Bamboo Chiller: Whoooooosh!

Bamboo chiller at left, bamboo cutting area at right

Bamboo chiller at left, bamboo cutting area at right

A few more racks may need to be added at a later date, but the newly installed bamboo chiller was ready for business this past Monday. A bit larger than the old units, it’s a thing of beauty, all shiny stainless steel inside and out. It has built-in hose bibs and floor drains, racks holding bamboo across about the middle two-thirds of its length, with space for more racks if needed. It’s wonderfully insulated, with internal refrigeration and humidity units – actually very similar to a giant walk-in florist’s refrigerator. This ability to maintain humidity will help the bamboo stay even fresher longer. I’m sure the bears will appreciate that, especially on Mondays and Tuesdays. Across a new, smooth concrete pad is a large wooden table, holding a new flat scale, much easier to use than the hanging scale employed in the past.

But the really cool part of the unit is the doors! Large, heavy double doors seal it closed but at the touch of a button, open they slide with a soft, gentle ” whoosh.” And the lights inside go on automatically! This seems to be a favorite of the keepers as well, since they pulled me back there to demonstrate it, the better to describe it all to you. They even let me push the button, to “whoosh” the doors closed.

This may seem a small, even silly thing to some readers, but the majority of the keepers’ days are spent feeding and cleaning, and in the case of the giant pandas, hauling and weighing bamboo is a major part of the job. Food has to be prepped several times daily and cargo container doors are not that easy to manipulate. Even though keepers are strong and fit, by the very nature of their daily activities, this is a safer work environment for them – and it’s nice to see what you’re doing! And it will be nice to see contented pandas now that their bamboo is kept crisper and greener early in the week.

A young guest asked this week if he could see the new cooler, but because it is located in an animal care area that is closed to the public, this is not possible. We’ll try to get some photos posted next week, but to help you visualize where it is, just look at the faux bamboo walls at the rear of the viewing areas – behind that are the exhibit bedrooms and transfer tunnels and just beyond that is the new chiller. Thanks again to all of you who made it possible.

Ellie Rosenbaum is a panda narrator at the San Diego Zoo.

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