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You can Adopt Ning Ning!

The Pollyanna Pickering Foundation is
pleased to announce a new partnership with the Charity Pandas
International, which will support the work of the BiFengXia
sanctuary visited by Pollyanna. Through their exclusive adoption
scheme which works to directly fund the care of pandas at the
centre, you can adopt Ning Ning, the panda seen in the photographs
with Pollyanna in the photo opposite.
Click here for more information,
and to adopt online
Win an Original Painting!

Popular actress Liza Goddard (right) joined
actors Christopher Cazenove (left), and Jack Ellis (behind)
- to officially launch the Pollyanna Pickering Foundation annual
prize draw, and Beyond the Great Wall Fundraising Campaign.
They are pictured above with Pollyanna,
and her original painting of a tiger cub ‘A Very Safe
Place’ which will be the first prize.
Tickets for the prize draw for the original
painting will be available at all of Pollyanna’s talks
during the Spring season, at the Beyond the Great Wall exhibition.
The tickets cost £1.00 each, and the winning ticket will
be drawn on the 17th July 2010.
Click
here to buy tickets securely online
The story of Pollyanna's first journey
into China is told in the book 'Giant Pandas and Sleeping Dragons'
Click
here for further information or to buy online
Bile Bear Rescue
While in China, Pollyanna also took the
opportunity to visit a wonderful sanctuary for Asiatic Moon
Bears rescued from the unspeakably cruel bile bear industry,
and now given a home in a wonderful facility created by the
Animals Asia Foundation. In countries across Asia, thousands
of bears live a life of torture on bear farms, so that their
bile can be extracted and used in traditional medicine. Bears
are confined in cages which vary from agonisingly tiny "crush"
cages to larger pens, all of which cause terrible physical and
mental suffering. Pollyanna was invited to visit the centre
by Jill Robinson, the founder of the charity, who has dedicated
her life to improving the plight of animals in the region.
Ten percent of sales made during the
Beyond the Great Wall exhibition will be donated through
the Pollyanna Pickering Foundation, which aims to raise £5200.00
to finance the complete rescue and transfer of a moon bear into
the sanctuary. We will bring further details of Pollyanna’s
visit, and the results of the fundraising campaign and rescue
soon.
Any additional funds raised will go to
funding the Naturewatch Spotlight
on China Campaign. Pollyanna is a patron of Naturewatch,
and has given her backing to this ambitious campaign –
with the ultimate goal being to help the Chinese authorities
introduce and enforce animal welfare laws for the purpose of
protecting domestic, farmed and captive animals in China.
Other expeditions :
Bhutan
India
China
High Arctic
Siberia
Transylvania
North America
Africa
Central America
Britain!
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Beyond
the Great Wall

In January 2010 Pollyanna made her first return
journey to China in fifteen years, travelling far beyond the
legendary Great Wall in search of some of the country’s
most endangered species.
A major exhibition of fifty new original paintings
inspired by this, and her previous journey, will be staged for
the first time in her private gallery at Brookvale House, Oker,
Near Matlock . in Derbyshire (AA signposted) from 19th June
– 4th July 2010. Click here
for details
Initially Pollyanna braved temperatures as
low as -29º, journeying to the rarely visited extreme North
East corner of China. Wild Siberian Tigers have been sighted
in the Hunchun Nature Reserve in the transborder area between
Russia and China which provides a ‘corridor’ of
habitat so tigers can disperse from Russia and repopulate areas
of China where they once lived.
Poaching of tigers for traditional Chinese medicine,
along with over-hunting of their prey species, wiped out populations
in China. Yet much of their habitat remained intact, and in
2003 an adult tiger was photographed for the first time by a
remote camera, operated by the Wildlife Conservation Society
who established the reserve. However research suggests that
fewer than 20 of the tigers exist in the wild in China, and
despite spending days in the region, the tigers proved elusive,
and Pollyanna was not able to sketch one in the wild –
although she was rewarded with wonderful sightings of other
wildlife who share the tiger’s habitat including deer,
cranes, eagles and rough legged hawks.

Pollyanna was able to sketch the tigers in a
breeding and conservation centre established to create a pool
of Amur tigers with a pure genetic bloodline, with the eventual
aim of re-introducing the cats into this remote mountainous
region which they once roamed in large numbers. For five days,
Pollyanna spent eight hours a day in a vehicle inside their
huge compounds observing and sketching the magnificent cats.
“It was a unique opportunity to watch Amur Tigers in their
natural habitat” Pollyanna commented “I was able
to sketch as they interacted with one another, and I gained
so much inspiration for new paintings in . these surroundings.
Seeing first hand the way the snow lays on their fur, or becomes
encrusted on their feet and tails will enable me to paint the
tigers in the snow with a realism and accuracy which would have
been completely lacking if I hadn’t made this expedition.”
2010 is the Chinese Year of the Tiger, and Pollyanna
is proud to be able to present her latest collection of paintings
during this auspicious year! Chinese horoscopes for the year
predict change and travel – and a vigorous and hard-working
year ahead. In the Chinese Zodiac the tiger . symbolizes support
and care, and through the exhibition Pollyanna hopes to raise
funds to support the protection and conservation of wildlife
in this remarkable country.
The most iconic animal to be found in China
is of course the Giant Panda – designated a ‘National
Treasure’ by the Chinese Government. Fifteen years ago
Pollyanna and her daughter Anna-Louise were the first two western
women ever to travel to a remote panda reserve in the Tibetan
Borderlands of China. Here they worked in a small panda hospital,
helping to care for a six month old baby panda bear –
and in the surrounding mountains succeeded in seeing a wild
Giant Panda. Since then the Earthquake which struck the Sichuan
Province in 2008 has devasted the region, with many of the roads
yet to be rebuilt. During her first journey, Pollyanna also
visited the panda breeding and conservation centre at Wolong,
which suffered so much devstation during the quake that it will
not be rebuilt. In fact the epicenter was just a few miles from
Wolong, and aftershocks continued for days. In a 24 hour period,
178 aftershocks were monitored in the quake zone.
This time Pollyanna followed in her original
footsteps to the starting point of her journey – the city
of Chengdu – where she spent a day at the The Giant Panda
Breeding Research Base sketching the residents, including the
beautiful red pandas. However her main destination was The BiFengxia
Giant Panda Base. Originally planned and built as a ‘training’
centre to prepare captive bred pandas for release into the wild,
since the devasting eathquake it has provided sanctuary for
53 pandas relocated from the centre at Wolong. Interestingly,
survivors of the earthquake said afterwards that the pandas
seemed to know the disaster was imminent, commenting that the
pandas stopped eating bamboo and became eerily agitated moments
before the quake struck.
The conservation centre is sitatued at the edge
of BiFengXia Gorge – an area of outstanding natural beauty
1,200 meters above sea level. Each panda enclosure covers at
least 1,000 square meters – nine times bigger than the
pens in Wolong. Several different varieties of bamboo have been
planted on the mountain slopes. Pollyanna was fortunate enough
to be allowed to work closely with the pandas, even sitting
quietly inside their enclosures with her sketch pad. On occasion
a panda – such as Ning Ning (above) would wander up to
have a look at this unexpected visitor. “It was such a
privilidge to be so close to these beatuful creatures”
Pollyanna said. “Although they could, if they wished,
severely injure a human being, they are so gentle and placid.
I think they must be the cutest animals ever created –
with their black eyes shining out of two huge black patches
of fur, and their perfectly round teddy-bear ears. I am sure
very few wildlife artists have ever had the opportunity to get
so close to one of the most endangered and enigmatic creatures
in the world!”
Although the diet of a wild panda consists entirely
of bamboo, in the centre as the cubs are weaned their diet is
sometimes supplemented with other fruit and vegetables. Ning
Ning is especially partial to apples! Pandas eat for up to 14
hours a day, and spend the rest of the time sleeping. Since
the pandas’ digestive system is not very efficient, they
must consume large quantities of bamboo every day, in order
to obtain the nutrition they need. Between the ages of 12 months
and 18 months, a panda cub will gain nearly 100 pounds and grow
the strong teeth it needs to eat bamboo. At this young age Ning
Ning is still playful and inquisitive!
Ning Ning was one of the first cubs to be born
after the earthquake, bringing fesh hope to the breeding and
re-introduction programme. One of twins, he was born on the
27th July 2008. His name is a diminutive version of Nanjing
– the town of the same name christened him during a ‘Ceremony
of Thanks’ which celebrated the birth of the new cubs,
and pledged their support for the pandas.
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