play_arrow

keyboard_arrow_right

Listeners:

Top listeners:

skip_previous skip_next
00:00 00:00
playlist_play chevron_left
volume_up
  • cover play_arrow

    WBPL – LIVE As Blackpool As You Are

Your dedications
Luna C. Adele - Easy On Me Wow I love this song! Thank you for your amazing music! Aria R. Deep Purple - Smoke On the Water Shoutout to the rainbow in my life, Gina! Orion S. Luna Park - Space Melody (Radio Version) Calling my cosmic companion, Jane! Hit play and let's embark on a musical space journey.

News - World and UK

Escaped capybara called Cinnamon captured after nearly a week on the run

todaySeptember 21, 2024 3

Background
share close

Escaped capybara called Cinnamon captured after nearly a week on the run

A capybara which escaped from a Shropshire zoo has been captured safe and well after spending nearly a week at large.

One-year-old Cinnamon escaped from Hoo Zoo and Dinosaur World in Telford on Saturday and was found living in a field next to the zoo by a search team on Tuesday night.

She was finally captured on Friday by a team of “over a dozen experts” in a pond within the zoo’s woodland conservation area.

A video shared by the zoo on social media showed the fugitive rodent being hauled from the water in a metal cage.

Cinnamon has since returned to an enclosure with her twin brother, Churro, and is acclimatising to life back in captivity.

Expert keepers will continue to monitor her around the clock to ensure a “seamless transition back to family life”, the zoo said.

The zoo also announced that Cinnamon will remain off show to the public this weekend as she re-familiarises herself with her usual surroundings.

Capybaras, which can grow to be 4.6ft long and up to 2ft high, are semi-aquatic and adapted for life in water.

On Thursday, the zoo said attempts to capture Cinnamon had been paused so she did not become stressed.

Hoo Zoo and Dinosaur World owner Will Dorrell said: “We’re absolutely delighted to have Cinnamon back at the zoo.

“We’ve been astounded at the public reaction to Cinnamon’s escape and are so grateful to everybody who has helped to return her safely to the zoo.

“Cinnamon will be spending some time with her brother in an off-show enclosure this weekend, but all being well we hope that Cinnamon will return to her usual paddock with the rest of her family next week.”

Keepers were working through the night on Wednesday to try to catch her, but said the area where she was living was “extremely dense” with “almost impenetrable” undergrowth.

She was spotted by a thermal drone within five metres of the place she was seen on Tuesday night, and keepers found fresh tracks and capybara poo.

“I know that there will be lots of people who will be very excited to see her, but nobody more so than her own mum and dad,” Mr Dorrell added.

Published: by Radio NewsHub

Written by: admin

Rate it

WHO WE ARE

We are bringing the fun back to the seaside city, and we live and love EVERYTHING Blackpool!

CONTACT
0%