Archive for the ‘Volunteers’ Category

Meet the Staff: Kristin Windle

Posted by Candace VanScyoc in Children's Zoo,Featured,Meet the Staff,Volunteers

 
Kristin holding our American Alligator during an Animal Presentation.

Kristin holding our American Alligator during an Animal Presentation.

Name: Kristin Windle
Hometown: Lake Jackson
Age: 20
Section: Children’s Zoo Intern
Favorite Animal: Elephant

Special Interests/Hobbies: Dance: Ballet for 16 years and tap for 15 years

What animals do you have?: I have a dog named Grady

Education/Training: Certified Veterinary Assistant, Bachelor of Science in Animal Science in progress

Jobs: Veterinary Assistant for 3 years. I started as a kennel attendant and worked my way up to receptionist and then veterinary assistant.

What do you want to do in the future?
Apply to veterinary school to work with small animals.

Why did you want this internship?
I love animals, and I wanted to get more experience with small animals than just in a veterinary clinic!

What is it like to be an intern here at the Houston Zoo?
There is no typical day. There’s lots of raking, cleaning, and loving on the animals…a bunch of fun! And lots of sweating.

What advice do you have for people wanting to enter this field?
Work hard at school! Make sure it’s something you love and have fun at, or you might be miserable (although this goes with any job!).

What is your favorite animal story?
When I got Grady: I was working, and someone abandoned him at the end of the veterinary office driveway. I went out to get an appointment, and he ran right up to me. I loved on him for a while and got him set up in a kennel. We picked each other right then and there!

There are several ways to join in on the fun at the Houston Zoo! To learn more about becoming an intern, visit the zoo’s Internship Programs page, or to learn more about volunteering, visit the zoo’s volunteer page.

Meet the Staff: Jennifer Stevenson

Posted by Andrea Pohlman in Behind the Scenes,Elephants,Featured,Keepers,Tortoise,Vet Clinic,Volunteers

Jenn shows off Miles, a Texas Tortoise, who is a resident animal at the ClinicHometown: Corpus Christi, TXSection: Clinic- Clinic KeeperSpecial Interests/ Hobbies:Anything outdoors, 4-wheeling in Goliad, TX and fishing.Interesting Fact:I have an identical twin sister.What made you want to become a zookeeper?I've always loved animals . I originally started volunteering in elephants and then was hired as a keeper there. I then transferred to the clinic so I could work with a greater variety of animals.How would you describe your job duties?As clinic keepers we are mainly in charge of daily husbandry. That means we clean, feed, medicate, and observe clinic “patients”. We also assist vets with treatments of the animals.We also maintain quarantine, and its animals. Zoo quarantine is not for sick animals, it is used to keep all incoming animals separate from the zoo collection until thoroughly examined and free of illnesses.Jenn assists the Zoo's Vets and Vet Techs with many procedures. Here she secures a dove while Vet Tech Ryanne tube feeds him.

What is a typical day like working in the clinic?
Every day is different, you never know what it will hold.

What is your education, training, and previous institution(s) you attended before coming to the Houston Zoo?
I have a one year certification from HCC as a veterinary paramedic.

What sort of advice would you give to anyone wanting to enter the zoo field?
Start volunteering and stick with it.  It is a great way to get the experience zoos require and you have a greater chance of getting hired on when you have been a volunteer.

What is your favorite animal story?
My great-grandparents had a ranch in Goliad, TX where I spent a lot of time as a child.  When I was about 10 I tried to get the goats and cows to like me and to approach me willingly.  Finally, 2 bulls approached me and I was able to hand-feed them.  All the time afterwards that they lived on my great-grandparent’s ranch, I could walk up to the fence and call them over and they would come running to me.  That was my first big animal experience.

Geocaching

Posted by Rochelle Joseph in Volunteers

How many of you have heard of geocaching?  For those who haven’t it’s a kind of game that uses GPS coordinates to find cache containers filled with surprises, a grown up treasure hunt that turns the globe (or your neighborhood) into a giant Cracker Jacks box!  Sound like fun?  Our longtime volunteer Dale Martin, who is a fan, told me all about it.

First, I wanted to know what exactly everyone’s looking for.  Cache containers are waterproof and durable — usually made of metal or plastic — and should be small enough to be well hidden yet large enough to actually be found. Translated, that means you’d be looking for something that could be the size of a pill bottle or a shoebox and anything inbetween. Each houses a log book where the player can leave their mark to let the next person know they’d been there; Most will also have little toys or gadgets that can be traded. Sound cool?

Here’s an example of  a cache box and the kinds of things you might find in it. Note the log book in a ziplock to the right.

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Of course seasoned players like Dale may want more of a challenge, so there are some searches that require you to solve a puzzle in order to gain the coordinates. Others might have coordinates inside the first container that lead you to another, and so on until you find the actual treasure.

The other end of geocaching is just as fun: you can put together as many of your own boxes as your heart desires and get creative about hiding them. There are universal guidelines to follow which can be found on this easy to use website: www.geocaching.com. If you become a member there (it’s free), they provide a datebase where you can list your cache coordinates so other members can start looking for them. If you click around on the site, it’ll tell you a whole lot more.

Fascinating! It just might make you look at things around you in a whole new way.  Dale told me “People hide them behind street signs, under the lamppost bases in shopping center parking lots, in gardens, under rocks.” So the next time you park at the store or sit on a park bench, if you find yourself wondering if there are geocache’s nearby, this game might be for you!

“If you like things technical, this is a great hobby,” says Dale. “But also, if you like the outdoors, it provides an endless variety of locales and terrain to get around.  It opens up a whole new world..  every where you go you think — this would be a good place to hide a cache!”

The guidelines state that none can be hidden in places that aren’t open to the public 24/7 or charge admission, therefore there are none exactly on the Houston Zoo’s grounds. BUT there are some close enough!  It could be fun to combine your next visit with a geo cache hunt! Last we spoke, Dale said there are some in Hermann Park (up to a dozen), on the Rice University campus (approx 6), in and around the Texas Medical Center (check the above mentioned website for the most up to date information). I think Dale himself has been behind a few of those!

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Whether you’re new to Geocaching or an old hand at it, do you think you can find them?  Is this new to you or have you already played the game?  Let us know in the comments area!

Written by Rochelle Joseph. Please visit my animal and nature blog at http://naturegirrrl.blogspot.com

Photos by Dale Martin

Tongue in Chic

Posted by Rochelle Joseph in Volunteers,iPhone App - Houston Zoo

The more people I get to know at the zoo, be they staff or volunteers, the more astonished I’ve become by the diversity of backgrounds and experience they bring to the table.  Today, I’ll include myself in that group, for the sake of this post and the irony contained therein.

As a stylist and Image Consultant, I dress people for a living– a career requires that I look pretty spiffy myself. But when I moved to Houston and started volunteering here, my life took a 180 degree turn. I confess I’ve never felt as right as when clad in the clothes that identify me as a part of the Houston Zoo. As such, I suffer no shame in admitting how proud I am to wear the “uniform”.

And what exactly is that you ask?  Here’s the rundown, from head to toe:

Shirt: We receive a Houston Zoo logo shirt with a designated color — in the volunteers case, it’s bright blue; staff wears burgundy, green or gray.  I opt for the polo version when I’m doing docent work but rely on the tee shirt when I do things that could get messy– like making paper mache enrichment items or cleaning out Kiva’s pen after Hurricane Ike.

Here I am modeling said shirt.  Shield your eyes… what you are about to see may be just too stunning to view full on. Kiva

Pants: Around here, Cabella’s 7 pocket khaki’s are the hot item, as trousers or shorts. I ordered mine as soon as I completed my volunteer orientation. These are often worn with a wide leather belt, which is helpful for those, like Keepers and Rangers, who need to hook things on it, like walkie talkies.

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Shoes: I sport lightweight hiking boots — sturdy for standing or walking all day, and they hold up through water, mud, and let’s just say it… poop!  In summer, Keen sandals keep tootsies cool while covering the toes, which is a good idea around animals (that’s a whole other post).

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Boots: Good to have a pair of Wellies in the car in case of rain or mud, a necessity if you’re a Keeper Aide.  Staff are issued heavy duty ones, but are free to express their personality through this item.  I’ve seen a hot pink pair and a leopard print set walking around grounds.41-U4EaKBAL._AA280_

Accessories: Depending on what you choose to do as a volunteer, there can be hours spent out in the sun and a hat comes in mighty handy. I have one like this with a collapsible brim that I can stuff into my pocket, but the most popular seems to be the baseball caps with the zoo logo, which can be found in our gift shop.

hat

Although my pants indeed have seven pockets, I put my volunteer-blue, HZ fanny pack to good use (see first picture above).  It’s just the right size to carry a water bottle, note pad/pen (for blog ideas), my iPhone (with the HZ App of course — and HZ Ranger and emergency numbers programmed into it), my pocket guide and a few extra maps of the grounds in case a guest asks me for one. Never hurts to have a bandana hidden in there too.

I top it off with my name tag. Can I tell you what a thrill it was to put this on for the first time? With this finishing touch, I am officially official, it’s bold black and white graphic making my identity unmistakable.  I think our guests appreciate these too. At a glance they can know who does what, and call us by name.

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All kidding aside, when I wear these clothes, it tells me that I’ve been trusted to represent the zoo, even when I’m off site. If I happen to go somewhere before I can get home to change, say the grocery store or the pharmacy, you wouldn’t believe how many grins I get.  Grown adults eyes light up when they see the HZ logo, as if it brings out the kid in them, or recalls happy memories of visits here.  I find myself answering almost as many questions on the street as when I’m on grounds. And I’m sure I’m not the only one.

It feels pretty great to be a walking reminder of a place that’s so special to the hearts of many. And since I’ve been spending my time with stars like Jonathan, Blanco and Shanti, I find I don’t miss Calvin, Armani or Gaultier one bit!

Written by Rochelle Joseph. Please visit my animal and nature blog at http://naturegirrrl.blogspot.com

Photos: Thank you to Amazon.com/hunter for Wellies, Cabella’s for Khaki’s, Altrec.com for the hat and shoes.com for the Keens. All other photos by Rochelle Joseph

Have You Tried The Houston Zoo App? It’s FREE!

Posted by Rochelle Joseph in Recycling/Green,Volunteers

Though I was one of the first in line to buy the Iphone, I’ve never downloaded or used what’s become commonly known as an App — a fun or useful thing that your phone/Ipod can do for you.

But when the Houston Zoo said they were offering an App, I decided it was time. And it was easy — I simply pressed the app store button on my device and typed in “Houston Zoo”. The App appeared and I hit the download button. Voila! Within seconds, without having spent a dime, there in the palm of my hand was all the information I needed regarding the zoo – as a visiting member, and as a volunteer whose job it is to answer questions from our guests and help their visit be an easy and memorable one.

I’m here to encourage you to try it yourself if you haven’t already. You don’t even need to be at the zoo.  Just pull out your Iphone or your Ipod Touch and follow the steps I did and check it out. It’s as helpful for planning your visit before you come to the zoo as it is when you’re on grounds.

As a docent these are a few of the questions I get asked all the time: When is the next Keeper Chat? Where is the carousel from here? Are there recycling bins on grounds?  Where are the rest rooms, the food courts, the ice cream places?   How far is it to the gift shop?  Is there a back exit, even though we came in the front? What’s this tiger/elephant/stork/warthog’s name? While the Zoo will always have plenty of people like me walking around to help our guests, all of these questions and more can be answered in a pinch by the App. And I learned yesterday that the zoo is about to add several new videos, pictures and features — and, they will continue to update and improve it to better serve you.

So I’m, curious — for those of you who’ve used the Houston Zoo App, will you leave me a comment telling me what  you’ve liked best about it or tell me of a situation where the App was helpful to you?

If you have something other than an iphone or ipod touch:  We’re looking to expand into other smart phone applications –like Driods and Blackberries –and would love to know how many of you would like to have something designed for those phones. Just let us know in the comments.  Thanks!

Written by Rochelle Joseph. Please visit Rochelle’s own blog, Adventures in Nature,  at http://naturegirrrl.blogspot.com/

Volunteer Extraordinaire Series: Pat Pilkington

Posted by Rochelle Joseph in Aquarium,Mammals,Volunteers,Zoo Births

Meet Pat, a simply lovely person and wonderful volunteer who I mentioned I’d write about in a previous post a little ways back. Pat has been giving generously, not just of her time but in many other ways for over 6 years! She comes in weekly — in the morning as an Elephant Keeper Aid then pitches in at the aquarium afterwards, which is where her husband Paul also volunteers.

Pat started out at the general commissary where food for our animals is ordered, prepared to the needs and specifications of each species and delivered to our keepers. Once she moved on to feeding the fish, all that experience came in handy.

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Then she heard about an opportunity to be on the rare and unique experience of a birth watch for one of the baby elephants. Taking the midnight to 4 AM shift, Pat and a handful of like-minded volunteers (meaning: crazily committed people– Dale, who I wrote about HERE, was one of them) kept their vigil in a trailer with TV monitors trained on the pens for months and months waiting for the baby to be born.  But it’s clear the rewards were great.  “I was there when the baby was born!” says Pat. She was able  to watch over the TV monitors since only our highly trained staff were allowed in the actual barn. “We continued our shifts for awhile after she’d arrived”

Pat says she made many friends in those wee hours, as the weeks of waiting piled up. “And,” added Pat, “ it was then that I witnessed  the tremendous devotion of the elephant keepers.”  Pat decided she wanted to continue working with the elephants and boy did she get into it, as the picture below shows!  Pat told me with a twinkle in her voice, “Elephant pooper-scooper, that’s my claim to fame!”

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Hey, I understand. After my stint as a carnivore keepers aid, I wrote about scooping bear poop myself.  Let’s face it, it’s an amazing job!

When the opportunity to go on safari with zoo staff and other volunteers came up, Pat went along with them to Kenya and got to know a new bunch of people over the dozen days they were traveling.

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“It was like a walking encyclopedia to be on safari. People like Sharon Joseph and Tammy (in Primates) were so knowledgeable about all of the animals that they knew more than our guides occasionally! My daughter and I didn’t have to use our guide books very often, since we could just ask them the questions.” And with that, she gave a little chuckle.

When Pat sent me the picture below, my eyes almost fell out of my head!  I mean, how many people can say they’ve done this?!?!!!

Pat Pilkington 2

She’s even had parties at the zoo for her sister’s 50th birthday and for her own 60th. “I don’t know if people realize just what a great venue the zoo is for throwing your own parties.”

For as much as Pat gives to our zoo, she’s also a volunteer and on the Board of Directors for Taping for the Blind and is a tour guide for Houston TranStar. Known for “adopting” zoo friends, most notably a Thanksgiving meal for those who aren’t with family each year and throwing baby showers and the like, Pat and Paul also found room in their rather large hearts to adopt two rescue kitties! (Note to self– get Pat and Paul to bring in cat pictures).

Becoming a volunteer at the Houston Zoo opens the door to many a world. Certainly being a visitor is a way to experience things, see things, feel things that you might only if you were a world traveler — and an exotic one at that (and you don’t even have to leave your own back yard). But becoming a volunteer expands that, and Pat’s story is a stellar example of how it can manifest. As she so aptly described, “These experiences have been the highlight of my retirement!”

Written by Rochelle Joseph. Come visit my personal animal blog at www.naturegirrrl.blogspot.com

Thank you to Pat Pilkington and Stephanie Adams for the photos

Volunteer Extraordinaire Series: Dale Martin

Posted by Rochelle Joseph in Alligator,Reptiles,Volunteers,Zoo Births

Meet Dale.

Dale Martin-0001

Photo by Stephanie Adams

Dale has been a docent at the Houston Zoo since 1990. Back then he was working full time and came to the zoo on weekends.  Once he retired and got some traveling under his belt, he got even more involved. It was around that time, in October 2003, that the zoo had not just one but two elephant baby watches going on at the same time. Dale decided to take one of those shifts, having no idea just how long it would last. You see, it’s hard to estimate the delivery date for animals like elephants and giraffes; his watch ended up lasting until August 2004!

But Dale put all those hours to good use. “We were doing a four-hour shift a couple of times a week,” he explained.  “At the time I signed up, I was also volunteering in the Registrar’s office helping them catch up on old paperwork that needed to be logged into the computer. So I spent much of my time on birth watch going through boxes and boxes of old reptile and amphibian records and entering that information.”

That was just one of the many ways that Dale’s productivity would manifest.  For almost 20 years he’s lent his talents for organizing materials and creating databases to department after department  here, which I imagine has made an immense contribution to how much more easily things run behind the scenes zoo-wide.

For instance, Dale pulled together the zoo’s entire photographic  collection, estimated to be over 1800 slides, into one a central place to serve all the departments. He did similar cataloging with the engineering department’s approximately 4000 drawings, logging them into an Excel spreadsheet for easy reference, then filing the originals in a conference room where they could be properly preserved and accessible when needed. Then he helped Graphics convert their database to digital images and along the way has contributed to our ongoing registry of all the zoo’s animals.  The list goes on.

With the zoo growing all the time it needs to make use of all that technology offers. The hardest part is getting new foundational systems in place to build on, and then making it user friendly for everyone.  Dale was an integral part of this process. That takes not just skills but real commitment. It’s no wonder that he’s received Volunteer of the Year Award!

Dale Martin receives his Volunteer of the Year award from Andrea Anders.

Dale Martin receives his Volunteer of the Year award from Andrea Anders.

Photo by Stephanie Adams

You might be asking right about now how it is that he can do all these things. Well, as I’m finding as I interview more and more volunteers, he’s led a really interesting life and done some unique things professionally. If I were to do them justice, we’d be here all day.  A few highlights: Dale became a radio man in the Navy, and after a short stint as an electronics technician in the research lab of the famous heart surgeon Dr. DeBakey he went on to NASA, working for many years in Communications.  That allowed him to do a wide variety of things as his career path there progressed.  For example, the video we’ve all seen coming down from the shuttle or space station went through Dale’s office. His department oversaw all Johnson Space Center TV, processing the video that came in and distributing it to the world. There he did quite a bit of archiving of that historic media, which at some point included the photography department, and located and documented information systems and data packages going up to the International Space Station. Whew! So you see, he is very, very good at handling a diverse variety of content and putting it in top notch order.

Another fascinating fact — Dale’s been a ham radio operator since he was 13.  That interest and his years at the space center came together many years later, when he became the first person at the Johnson Space Center to speak to someone on the orbiter outside the official NASA folks… and he did it via ham radio!

Astronaut Owen Garriot carried a ham radio on board the shuttle, with which he began communicating to operators around the world, essentially letting amateur radio folks on the shuttle.  An article from NASA Science News put it best: “This contact was the first communication between astronauts and people on the ground outside of “official” channels, which are usually reserved for presidents and heads of state.”  How exciting that our Dale was the FIRST one!

Dale Martin, KG5U, (L), and NASA Astronaut, Dr. Owen Garriott, W5LFL (R), at one of the W5RRR HF station consoles, when BOTH were on terra firma -- earth!

Dale Martin, KG5U, (L), and NASA Astronaut, Dr. Owen Garriott, W5LFL (R), at one of the W5RRR HF station consoles, when BOTH were on terra firma -- earth!

Photo by Dale Martin /http://www.w5rrr.org/sta-pix.html

Obviously Dale has worn many hats here, which is the great thing about being a volunteer at the Houston Zoo. If you have more than one interest or many talents to contribute like Dale does, the truly wonderful folks who oversee all the volunteers — Lauren McLaughlin and Andrea Anders — really make the effort to make those opportunities available.

These days Dale comes in as if he were a full timer. When I asked how he’d describe his most recent incarnation, it was no surprise that he rattled off a list a mile long.  “I upload images to the digital imagery database (for Stephanie Adams, our Staff Photographer), handle incoming requests for images, go out on photo assignments when Stephanie is elsewhere engaged or assist her on projects.  I also work for Kelly Russo, our web manager, updating web pages, and making zoo videos to go up on the zoo homepage, YouTube, and now Comcast On Demand Zoo channel.”  WHEW!   Wait, I think I already said that.

Dale certainly has his finger on the pulse of everything  going on here at the Houston Zoo. Most days you can find Dale on the grounds, photographing whatever catches his eye. One thing I know for sure, is that Dale is having fun. I can’t imagine he’d devote so much of his valuable free time to us if he wasn’t.  Our beloved Zoo as well as those who know and work with him, are much, much richer for it.

Volunteer Extraordinaire Series

Posted by Kelly Russo in Aquarium,Featured,Natural Encounters,Volunteers

Meet Paul.  
 
That’s him in front of the entry foyer tank at Natural Encounters.

Paul standing in front of Natural Encounters aquarium tank.

Paul standing in front of Natural Encounters aquarium tank.

You may be scratching your head, as all you see is a blue volunteer tee shirt, khakis and a hat. Well, Paul is a little bit of a mystery… and he likes it that way.
 
But I can tell you this much: Paul is a volunteer who comes twice every week, and has been for the last four years.  Among other things, he’s in charge of making all the meals for the fish in the Aquarium and Natural Encounters.  But Paul is also is famous for his baking skills.
 
I think I hear you asking: Do fish have a sweet tooth?
 
No!  But people do. And as the many of the zoo staff and volunteers will attest, Paul’s baked goods are the best. Though I imagine those in Paul’s immediate department would like this to be a well kept secret, it seems that word has spread. And folks from other areas of the zoo have been known to pilfer– er, sample–Paul’s homemade cookies.
 
Which are their favorites?  Hard to say, as Paul has brought in at least one if not several bags of different, bite-sized cookies each day and tells me he has not repeated the same recipe, save once or twice, in all his time at the Zoo. If you do the math for 4 years of volunteering twice weekly that’s hundreds of different cookies made and consumed!
 
When I went in to meet Paul for this interview, it was a day he’d brought in three different kinds: Orange Oatmeal Raisin, Chocolate Diamonds, and Peanut Butter.  I went for just one, then I had to try another, but told myself that was it.  But he encouraged me not to leave until I’d tried them all. Really, the sacrifices you make for writing!
 
All kidding aside, the experience was much like tasting fine wine. There were subtleties in flavor and texture, as well as being pleasing to the eye. The oatmeal was oh-so tender and had the lightest hint of orange essence. Exquisite! The peanut butter was great — how can peanut butter not be?  The chocolate cookies were cut into a diamond shape with a subtle sprinkling of multicolored dots on top and while quite thin, were somehow as moist and chewy as a thick brownie. I had no idea how he did it!
 
So how do the fish fare, if Paul takes care of human palates so well?  Paul took me around and explained how each bank of tanks have a number and that corresponds with various sizes and colors of Tupperware containers. What he feeds an octopus might be very different than what he feeds an eel. Some species are fed more than once a day, and those meals may vary to provide all the needed nutrition. I was impressed as Paul spoke easily to me about each different sea animal in detail, covering far more than their diet — including their habits, personality, breeding patterns, the kind of water each needed, and their history at the Houston Zoo. There wasn’t a question I asked that he couldn’t answer. 
 
When I trained as a docent, I remember thinking that the aquarium had to be one of the more difficult areas to run because each tank must maintain a delicate balance. Many elements need to be just right — temperature, water quality, plant life, complimentary co-mingling of species, cleaning and feeding. Paul takes to all that like a fish to water (I just had to say it!).
 
To feed the animals at the zoo you have to get in early. And Paul does. The Zoo’s general commissary delivers what’s needed on a daily basis to each section’s kitchen first thing in the morning. Then there’s cutting and measuring out each animal’s meal, which may be determined, among other things, by species, weight, general health needs and what’s found in their natural habitat. Then you either leave those prepared meals for the keepers to actually feed to them, as I did when I was a Carnivore Keepers Aid, or you may be able to assist in the feeding, as Paul does. 
 
So you just might find Paul behind the piranha exhibit in Natural Encounters. The day we met, during a Meet the Keeper Talk, he stood above the tank and the fish knew he was there. They went from randomly floating to swimming rapidly and in a tight circle right in front of him. They know he’s the man with the goods. 
 
I shivered at the idea of feeding piranhas, thinking of them from movies as flesh eating attack fish. Paul set me straight, “It’s a crock that piranhas are man-eaters! Those effects are staged.”  While he informed me that they do have a natural trigger that involuntarily makes their jaw snaps anytime it hits something, natives swim in the rivers where piranhas are found all the time without incident.  “Our very own keepers dive in the tank every two weeks to clean it,” Paul added, “and those fish go hide on the other side of the tank.”  While I was reassured, I think I’ll stick to watching him feed them!

Paul selecting one of the 35 specialized tubs of food� - coded by color and zone for the various tanks - from one of the aquarium�s refrigerators.

Paul selecting one of the 35 specialized tubs of food - coded by color and zone for the various tanks - from one of the aquarium's refrigerators.

Paul credits his wife Pat, who is also a weekly volunteer, for getting him started at the Houston Zoo.  When I asked what made him so devoted Paul said, “I enjoy it. I enjoy doing things where there’s a sense of accomplishment. You prepare the food and feed the fish and you feel you’ve done good.  And if it weren’t a good crew of people,” he added, “I wouldn’t be here.”
 
I could not agree more. Those who I’ve met at the zoo have been among the nicest, most dedicated and knowledgeable folks I’ve ever met. Paul and Pat demonstrate how much they care for their zoo friends in many ways (as if mouth watering cookies weren’t enough), often hosting anything from Thanksgiving dinners to baby showers for their co-workers. And they even come in on Christmas to work so others can get home a little early. Paul and Pat probably don’t realize that they are key members in the very group they admire!
 
Besides volunteering at the zoo, Paul goes every other week to the blood center to donate a pint of blood… He is closing in on his 79th gallon!!!  At 8 pints per gallon you can do the math on how often he has gone.  The record is 200 gallons and he’s well on his way.  Thankfully the piranhas aren’t taking any!
 
Please check back to learn a little more about Paul in the article I’ll post next about Pat… since it seems you can’t really talk about one without including the other. In the mean time, make sure to be on the look out for a tall, thin man feeding the fish.  It just might be our Paul.

Post written by Rochelle Joseph, Houston Zoo Docent
http://naturegirrrl.blogspot.com/