Panda Bei Bei says bye bye to US, heads home to China

AFP
The US-born giant panda Bei Bei on Tuesday left the National Zoo in Washington for a 16-hour flight back to China as part of its research and breeding program.
AFP
Panda Bei Bei says bye bye to US, heads home to China
AFP

Giant panda Bei Bei rests at the Smithsonian's National Zoo in Washington, DC on November 14.

The US-born giant panda Bei Bei on Tuesday left the National Zoo in Washington for a 16-hour flight back to China as part of its research and breeding program.

The 4-year-old Bei Bei, whose name means "precious treasure" in Mandarin, will travel on a specially equipped direct flight from Washington to Chengdu inside a steel and plexiglass crate, accompanied by his keeper and a veterinarian, zoo officials said.

Once a young panda reaches the age of 4, he or she is repatriated to breed with other animals at sanctuaries in China.

"Today is bittersweet," said zoo director Steve Monfort.

"We've cared for Bei Bei, and along with millions, watched him grow into a true ambassador for his species," Monfort added.

"We look forward to continuing our 47-year giant panda conservation program and collaboration with Chinese colleagues to study, care for and help save the giant panda and its native habitat."

FedEx is paying for the flight and the special outfitting of the Boeing 777 — called the "Panda Express" for the occasion.

The National Zoo staff have prepared a special stash of treats for him: 30 kilograms of bamboo, 2 pounds of apples and pears, 2 pounds of cooked sweet potatoes, two bags of biscuits and water, officials said.

Bei Bei's siblings, brother Tai Shan and sister Bao Bao, have already been returned to China, while his father Tian Tian and mother Mei Xiang will remain at the National Zoo until at least December 2020.

Bei Bei was born in August 2015, and his name was announced with great fanfare at an event with then-first lady Michelle Obama and her Chinese counterpart Peng Liyuan.


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