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Status Update: ‘April' the Giraffe Is Still Pregnant, Enjoys Yard Time With Kicking Calf

20 to 30 million people across the globe have tuned in to watch a live stream of her late-stage pregnancy

What to Know

  • Millions of people have been watching the stream in anticipation of the birth of "April" the giraffe's fourth calf
  • Her story was vaulted into global headlines after activists complaining of "nudity" got the livestream yanked from YouTube
  • The livestream was back online about an hour and a half after the brouhaha started

STATUS CHECK: You Can See the Kicks in April's Belly!

The 15-year-old giraffe named "April," who has captivated millions of people across the world as they watch a live stream in anxious anticipation of the birth of her fourth calf at an upstate New York zoo, is still pregnant and doing well. 

Veterinarians with the Animal Adventure Park in Harpursville, outside Binghamton, said April is experiencing increased belly movement. The happy and healthy mother-to-be has also started to produce milk and shed a few droplets during a Saturday evening examination.

The spotted beauty gazed into the camera, wiggling her ears as she chewed her breakfast Sunday morning. The zoo said the giraffes will stay inside due to the extreme temperature drop and wet or frozen conditions. 

"Rest assured, they receive extra enrichment and extra attention on days they do not venture out," the zoo said. "A little extra bonding time!"

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Otto Greule Jr/Getty Images
Peekaboo. April pops her head over the pen to say hello.
April, 15, is seen on the right with her much younger lover, Oliver, 5, in the left pen. Have they had a fight?
"Hello, April? It's me, Oliver. Why the long face?"
"Go away, Oliver. You're stretching my patience." It's not his fault, he just doesn't understand what it's like to carry a 200-pound baby.
Getty Images
The long-necked beauty is seen in her pen on Friday. April changed some of her behaviors overnight Thursday, her keepers said.
She was choosing new spots to stand and sleep and going off her usual naptime routine, the Animal Adventure Park said in a Facebook post Friday morning.
Erica Davies
April was more interested in chatting with our reporter than speaking to Oliver. The pair were introduced when he was just a calf.
April's pregnant belly. On Friday her keepers said they could feel the baby moving.
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Let's hope April's baby comes soon. The zoo said she appeared “a little more on edge” and was “not being as lovely as usual." Perhaps Oliver shouldn't take her stand-offish behavior personally.

She and her mate, 5-year-old Oliver, had to be separated from each other while they frolicked outside Saturday afternoon because he got aggressive and wanted to rough house. According to vets, bullish behavior is common for male giraffes during the final stages of pregnancy.

"He does not want to play house -- he wants to ROUGH house," the park wrote in a Facebook post Saturday morning. "That is natural behavior as males take no part in rearing their young, nor have a need for a female once she is pregnant. Sad but true."

Viewers were concerned about the long-necked lovers' separation and questioned the vet's intentions until the zoo offered reassurance and told animal lovers to trust them.

Not much changed as the day came to a close: April alternated between standing still, swinging her tail, drinking water and slowly circling her pen. At one point during the afternoon, the calf could be seen kicking around in her belly.

We checked in on April the giraffe at Animal Adventure Park Friday, March 3, to see how she and her keepers were getting on ahead of the birth of her new calf.

April's pregnancy was catapulted into global headlines earlier Thursday after YouTube briefly yanked the zoo's live stream following complaints by animal activists that it violated the site's policies concerning "nudity and sexual content." Thousands upon thousands of commenters voiced their frustration on Facebook and YouTube, and the stream was restored within an hour or so. 

More than 30 million people across the globe have tuned in over the last few days to watch it. You can check out the live stream above.

April was seen slinking gracefully around her hay-laden home Friday morning in no apparent distress. Once she goes into active labor, zoo officials say the keepers will go in to help her but the first-time dad will be held out of the pen. Active labo

Giraffe pregnancies last for 15 months. Labor lasts anywhere from a few hours to a few days. The calf will be about 150 pounds and 6 feet tall at birth and up and walking in about an hour. The zoo says it will hold a contest to name it.

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