Latest news with #Toyne
Yahoo
25-04-2025
- Automotive
- Yahoo
Springfield Fire Department unveils new fire engine
SPRINGFIELD, Mo. — A new fire engine was placed into service by the Springfield Fire Department (SFD) on Thursday. The new fire engine, which features a Toyne 1500 GPM pump and a 750-gallon tank, will operate in the northwest part of Springfield and will be positioned at Fire Station 5 on West Kearney Avenue. 'The crews at Station 5 are excited to have the new fire engine in our district,' said Fire Captain Brian Fick in a news release. 'We know this will help us provide the best emergency services possible.' More road closures impacting Downtown Springfield The fire engine will replace a 20-year-old yellow frontline fire engine. SFD says it was the last yellow fire engine in service after being a part of the city since the 1970s. The new engine was funded with the Level Property Tax, which was last renewed by Springfield voters in 2017. It cost $792,099 and took almost 600 days to build, SFD says. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.


BBC News
20-04-2025
- General
- BBC News
Bristol Zoo: Raising baby gorillas at home an 'amazing experience'
A zookeeper has described what it felt like to hand-rear two baby gorillas who were rejected by their mothers. Alan Toyne, who spent 14 years working at Bristol Zoo, raised two infant gorillas - including one in his own home. He has now published a memoir, Gorillas in Our Midst, about the "amazing" experience. "[They're] just very hairy versions" of human children," Mr Toyne told BBC Radio Bristol. Starting out as a volunteer keeper, Mr Toyne eventually became the leader of the team looking after mammals at the the zoo, caring for "everything from a naked mole rat" to the western lowland gorillas. While most of his work revolved around the Clifton site where Bristol Zoo was based, he found himself faced with bringing up a baby gorilla at his home after four-week old Alfia was rejected by her mother Kera following a difficult birth."Hand-rearing is quite a rare thing to do," he said. "It means that the zoo keeper has to feed that animal milk until it is capable of eating solid food and feeding itself." But what does hand-rearing a gorilla really look like in practice? "Afia had to come home with me in a car seat, I parked outside the house luckily [and] took her in," Mr Toyne explained. "She was pretty tiny but they grow and get pretty mobile quite quickly," he added. Eventually, he added: "She was running around the house, yanking the wi-fi router out of the wall, jumping off tables."We taught them to walk, to play and to feed - and spent a long time wearing a string vest which kind of replicates the fur of the animals - so they cling onto you wherever you go." As "incredibly intelligent animals" with "really complex" social hierarchies, it was important that Mr Toyne and his family recreated a similar environment to the one Afia and Hasani - another gorilla who was also later hand-reared by the zookeeper - would live in once they returned to the zoo. "We used to eat all at the same time because it's quite important for them to eat at the same time as the other gorillas," he said. "We'd sit around the table having our tea and she'd be eating veg, lettuce and cucumber. I say eating, she would be chucking a load of it on the floor." Both Afia and Hasani grew strong enough to return to their own species and live at the zoo with surrogate mothers. Bristol Zoo Project, which has reopened on a new site on the northern outskirts of the city, has come under recent scrutiny for keeping some of its animals - including gorillas - on the closed Clifton site while construction is under way on their new enclosures. Trespassing incidents have been reported at the former zoo site, which Mr Toyne said could have an impact on the gorillas."You've got Jock, the silverback, whose job it is to protect his family group, he's really elderly now. The stress that puts on him, with people crashing around in the middle of the night, is awful," he said. Director of conservation and science at Bristol Zoological Society, Brian Zimmerman, has previously said the incidents were being taken "extremely seriously", adding the "care and welfare" of animals was "top priority". Zookeepers also took part in a Facebook livestream where they explained that they still work at the Clifton site to provide the same level of support and care to the animals."The animal's requirements haven't changed. They still eat the same food, they still need the same enrichment and the same training," they said.