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Cheng Lang, Cheng Feng and Ji Xiao @ Panda Valley, May 2024(Breeding Centre pt.3)

The final pandas to share about from the Panda Valley Breeding Centre are the trio of Cheng Lang 成浪, Cheng Feng 成风 and Ji Xiao 绩笑 who all live together in the largest yard in the Breeding Centre. These three girls were all born in 2019, making them now 5 years old. Cheng Lang and Cheng Feng are twins born to mother Cheng Da and father Mei Lan, who is an oversea’s returnee having been born at Zoo Atlanta in 2006 and who is currently living in Chengdu Panda Base and I saw later on this trip. Cheng Lang is also famous in her own right by being the lightest born surviving cub, she was just 42.8g which is crazy and typically around a third of that of the majority of cubs born! Her sign says she has a more pointed face and enjoys both cleanliness and eating while lying down – and yes, I definitely saw her enjoying her bamboo while reclined^ Cheng Feng her twin was born weighing 171.9g, four times that of her sister. She is lively and active, enjoying playing, and is also a clever quick learner. Ji Xiao is just a few days older than the twins and born to mum Ji Li, and while there is no father information on the sign, I saw online her father is also listed as Mei Lan. She was famous as a baby for having paler fur so was popular on social media. Her sign says she has a big face and is charmingly clumsy (adorable), she is also more timid and is slower to move – what a sweetheart! These three really seemed to be living together in a nice harmony, sharing their space well. I saw them both inside and outside on my visits, they were definitely the most active pandas that I saw at Panda Valley. They were mostly enjoying a bamboo feast when I saw them, and they generally quite happily sat at different spots eating the bamboo, there was very little arguing over who was getting the best piece of bamboo from a pile! As I visited Chengdu Panda Base in 2019 and saw lots of cubs, it’s very likely that some of the cubs in the pictures in my 2019 visit post were these three.

It was definitely busy at their yard, but they had the biggest space for viewing with options both at the front where you come up the stairs and along the back side of the yard. When I was there I did spot one of the pandas from the front viewing but she was walking up towards the back, but always saw two or all three of them up the back where there was a large platform and where most of the bamboo was placed.

One of the security guards there helped identify which panda was which – the first pictures below should be Ji Xiao, with Cheng Feng standing up on the edge of the pond space (wasn’t filled when I was there), and Cheng Lang is the one rolling around in the pile of bamboo whilst eating it. They did then move around and these photos are also from both visits, I only got which panda was which on my first visit.

Continue Reading “Cheng Lang, Cheng Feng and Ji Xiao @ Panda Valley, May 2024(Breeding Centre pt.3)”

Oreo @ Panda Valley, May 2024 (Breeding Centre pt.2)

The next panda to share with you also living solo in the Breeding Centre at Panda Valley is Oreo 奥莉奥! Oreo lives in the third yard upstairs in the Breeding Centre, so you have a circular view and can see him from just about any angle. When I was there he was up the back enjoying bamboo on both visits. On my first visit he was positioned quite near the edge of the yard and close to some perimeter bushes, so I couldn’t really see him well enough for pictures. I was very glad when I returned on my second visit and he was in a better spot. He was in the same area and still enjoying his bamboo! He was one of the more popular pandas, with a crowd of around 10-15 people who were taking up most of the viewing spot right in front of him, so I did have to wait a bit and get my elbows out when I wanted in. I think I had it in my head that Oreo was a younger panda, but he’s now 12 years old! But still looks young to me^ His sign says he is round and fond of bamboo, I can definitely attest to that =)

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Breeding Centre pt.1 @ Panda Valley, May 2024

The Breeding Centre is the first panda yards you come across in Panda Valley and it looks to be perhaps the latest built because it has quite a different design to the other 3 houses here. I saw a total of 6 pandas living here, but there were also off-show areas inside so there may have been another panda or two also here. When you first come up to the area from the front of the park there is immediately one outdoor yard which has almost a circular design with viewing a lot of the way around. Then you head to the left and through a covered walkway viewing 2 indoor areas – one always had curtains drawn around it when I visited, but the second was very large with a climbing structure in the middle and roof windows to keep it bright – I saw pandas in here later in the day on my first visit. You then take the stairs or a lift/elevator up one floor and from there you can view 3 outdoor yards which have multiple viewing options. The first one you come to is the largest, then the middle one is long and thin, then the final one is slightly larger and this one is like a half circle that you can view on the rounded edge – when you walk around this, you then next come to long thin yard again from the other side, and finally again the largest yard from the other side. I really liked the design here with the viewing options depending on where the pandas were within their yards. Whilst this is called the Breeding Centre, I didn’t see any babies or kindergarten-aged pandas here. Maybe I was just here at the wrong time, or maybe they don’t have mums with babies/a nursery-style set up any more, I’m not sure. First I will share about two of the solo pandas living in this area of Panda Valley:

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Introduction to Panda Valley and the ‘free-roaming’ Red Pandas

On both my second and fourth mornings of my time in Dujiangyan 都江堰 I headed out to the Chengdu Field Research Center for Giant Pandas, or more commonly known, Panda Valley 熊猫谷. I had only planned to have one visit here, but after looking through some of my pictures and having only seen a small glimpse at a few ‘big-name’ pandas, I decided to use my extra time for a second visit!

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