Please note: Winter Illuminations is still scheduled to go ahead this evening but we are closely monitoring the weather. Keep an eye on our socials for the latest update. The Yorkshire Hive, Polar Bear Santas Grotto and Yorkshire Wildlife Park remain open during the day but some areas of the park may be temporarily closed. For safety reasons the Christmas Fair will remain shut. 

World Lion Day 2024

5th August 2024

The Lions of Ukraine are celebrating their first summer of freedom in Yorkshire far from the ravages of the Russian invasion.

Aysa and her three cubs, Emi, Santa, and Teddi, who were rescued earlier this year by Yorkshire Wildlife Park, have settled into their new home in Doncaster, where they are enjoying the summer sunshine.

Aysa was rescued from the war-torn Donetsk region and taken to Kyiv, where she gave birth to her three cubs. The family then spent nine months in a holding facility in Poland before making the 2,000-mile trip to the UK.

The lions are now being hailed as a symbol of hope on World Lion Day as they enjoy life at the 175-acre park near Doncaster, which is an acclaimed centre for conservation.

“The Ukrainian lion family has been incredible and settled into their new home so quickly. They have accepted their new surroundings and keepers unconditionally,” said Colin Northcott, deputy section head of carnivores at the award-winning park.

“They have grown in confidence tenfold - so much so that it is as if they have been here their entire lives. They have almost doubled in size too, and with all the space available to them, they have improved in health and strength.”

“They have become a huge hit with the public and staff alike, and I am extremely proud of them and the team who look after them. From cowering in the corner of their pen in Poland, trying to hide from the world, to the proud and confident animals they are today, they truly are the pride of Yorkshire.”

Aysa was abandoned in a private zoo when fighting engulfed Donetsk. She then gave birth to her cubs, who are now nearly two years old. Traumatised and malnourished when they arrived from Ukraine, they were cared for in a temporary shelter at a zoo in Poland. Yorkshire Wildlife Park then came to the rescue and, backed by public support through the Wildlife Foundation, organised for them to start new lives at the park’s seven-acre Lion Country reserve in March.

Their survival and health are significant achievements that were praised on World Lion Day (Saturday, August 10) - a day held to raise awareness about the dwindling number of lions living in the wild and to celebrate successful conservation projects.

The park, which gained fame through its original Lion Rescue in 2010, when 13 lions were saved from horrific conditions in Romania and brought to Yorkshire for happy and healthy lives, is home to many rare and endangered species, including Amur leopards, giraffes, and black rhinos.

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