Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: THURSDAY, May 13, 1993 TAG: 9305130198 SECTION: VIRGINIA PAGE: C1 EDITION: METRO SOURCE: ED SHAMY STAFF WRITER DATELINE: LENGTH: Medium
The lion's share of the $10,000 pool will be paid for with $8,000 contributed by Sue Collins of Roanoke. It was Collins' $10,000 donation in 1991 that capped the zoo's two-year fund drive, enabling contractors to begin work on a new habitat for the tiger.
"I'm a cat lover, and I guess the bigger, the better," said Collins. "It's just a shame all the animals can't have such palatial homes at our zoo. Maybe someday."
The remaining $2,000 came from contributions from zoo visitors who dropped coins in a box near the tiger exhibit, according to Beth Poff, the zoo's director.
On hot summer days, Ruby has squeezed her 350-pound frame into a steel cattle trough to beat the heat.
"Siberian tigers very much enjoy the water," she said. "They use it to cool off and will use it in the wild as a hunting device. Sometimes they'll drive a deer into the water."
Ruby, now almost 6 years old, lived in a converted corn crib when she first arrived on Mill Mountain. The zoo unexpectedly inherited the female tiger - mostly Siberian but perhaps mixed with Bengal - in 1988 after state game officials confiscated her from her illegal owner in Danville.
A pool was originally planned for the tiger exhibit, which cost $55,000 in all, but was ditched when money ran short.
All that was left was a hole in the dirt at the center of Ruby's new home.
Poff said work could begin within two weeks, laying concrete and preparing a small septic system for overflow water.
While the 190-square-foot pool is built, Ruby will be held in her holding pen - the former corn crib, said Poff. Most of the work will be done at night, when the tiger is usually in the holding pen anyway.
by CNB