Hit the snooze!

Whipsnade Zoo’s brown bears gently wake from hibernation

4 March 2026

Spring may have arrived at the UK’s largest zoo with a brief burst of sunshine, but our European brown bears Mana, Minnie, Naya and Cinderella are in no rush to get up and at ‘em. 

The fluffy foursome were spotted basking in the first of the spring rays, having awoken after three months of deep slumber. Footage captured by zookeepers this week shows the bears taking in the sights, sounds, and smells of a new year at a leisurely pace.  

Our predators section manager Sarah McGregor said: “Spring is a magical time at Whipsnade Zoo, a moment made ‘official’ when our brown bears emerge from hibernation.”

“They can be quite sluggish when they first wake up, and this year has been no exception – they've definitely wanted to hit the snooze button a few times! I think, like the rest of us, they’re waiting for the sun to really start shining before committing to leaving their cosy beds.”  

Minnie the brown bear sitting in her paddock enjoying the sun
Minnie the brown bear playing with a stick in her paddock

Wild bears enter hibernation, a survival skill they’ve learned to preserve energy when food availability is scarce, every winter. While food is plentiful at the zoo, the bears are still driven by innate instincts to forage, and so the keepers adapt what they are fed to match their behaviour and encourage them to rest over the coldest months.

Sarah continued: “Although they're a little dozy at the moment, our brown bears get excited by food or enrichment, and love rolling about in scents we spray or sprinkle in their habitat. Over the next week or so they’ll have well and truly woken up, and we can’t wait to see them playing together or making a splash in the water of their pool.”

 

Bears laying at the Zoo - European brown bears
A European brown bear playing with a tube at Whipsnade Zoo

While European brown bears are listed by the IUCN as a least concern species, some subpopulations in Europe are Critically Endangered from habitat loss and human/bear conflict.  

Sarah added: “Our bears are great ambassadors for their species, to help educate and raise awareness of European animals and highlight how important it is for us to find ways for people and wildlife to coexist. 

ZSL, the international conservation charity behind Whipsnade Zoo is working around the world to restore habitats and protect important species. We’re so lucky to have Naya, Cinderella, Mana and Minnie at the conservation zoo to educate visitors on the threats facing bears in the wild and what we can all do to help.” 
 

Minnie the brown bear playing with a stick
Minnie the brown bear playing with a stick

Visitors to our conservation zoo this spring will be able to see the bears, as well as 11,000 other animals, and every ticket goes towards supporting the conservation work ZSL does around the globe.

Book tickets 

Bear weekend celebrations!

Join us on Saturday 21 and Sunday 22 March for a whole weekend celebrating our European brown bears, from talks, activities, crafts, quizzes, there's fun for all the family. Plus, you can also make a bear a picnic*!
 

*This is an exclusive, paid-for experience, for £5. Find out all the details here.

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