Zoo Improvements Continue with Grizzly Bear Habitat Updates

April 24, 2024

UPDATE APRIL 24, 2024: Guests Can See Grizzlies in Temporary Staycation Home at CMZoo
Our grizzly bears, Emmett and Digger, are getting updates to their habitat and viewing areas. Emmett and Digger wanted to skip the rest of construction near their habitat, so they have temporarily moved to the Asiatic bear area near the play hill, above the tapir yard. Guests can visit them right away.

How Do You Move Two Grizzly Bears?
With candy and a big crate.

Relying on trusting relationships with the grizzlies and the added appeal of candy, keepers asked the bears to walk into a big crate. After 4 days of training and lots of Kit Kats and Reese’s peanut butter cups as rewards, the bears were comfortable with their crates, and they were ready to move. Each bear loaded into a crate voluntarily, separately and one at a time. Then, we carried one 700-pound boy at a time on a forklift, wide awake! Emmett moved first, then Digger arrived.

Their temporary home, next door to beloved aging Asiatic black bear, Beezler, is a good short-term location on one condition: ‘Golden Girl’ Beezler still gets her favorite sunny nap spot.

We look forward to welcoming guests and bears back to the grizzly exhibit when it reopens soon. In the meantime, stop by to see Emmett and Digger on the left side of the Asiatic bear habitat, and Beezler on the right.

Why Did They Need to Move?
CMZoo improvements continue with grizzly bear habitat updates

The former grizzly bear boardwalk is being replaced with pathways that provide additional grizzly viewing experiences for guests in Rocky Mountain Wild. The elevator tower is being repurposed as a future play feature, with giant tube slides attached to its sides. Guests will still be able to take the stairs up and can either slide back down or enjoy the view and walk down the stairs.

Ongoing improvements to the bears’ habitat – including the recently completed waterfall in their north yard – will make it better suited to provide homes for potential orphaned cubs in need of human care.

After a couple of months of construction in Rocky Mountain Wild, construction got louder and closer to the bears. Emmett and Digger showed signs they’d rather skip the final phases of that work. So, their teams trained them to voluntarily enter and crate, and moved them to a more suitable location for the rest of the grizzly bear construction project. Emmett and Digger continue to receive daily care, enrichment, training and interactions with keepers and staff in their temporary home, and they appear to be enjoying the change of scenery and quiet, away from construction.

Watch for updates here and on our social media channels


DECEMBER 2023: Guests and members will soon get new views of Emmett and Digger, CMZoo’s nearly 19-year-old grizzly bears. When the project is complete, visitors will get different perspectives of the bears from ground level and from an additional guest viewing area. Ongoing improvements to the bears’ habitat – including the recently completed waterfall in their north yard – will also make it better suited to provide homes for potential orphaned cubs in need of human care.

Starting in January, the grizzly bear area in Rocky Mountain Wild will be closed while the Zoo manages these projects. The estimated reopening date is early summer 2024, and teams will be pushing themselves to meet (or beat!) that deadline. Because the vast majority of the work will occur outside of the grizzlies’ habitat, Emmett and Digger will have access to their indoor and outdoor spaces as usual. They will, of course, continue to receive daily care, enrichment, training and interactions with keepers and staff.

“One of the most noticeable changes for our guests will be the removal of the grizzly bear boardwalk,” said Dave Ruhl, CMZoo executive vice president. “We’re decommissioning the elevator and building new pathways that we believe will provide better access for our guests visiting the grizzlies. We have something really fun in mind for the future of the elevator tower.”

The elevator tower will stay in place as a future play feature, with giant tube slides attached to its sides. Guests will be able to take the stairs up, as they can now, but instead of walking to the boardwalk, they can either slide back down or enjoy the view and walk down the stairs.

The current grizzly viewing area, by the grizzlies’ pool, will stay in place. Guests will access it via a paved sidewalk and ramp similar to the sloped sidewalk from African Rift Valley to the main road. A second guest viewing area will be built at the base of the grizzlies’ north yard. The future path to grizzly viewing will start near the end of the Asian Highlands tiger bridge.

Additionally, the grizzlies will get new outdoor overnight spaces, so they can choose to sleep inside or outside. New gates and spaces in separate yards also give the Zoo the opportunity to provide homes for wild orphaned bear cubs in the future. With new access points, keepers could care for Emmett and Digger in one set of spaces and cubs in another.

“We believe these changes are going to improve both guest experiences and animal experiences,” said Ruhl. “There are no current plans to welcome cubs to the Zoo, but unfortunately, wildlife officials need to find homes for orphaned cubs nearly every year. If we can give them a second chance at life by providing a safe home for them, we will.”

CMZoo will provide updates on the grizzlies and the new-and-improved guest areas as progress continues.

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