at Toronto's panda exhibit.

Dignitaries and politicians were among those who got a sneak previewtoday of the giant panda exhibit that will formally openat theToronto Zoo this weekend.

The Toronto Zoo is hosting a pair of giant pandas for a five-year period, the first half of a decade they will spend in Canada.

Those very important pandas, Er Shun and Da Mao, flew to Toronto on a special FedEx plane in March. They weregreeted at the airportby Prime Minister Stephen Harper and his wife, during a ceremony that also featured a high-school band playing on the tarmac.

The zoo has built a special exhibit that will house them during their stay in the city. The pandas have been getting adjusted to their new surroundings prior to going on exhibit to the public.

At a morning news conference, Toronto Mayor Rob Ford spoke about the zoos good fortune in hosting the pandas.

"Very few cities and zoos have this opportunity," Ford said Thursday morning.

"We are pleased to have the privilege of providing a home for Er Shun and Da Mao and hope their stay at the Toronto Zoo is an enjoyable one."

Toronto Zoo CEO John Tracogna said the pandas' arrival in Canada was the result of many years of hard work by both governments here and in China.

"Today is a proud day for all Canadians," said Tracogna.

China's ambassador to Canada, Zhang Junsai, was also present for the event on Thursday morning, as was York-Simcoe MP Peter Van Loan, the Conservative government House leader, and Michael Chan, Ontarios minister of tourism, culture and sport.

The pandas won't go on public displayuntil Saturday.

The zoo has said it expects the pandaswill draw an estimated 300,000 visitors during their first year in Toronto.

After their time in Toronto, Er Shun and Da Mao will be heading to Calgary for the final half of their Canadian visit.

The Toronto Zoo has not hosted giant pandas in almost three decades, the last time beinga months-long stay in 1985.

Harperannounced that the pandas were coming to Canadawhile he was on a trip to China last year.

Originally, Er Shun was supposed to come to Canada with a different panda named Ji Li. But that changed whentesting revealed that both were female. That's why Da Mao ended up coming to Canada instead.

The Toronto Zoo is hosting two pandas for a five-year period. Er Shun and Da Mao will then head to the Calgary zoo for an additional five years. (Nathan Denette/Canadian Press)