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October can be a busy month at the San Diego Zoo Safari Park’s Condor Breeding Facility. This is the time of the year when we start to prepare for the next breeding season: clean nests, conduct routine health exams, and provide maintenance to flight pens that were previously off-limits to keepers because of the presence of our young chicks slated for release to the wild. But before we can start anything, we need to move the recently-fledged chicks to their new home— our socialization pen.
Our remote socialization pen is approximately one mile from the main part of the Safari Park. There, this year’s Condor Cam chick, Antiki, is isolated from any human activity and socialized with other fledglings her age. In the wild, condor chicks stay with or around their parents for up to 18 months. We don’t let them stay that long here at the Park. If we did, the next breeding season would probably be compromised; the presence of the fledgling may prevent the parents from breeding the next year, or the parents may turn aggressive to the chick if they try to nest again.
Before her move, we affixed a wing tag to Antiki’s right wing for identification purposes. She is now wearing wing tag White 77. She is now sharing this large pen with five other condors:
- Xananan (ha-NA-nan): Female, 11 years old, wearing tag Blue 21 (left wing).
- Sunan (SOO-nahn): Female, 1 ½ years old, wearing tag Blue 49 (right wing).
- Eeuukey (ee-YOO-kee): Male, 6 months old, wearing tag Blue 84 (right wing).
- Pali (PAH-lee): Male, 6 months old, wearing tag Yellow 96 (right wing).
- Uqushtay (oo-KOOSH-tay): Female, 6 months old, wearing tag Red 97 (right wing).