New giant pandas are heading to the US from China


We’re getting new pandas, people! We’re. Getting. New. PANDAS! Specifically, two giant pandas named Yun Chuan and Xin Bao, who will be traveling with handlers from China as they relocate to the San Diego Zoo. For a sense of how monumental this is, bear in mind (had to, not sorry!) that it’s been 20 years since we’ve welcomed new Ailuropoda melanoleuca to our shores. American-Chinese relations may be politically tense, but China is committed to working with conservationists across the globe to protect their special species. They call this practice of sharing their bears with the world, I kid you not, “panda diplomacy.” Bring on the delegation!

Pandas Yun Chuan (pronounced yoon chu-an) and Xin Bao (pronounced sing bao) are coming to the San Diego Zoo from China, making a 7,000-mile trip to their new home.

NBC News correspondent Janis Mackey Frayer shared on TODAY June 25 that the pandas will go into crates transported via truck to an airport for their specialized flight to the U.S. The handlers will make the trip with the pandas, giving them their food and helping them settle once they reach San Diego.

It’s unclear when they will arrive, but the animals will need some time to acclimate as it takes about a month to adjust to the new climate and different food. Once the pandas are situated, those who are interested in visiting them should plan accordingly: The ideal time to see them is in the morning when it hasn’t gotten too hot. Later in the day, they enjoy sleeping in the shade.

Earlier this year, zoo officials visited the pandas in China.

“Our conservation partners in China shared photographs and personality traits of Yun Chuan and Xin Bao, but meeting them in person was so special,” Dr. Megan Owen, vice president of Conservation Science at San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance, said in a press release in April.

“It’s inspiring as people from around the world come together to conserve, protect, and care for these special bears, and we can’t wait to welcome them to San Diego,” said Owen.

While it’s not clear when the pandas will arrive, Owen told TODAY in April that it’s essential to bring the animals to the U.S.

“A really important part of having them here is so that we can continue to study them and what we learn from them will contribute to the conservation of the species,” she said.

“But, also, just having the six million visitors that come through our front door every year be able to experience the giant pandas,” she continued. “It’s incredibly inspiring, and it really makes them advocates for conservation. We’re working very closely with our colleagues in China and we’re going to continue to contribute to the conservation of the species in their native habitat, as well.”

In the press release shared by the San Diego Zoo in April, Xin Bao was listed as a nearly 4-year-old female whose name means a “new treasure of prosperity and abundance.”

“She’s incredibly playful, maybe even a bit mischievous,” Owen told TODAY.

Yun Chuan was listed as a nearly 5-year-old male panda in the April release. He was described as “mild-mannered, gentle and lovable,” with a mother named Zhen Zhen (pronounced jen jen), who was born at San Diego Zoo in 2007. The name Yun is a reference to his grandmother Bai Yun, who resided at the San Diego Zoo for 23 years, while Chuan refers to his native Chinese province.

“He is more laid back, I’d say,” Owen told TODAY.

[From TODAY]

Sure, it’s cute just reading about Xin Bao’s playful nature, or Yun Chuan’s lovability. But you simply must watch the video coverage as well. These two dopes are stupidly ridiculous. Hanging sideways off trees, gnawing away on bamboo — they eat 80 pounds of it a day; Xin Bao also reportedly likes apples and cornbread, too — or doing a few roly-poly-olys, Xin Bao and Yun Chuan don’t give a shoot how they’re caught on camera. If you really to want spontaneously combust from silliness overload, cue the video up to the 1:30 mark and watch these beefcakes play on a slide. Go on, I’ll wait…

No dates have been announced yet for when Yun Chuan and Xin Bao will be ready to receive visitors in their new Southern California residence. That’s likely intentional, as they’re counting on it taking a minimum of a month for the pandas to reacclimate. They’re traveling 7,000 miles, it’s gonna take time to reestablish their dedicated routine of, according to NBC News’ Frayer, “eat, lounge, repeat.” All joking aside, I think I’ve finally found my people. Wishing a safe and swift voyage to Yun Chuan and Xin Bao. In the meantime, I’ll be cursing out every known deity recorded by man for the grave injustice of my not being born a panda.

Stock photos of pandas credit W Warby, Kirandeep Singh Walia and Laura The Xplaura on Pexels, Jason Sung and Ying Wu on Unsplash

You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.

24 Responses to “New giant pandas are heading to the US from China”

  1. Pinkosaurus says:

    Panda videos are one of those things that can improve even the worst days. Really, just some of the world’s most adorable derps.

    A cousin lives in a house that was growing bamboo to donate for the pandas at the zoo when she was stationed in San Diego. The landlord would come and harvest it every once in a while and she said it would pop back up like it had never been cut in a matter of weeks. So glad panda diplomacy has not come to an end (yet).

    • bananapanda says:

      That’s pretty cool. DC is getting Pandas later this year or next year. They’re taking the time to renovate the panda area right now.

      Yes, pandas mainly eat bamboo but they’ll also eat fruit and vegetables. DC’s zoo gives them icicle fruit cakes in the summer.

  2. Bumblebee says:

    I was reading about the Panda fandoms in China. You think the Swifties are bad? You think think K-Pop fandoms are intense? They have nothing on Panda fandoms. It’s adorably scary how much influence these bamboo lovers have.

  3. Lolo86lf says:

    As I understand it Bamboo is mainly the only food Panda bears eat. The zoo is gonna have to spend a fortune on imported bamboo. We do not have Bamboo forests in the US . Not very practical is it?

    • equality says:

      Bamboo is easily grown in the US. I have been to many zoos that have it planted at the actual zoo. It would be really easily grown in California.

    • CatMum says:

      bamboo is the ONLY food pandas eat! really! unless American bamboo is somehow different than Chinese bamboo… the writer was making things up. nice work, Today. hopefully their colleagues will clown them mercilessly, morning noon and night.

      I mean, I saw the pandas at the Washington zoo as a kid, and even I remember that!

      ok, that said, that bench photo, omg!

  4. Lady Esther says:

    Hmmm, let’s see: will only eat fancy food…derping around all the time…expensive to maintain….love going down slides…not useful but fun to watch? Yep, royals are pandas 🙂

  5. Chantal1 says:

    How exciting! Watching Panda videos and old school music videos is how I first got hooked on YouTube. Cuteness overload – esp baby pandas! It’s great that Panda diplomacy hasn’t ended. If only human diplomacy worked as well…

  6. Nanea says:

    “In the meantime, I’ll be cursing out every known deity recorded by man for the grave injustice of my not being born a panda.”

    Kismet, I know what you could do to help remedy that injustice.

    No, I don’t mean visiting the zoos of either San Diego or DC, but start saving your $$$ so you could change them into ¥/元 aka yuán.

    There are two centers in the Sichuan province that you could visit, either the Bifengxia Panda Base in Ya’an, where the two 🐼🐼 going to San Diego are from, or the Chengdu Research Base of Giant Panda Breeding, a public non-profit institute.

    In both places you can see *lots* of 🐼🐼🐼 of all ages — playing on slides, swings, napping, feeding.

    We’ve been to Chengdu, and there’s so much Chinese history on offer there besides 🐼🐼🐼, and lots of great food. But one could probably do both places, if one felt like it!
    🐼🎍

    • Christine says:

      Holy marbles, this has shot to the top of my bucket list.

      • laurie says:

        You can also volunteer for a day. I did and it was amazing. Mucked out their “rooms”, swept up their playing area of poop, broke up bamboo, fed them “cakes” we made. Highly recommend the experience. They are so personable and funny.
        And as to growing bamboo in the states, I pass a bamboo grove on my walks in NJ. It grows like a weed and is very invasive. It’s rampant in Florida.

      • Christine says:

        I can confirm. I live in SoCal, and some moron who lived in this house before us decided planting bamboo in the backyard was a very effective inner-city fence. I mean, I guess it works for that purpose, I absolutely cannot see the house behind ours, but it grows like a weed, and constantly has to be thinned out. Every so often we get fed up enough to talk about ripping it all out, but we’ve been here 12 years, and still haven’t done it.

        That totally should have been our pandemic project.

      • Deering24 says:

        Agreed about the NJ bamboo—a local house here has a veritable wall of trees around the backyard. I thought it was fake, because NJ isn’t the most temperate state—but nope. The owner has been growing it for years…

  7. ElleE says:

    Pandas are the ultimate soft diplomacy and I love them.

    More panda cams please! If we ever get panda cubs, no one‘s gonna get work done for like 4 months.

  8. PinkOrchid says:

    “Every Panda is cute, so I don’t care which one I see.” Love this. Cuteness you can count on!

  9. Rnot says:

    This is mildly reassuring as China has been using a more aggressive and less-compromising approach to diplomacy over the past few years. Hopefully the return of pandas indicates a return to the more collaborative diplomatic approach of the aughts and early teens.

  10. B says:

    Thanks for posting this, exciting/adorable! The TODAY video said they’ll arrive this summer and will celebrating their birthdays at the end of July in San Diego (likely still in quarantine). I live in SD, and wondering how it will be for them to adjust to our weather after coming from rainy, cool mountains?

  11. IFoxi says:

    The Zoo is still doing active construction on their exhibit. They are modifying the older one, think they started the instant they got green light from China. I’m guessing at least another month.

    I love that they are sending Bai Yun’s grandson 😍Watching her raise Zhen Zhen on panda cam was so fun to watch.

Commenting Guidelines

Read the article before commenting.

We aim to be a friendly, welcoming site where people can discuss entertainment stories and current events in a lighthearted, safe environment without fear of harassment, excessive negativity, or bullying. Different opinions, backgrounds, ages, and nationalities are welcome here - hatred and bigotry are not. If you make racist or bigoted remarks, comment under multiple names, or wish death on anyone you will be banned. There are no second chances if you violate one of these basic rules.

By commenting you agree to our comment policy and our privacy policy

Do not engage with trolls, contrarians or rude people. Comment "troll" and we will see it.

Please e-mail the moderators at cbcomments at gmail.com to delete a comment if it's offensive or spam. If your comment disappears, it may have been eaten by the spam filter. Please email us to get it retrieved.

You can sign up to get an image next to your name at Gravatar.com Thank you!

Leave a comment after you have read the article

Save my name and email in this browser for the next time I comment