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News / Life / Pets & Wildlife

D.C. bids bye-bye to Bao Bao

National Zoo’s panda heads to China for breeding program

By Nona Tepper, Medill News Service
Published: February 21, 2017, 5:17pm
2 Photos
Animal keepers wave goodbye to Bao Bao, the beloved 3-year-old panda, Tuesday at the National Zoo. (J.
Animal keepers wave goodbye to Bao Bao, the beloved 3-year-old panda, Tuesday at the National Zoo. (J. Scott Applewhite/Associated Press) Photo Gallery

WASHINGTON — Will the National Zoo change without Bao Bao?

“Ask the bamboo,” joked Noah Tadele, 9, an aspiring veterinarian who was at the zoo Tuesday to say goodbye to Bao Bao, a panda cub headed home to China after nearly four years as the big celebrity at the National Zoo.

Americans across the country joined Noah in person or online to bid farewell at the cub before she left the zoo to participate in China’s panda breeding program. Bao Bao, born at the National Zoo Aug. 23, 2013, is part of an agreement with China that requires any giant panda cub born in the United States to be returned to China at around age 4. China owns all the giant pandas in the U.S. and leases them to American zoos.

The National Zoo held a series of parties the week before Bao Bao’s departure to commemorate the cub’s time in America — and her love for food, especially bamboo.

Like Noah, Michael Brown-Palsgrove, the zoo’s curator of giant pandas, said he’ll always remember Bao Bao for her appetite — the 3-year-old eats about 20 pounds of bamboo a day. Evolution has given the pandas a thumb to better grip and eat bamboo, Brown-Palsgrove said. He finds solace in the fact that Bao Bao will soon live in the land of wild bamboo.

“She’s going to have the best bamboo in the world,” he said of Bao Bao’s new home in southwest Chengdu, China.

In the days before Bao Bao’s goodbye, some 60,000 panda-lovers attended ice cream cake, dumpling and peach eating parties to commemorate her life at the zoo.

Even more people tuned in to commemorate Bao Bao’s departure virtually.

“Bao Bao we’ll miss you terribly,” one fan wrote on the National Zoo’s Facebook page. “I hope you have a wonderful life in your homeland. Take with you the love of millions here. Tears.”

Brown-Palsgrove said the Facebook fan and thousands of others “have been able to watch Bao Bao grow up from the time she was a tiny cub, watching her on our panda cams.”

“They feel a part of her life, and want to celebrate that.”

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