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A new place for aging penguins to chill: New England Aquarium builds an ‘assisted living' island

A new place for aging penguins to chill: New England Aquarium builds an ‘assisted living' island

Boston Globe18-03-2025

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The new private island, separate from the main penguin colony, so far accommodates six aging African penguins, who range in age from 14 to 34. The move comes as more than half of the aquarium's penguin colony has met or surpassed the typical life expectancy of their species, which is 10 to 15 years in the wild.
The separation allows aquarium staff to keep a closer eye on the ailing penguins and quickly spot changes that might indicate common challenges older penguins face, including foot injuries and cataracts. Aquarium staff have been workshopping the idea since last year.
'Our goal is to take a proactive approach to managing geriatric animals in an environment that better meets their physical and behavioral needs,' said Kristen McMahon, who oversees the care of more than 50 pinnipeds and penguins at the aquarium.
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At a feeding session Tuesday afternoon, the birds snatched sardines from an aquarium staffer inside the exhibit. Another staff member stood nearby with a clipboard, noting down how many fish each penguin ate to monitor for appetite changes.
Among the penguin retirees are Harlequin, 32, and Durban, 31, who have been a pair since 2000 and raised eight chicks together. Also in the exhibit is Boulders, 34, who is showing symptoms of arthritis, and Isis, 29, who aquarium staff said has struggled socially as she ages. Lambert, 32, with a history of cataracts, and his younger mate, Dyer, 14, have also joined the new community.
Some penguins swam around in the exhibit while others perched on the island, which has added padding to protect their aging feet.
After feeding time, Lambert, who had one of his eyes removed due to cataracts, sat patiently in a staff members' lap as she administered two rounds of eye drops to his remaining eye.
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African penguins are classified as a critically endangered species that face threats from climate change, pollution, and habitat loss. They swim off the rocky coasts of southwestern Africa in Namibia and South Africa and the surrounding islands.
Aquarium staff said the new retirement exhibit not only benefits the aging penguins, but may also serve as a specialized area for any bird in the colony who requires special medical attention.
'Being relaxed is key, and we think the new retirement home will ultimately lead to happier and healthier penguins,' Major said.
Alexa Coultoff can be reached at

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Vintage Chicago Tribune: Unexpected finds in Chicago parks
Vintage Chicago Tribune: Unexpected finds in Chicago parks

Chicago Tribune

time14 hours ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Vintage Chicago Tribune: Unexpected finds in Chicago parks

Ah, it finally feels like summer in the city. We can't wait to spend as much time outside as possible. But did you know your favorite Chicago park might have a secret past? These are some of the unexpected things we found when looking through the Tribune's archives. In parks featuring lagoons, Park District officers were kept busy chasing poachers who fished without a permit. Some parks — Lincoln, Garfield and Washington among them — had holding cells in their field houses. The Park District police were consolidated into the Chicago Police Department at 12:01 a.m., Jan. 1, for the territorial border agreed to by the Pottawattomie and the U.S. government, this park formerly featured a zoo. The first animal housed there was a single black bear named Teddy. It was donated by Frank Kellogg, president of the now-defunct Park Avenue Park District. Pheasant, ducks and an opossum followed. More recently, varieties of goats, exotic farm chickens and roosters and an African water fowl called the one-acre zoo inside the 13-acre park home. There is now a nature center and a bird migration area at the park, but no the oldest park in Chicago, the 3-acre landmark was the landing spot for many people who lost their homes after the Great Chicago Fire of 1871. The space earned the name 'Bughouse Square' — American slang for a mental health facility — in the early 1900s when people would come to the park to stand on soapboxes and crates to give long lectures about their theories, passions and ideologies — no matter how addled, goofy or, indeed, sharp and smart. Some of the people who used to speak and argue in the park were famous: Carl Sandburg, Emma Goldman, Eugene V. Debs. Others were anonymous anarchists, dreamers, lunatics, poets and sprawling lakefront park is home to Lincoln Park Zoo, Chicago History Museum, beaches and bodies. Burials took place in the Chicago City Cemetery, which was north of North Avenue along the lakefront and outside the then-city limits. Bodies were later relocated to other cemeteries due to a variety of factors — city expansion northward, health risks associated with rising lake levels and their proximity to decaying bodies buried in shallow graves, and a lawsuit concerning one of the cemetery's sections. But some were probably left behind, Helen Sclair discovered. Her suspicions were confirmed after visiting the Illinois Regional Archives Depository at Northeastern Illinois University. Tribune reporter Ron Grossman wrote, 'Sclair seems to have been the first to guess that the archive might contain records of the old lakefront cemetery. … Eventually, she found more than 600 relevant documents, had them photographed, then copied by hand their virtually illegible 19th century handwritings.' Today, the tomb of innkeeper Ira Couch is the most visible reminder of what the area was used for, but as many as 12,000 bodies might still lie below open-air 'floating hospitals' in Lincoln Park were built between the 1870s and the 1900s, and offered excursions from the piers on Lake Michigan. In 1914, the Chicago Daily News offered to fund a more permanent sanitarium building. Opened in 1921, the impressive Prairie-style structure was one of several Lincoln Park buildings designed by Dwight H. Perkins of the firm Perkins, Fellows, and Hamilton. Perkins, an important Chicago social reformer and Prairie School architect, designed buildings, including Café Brauer, the Lion House in the Lincoln Park Zoo and the North Pond Café. The impressive Chicago Daily News Fresh Air Sanitarium building was constructed in brick with a steel arched pavilion with 250 basket baby cribs, nurseries and rooms for older children. The breezes through the shelter were believed to cure babies suffering from tuberculosis and other diseases. Free health services, milk and lunches were provided to more than 30,000 children each summer until 1939, when the sanitarium closed. Major reconstruction of Lake Shore Drive led to the demolition of the building's front entrance. During World War II, the structure became an official recreation center for the United Service Organization. The Chicago Park District converted the building to Theatre on the Lake in the early 1950s. Today it's a lakefront restaurant and venue that hosts concerts and theater named for Stephen A. Douglas, the senator from Illinois and noted Lincoln debater, the Chicago Park District board of commissioners voted on Nov. 18, 2020, to officially rename this park in honor of abolitionists Anna Murray Douglass and Frederick Douglass. Though many parks around the city now have swimming pools, Douglass Park became the first to have one devoted to recreation. Immigrants who lived in this area in the mid-1890s petitioned to have Chicago's first outdoor public swimming pool built there. When it opened in August 1896, the Tribune reported 15,000 people braved bad weather to celebrate with a parade. 'The German, Polish, and Bohemian athletic societies in the city had charge of the exercises. Long before the hour set for the beginning of the procession hundreds of uniformed Turners and bicyclists gathered … It was estimated that 3,000 men were in line. The procession consisted of four divisions, each headed by a band.' A pool still exists in the park. It is used for day camps, classes and open were in bloom when the Washington Park Conservatory debuted at 56th Street and Cottage Grove Avenue in late 1897. Heated by exhaust steam piped in from a plant 700 feet away, the new 'floral castle' provided South Siders with a warm respite and lush surroundings inside the 425-foot-long hothouse constructed of stone, iron and glass. Thirty-foot-tall palm trees flourished under the conservatory's main dome and exotic fruits trees, ferns, grasses and vines were also mixed in. Washington Park long a site of change, controversyThe conservatory held exhibitions throughout the year, but plans were made in 1936, to tear it down. Its structure was deemed weak and too expensive to repair. A Park District police station was later constructed at 57th Street and Cottage Grove Avenue. The DuSable Black History Museum and Education Center opened there in South Shore neighborhood was, like much of Chicago, a place where ethnic groups came and went. Yet above the club's porte-cochere, its arched entrance way, was a sign proclaiming that the South Shore Country Club was: 'For Members Only.' 'Until it closed in 1974, the club was, in the coded language of the time, 'restricted,'' Grossman wrote in 2016. 'Remember that this was a private club in its time and if you were Black or Jewish, forget about it,' a Chicago Park District official told the Tribune in 1984, when the club was renovated, prior to reopening as the South Shore Cultural Center. 'People who have never been here before will walk in and realize they are in the Taj Mahal.' South Shore: From exclusive country club to inclusive cultural centerThe club was worthy of such hyperbole. The main clubhouse, built in the then-tony Mediterranean Revival style, featured a cavernous main dining room and grand ballroom joined by a 'passaggio,' a broad and towering corridor. It was so long that three orchestras could play in different parts of the clubhouse without interfering with each other. Its facilities came to include a nine-hole golf course, tennis courts, a trap-shooting range, lawn-bowling courts and stables, bridle paths and a dressage ring for equestrian members. The club's Horse Show was the high point of Chicago's social season. In 1920, the club added a band shell to its music venues. The club reached its high point of a little more than 2,000 members in 1953. But membership declined as the neighborhood's demographics changed. In 1975, the club sold its property to the Chicago Park District. Years of squabbling followed over what to do with the site. Park District officials weren't eager to spend money on the clubhouse and athletic facilities. Maintenance had been neglected as the club's revenues shrank. 'Ironically, Blacks — many of whom are now fighting to preserve the structures — were barred from the grounds except to work,' the Tribune observed in 1977. In the end, the neighborhood won. The buildings and grounds were renovated and now host jazz festivals, the restaurant Nafsi, art exhibitions and lectures. Michelle and Barack Obama held their 1992 wedding reception there. Thanks for reading! Subscribe to the free Vintage Chicago Tribune newsletter, join our Chicagoland history Facebook group, stay current with Today in Chicago History and follow us on Instagram for more from Chicago's past.

WNC relief organization runs out of money. How volunteers are still trying to help
WNC relief organization runs out of money. How volunteers are still trying to help

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

WNC relief organization runs out of money. How volunteers are still trying to help

WENDELL, N.C. (QUEEN CITY NEWS) — A disaster relief organization based in western North Carolina is packing up and heading back east. Organizers started Operation Anchor and worked in the mountain communities for months, cleaning up the devastation left by Hurricane Helene. Now, they're out of money. 'I kept pushing us to keep staying and staying and staying and staying because I didn't want to leave,' said Steven Lambert, the vice president of Operation Anchor. 'We needed to be there. We still need to be there.' For six months, volunteers with Operation Anchor made the western part of the Tar Heel State their home following Helene. They repaired dozens of homes, businesses and churches using monetary and supply donations. 'I would say monetary, we brought in about $450 to $550,000 and then in material donations you probably brought in another $200,000 worth of materials, $300,000 worth of materials,' said Lambert. Those funds have since dried up, and the organization's president and vice president spent the past couple of months using money out of their own pockets to help. 'The donations that we had seen just had kind of stopped,' said Hannah Stutts, the president. 'People forget. Storms happen and six months later, I think in general people just assume that those communities are fine or they're back to normal.' But things aren't back to normal yet. 'There's a lot of debris removal still needing done,' said Stutts. 'There's people that still have holes in their roofs from trees that fell, you know, that were denied assistance.' It's heartbreaking for volunteers to have to leave the area knowing there's work to be done. 'To wake up one morning and tell yourself, you know what, it's time that we have to leave, there's nothing else we can do, it's not the best feeling in the world,' said Lambert. President Trump's proposal to 'wean off' FEMA sparking debate While they're not in the area anymore, they want to keep helping and supporting victims of any future Carolina storms. 'Our plan is to regroup, build our supplies back up to be ready for stage one to go onto the next hurricane,' said Lambert. We are in the midst of hurricane season, and experts predict it could be more active than usual. Some of the supplies Operation Anchor volunteers are collecting to prepare for any potential storms include food, water, blankets, clothes and other essentials. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Families of those killed in collapse of Georgia ferry dock sue companies that built it
Families of those killed in collapse of Georgia ferry dock sue companies that built it

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

Families of those killed in collapse of Georgia ferry dock sue companies that built it

ATLANTA (AP) — Relatives of seven people who drowned in waters off a Georgia island after a ferry dock walkway collapsed announced Wednesday they filed a lawsuit against the companies that designed and built it. Dozens of people were standing on the metal walkway over the water between a ferry boat and a dock on Sapelo Island when it snapped in the middle. Many plunged into the water and got swept away by tidal currents, while others clung desperately to the hanging, fractured structure. The tragedy Oct. 19 struck as about 700 people visited Sapelo Island for a celebration of the tiny Hogg Hummock community founded by enslaved people who were emancipated after the Civil War. Reachable only by boat, it's one of the few Gullah-Geechee communities remaining in the South, where slaves worked on isolated island plantations retained much of their African heritage. 'It was supposed to be a celebration of Black pride, but it became a day of great, great, great Black loss of humanity and life,' civil rights attorney Ben Crump, one of several lawyers behind the lawsuit, told an Atlanta news conference. 'We're filing this lawsuit to speak to that tragedy.' Attorneys for the families of those killed and more than three dozen survivors say the 80-foot (24-meter) walkway was weak because of a lack of structural reinforcement, poor welding and failure by the Georgia firm that built it to follow design plans. The walkway was 'so poorly designed and constructed that any competent construction professional should have recognized the flimsy and unstable nature of the gangway,' the lawsuit says. Regina Brinson, one of the suing survivors, said she was on the crowded walkway when she heard a loud crack and saw family friend Carlotta McIntosh plunge into the water holding her walker. Brinson and her uncle, Isaiah Thomas, also fell. Brinson recalled prying her uncle's fingers from her shirt to avoid being dragged underwater. Both Thomas and McIntosh died. 'The pain doesn't get any easier whatsoever,' Brinson told the Atlanta news conference. Kimberly Wood said she tumbled from the collapsed walkway clutching her 2-year-old daughter. Her older girl, 8, clung to the dangling walkway's railing. Wood said she managed to tread water until she reached a life preserver tossed from the ferry boat. Her older daughter was rescued and treated for wounds to her hand, said Wood, who had an injured shoulder. 'I'm shaking now just taking about it,' said Wood, another plaintiff. The lawsuit targets four private contractors hired to design and rebuild the ferry dock and walkway for the Georgia Department of Natural Resources. The project was finished in 2021. The walkway was fabricated by McIntosh County business Crescent Equipment Co. Its attorney, Clinton Fletcher, declined to comment. The project's general contractor, Virginia-based Centennial Contractors Enterprises, said by email that it doesn't comment on pending litigation. So did SSOE Group, which purchased an Atlanta design firm named as a defendant several years ago. An engineering firm also named as a defendant did not immediately return a phone message Wednesday. The lawsuit doesn't target the Department of Natural Resources or any other Georgia state agency. It says the department relied on its private contractors to ensure the walkway was safely built, which was "beyond the scope of the DNR's internal expertise and qualifications.' The agency told The Associated Press last year that the walkway should have been able to support the weight of 320 people. About 40 people were standing on it when it snapped. 'There was supposed to be a certified professional engineer that signed off on that part of the project and that was neglected," said Chadrick Mance, a Savannah attorney representing nine of the injured. Filed in Gwinnett County State Court in metro Atlanta, the lawsuit seeks unspecified damages for negligence, wrongful deaths and personal injuries. The cause of the collapse remains under investigation by the state officials, said Haley Chafin, a spokesperson for the Department of Natural Resources. State Attorney General Chris Carr also tapped a private engineering firm to perform an independent investigation. ___ Bynum reported from Savannah, Georgia. ___ Kramon is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues. Follow Kramon on X: @charlottekramon.

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