... Mad about animals? Now you can discover everything in Animals, Animals, Animals. Adopt Winti, the baby orangutan. Help deliver a foal. Look after newborn puppies. Lend a hand. Meet animals from around the world. Give your pets the love they deserve. Rescue and care for animals in need. Monkeys, cats, penguins, rabbits, tigers, dogs, elephants, even snakes. They're all in Animals, Animals, Animals. Every week for you to collect and keep. Animals, Animals, Animals. Don't you just love them? Mad about animals? Welcome to Animals, Animals, Animals. The amazing new weekly collection that will bring you lots of great new friends. Animals from around the world, out in the countryside and in your own home. One day you may want to work with animals. Maybe as a vet or veterinary nurse, in animal rescue or in stables. Or perhaps you'll want to work with wild animals, in Africa or on the islands of Asia or under the ocean. And you'll always want pets of your own. Maybe a dog, a cat, a rabbit or even a snake. Animals, Animals, Animals will help you understand how these wonderful animals need our care and understanding. And how you can help. With each weekly part of Animals, Animals, Animals you'll build up a fantastic collection of information, pictures and great animal characters to enjoy. And as you file each sheet, we'll bring you closer to animals than ever before. And let you share your love with them. Each week, Animals, Animals, Animals will be helping animals in need all around the world. And you'll be able to follow their progress as we go along. For instance, in the Let's Adopt section, you've already met Rinthi, the baby orangutan. Rinthi was found alone in the jungle after his mother died in a forest fire. He was badly burned, weak and hungry and very scared. Fortunately, he was found and now lives in a rehabilitation centre in Borneo. He needs all the help he can get to grow into a healthy adult orangutan and to return to the trees of the tropical rainforest. Find out what happens to him after he starts his new life at the rehabilitation centre. How he gets healthy again and forms a special relationship with his carer. And how he learns to play with the other adopted orangutans. You can follow him in his lessons in finding food, climbing trees, building nests and fending for himself. You'll be able to follow and help Rinthi as he grows up and prepares to leave the centre to live in the wild. And that's not all. We will also be adopting Danny, the busy Labrador guide dog trainee. Find out how he learns his good manners at an early age. Follow his training and progress until he's ready to meet and look after his blind partner when he's two years old. Sariska, the playful tiger cub. Sariska is blind when she's born and opens her eyes at two weeks old. Follow her as she grows up, prepares to look after herself and finds a territory of her own. Mabel, the sleepy koala who loves eating eucalyptus. Mabel sleeps for 20 hours a day to conserve her energy as her body can't store fat. She communicates with other koalas with soft clicking noises. So you'll also be able to share in their new lives as we go along. As well as meeting lots of individual characters face to face and giving them your help and love, we'll take you on a wonderful graphic safari to meet some of nature's most fantastic animal families. Soon you'll be meeting a penguin family who live in freezing Antarctica. You'll see how they get along together in family life, teach their young the skills they need and how they spend their days fishing and swimming for fish, squid and baby crabs. During the winter it's dark all the time, but during the summer when the baby penguins are hatched, it's light all night long. Penguins can't fly, but they can swim faster than we can run by using their wings like paddles. Their black and white colour makes them well camouflaged. It's very important that they're hard to see or they could be eaten by killer whales or seals. You'll meet lots of other animal families from around the world and learn all about their fantastic lives. You'll be thrilled by the lion family who live in Tanzania in Africa. They have a tough life, but somehow they make it through and bring up a great family of cubs. And you'll see the hilarious antics of the gibbon family who swing through the jungles of South East Asia. These animals live all over the world, but what would happen if one day you were walking along and found an animal that needed your help? What would you do if you found a fox in your garden? If you see a fox out during the day, it may be unwell because foxes usually only come out when it's dark. It may be a young fox who has recently started to fend for himself and isn't very good at hunting yet. Or maybe the fox has been injured, in which case you'll need to know who to contact. And what about a lamb who needs to be hand-fed? Almost as soon as a lamb is born it can stand up, but sometimes the mother sheep has twins and may not be able to cope with both. Without the care of its mother, the baby lamb needs to be fed several times a day with a bottle to make sure it grows and stays healthy. You'll find out how to help all of these animals and many more in the Lend a Hand section. You'll be learning the essential do's and don'ts that will help you lend a hand that might even save an animal's life. Unfortunately, some animals in our human world get into bad scrapes which aren't their fault. You'll be meeting lots of characters on Animal Rescue Patrol. Join the professionals at work as they rescue animals in trouble. Find out what attention, treatment and care is needed to nurse them back to full health. And one day you might want to work with animals. The Essential Vet Course shows you the wonderful work these dedicated vets and veterinary nurses do. And as Essential Vet Course builds up, you will have a manual of animal care so that one day you might look after animals and make sure that they stay in the best of health. You'll find out how vets diagnose animal illnesses, how they know what help to give, what they do when an animal needs an operation, and how they nurse animals back to full health. You'll see how a dog who has swallowed a needle is given life-saving surgery, how a hamster who's been in a fight is stitched up and made better, how a cat with flu is nursed back to health, how a dehydrated lizard is given the right fluids through a drip. And after the vets have performed their skilled work, the sick animal needs lots of care, love and attention to help it back to full health. If you've had a pet who's visited the vet, you'll know it's your job to care for them and love them when they come home. And with lots of care, they'll soon become your happy, healthy, loving pet again. Fortunately, not all animals need to be rescued. Some just need love and looking after properly in your own home. In the Looking After Pets section, you can get to know about all types of pets that you could happily keep. Guinea pigs make great pets as they're friendly, lovable and inexpensive to keep. But before you buy a gay pig or any other pet, you'll need to find out all about their ideal home, what food they like to eat, how to make their hutch comfortable and clean, how to keep them fit, and what to look out for when things aren't quite right. They need to be looked after properly, and you'll find all the information in the Looking After section of Animals, Animals, Animals. Have you ever thought about keeping a pet snake? If they're well looked after, they can make great pets too. The best and safest snakes to keep are quite small, such as corn snakes. These snakes won't grow too big, but they'll need a heated vivarium, something to hide under, water so they don't dehydrate, and of course, they have a very special diet. So before you rush out to buy a snake, you must make sure you can look after it properly, and check that your family is happy with a snake in the house. We'll be showing you lots of essential things to help you with your cats, dogs, guinea pigs, tamsters, gerbils, budgies, tortoises, even Vietnamese pot-bellied pigs. Looking after pets is really fun, and you'll learn a lot too. The more attention you give them, the more your pets will love you back. But some of our most wonderful animals are in real danger, and need lots of special help. The gentle giant panda lives in China, and forages for bamboo stems and leaves to eat. They used to live all over China, but now there are only a thousand of them left, and they need our help to stop them becoming extinct. We can help these beautiful creatures by creating new reserves and panda corridors, so they can move between these reserves to find more food and meet one another to breed. It's not too late to help the pandas. Just by writing to the right people and getting involved with projects in your area, you can make a real difference, and we'll tell you how. The mountain gorilla is under threat for different reasons. They live in the mountain rainforests of Central Africa, and there are only 650 of them left in the wild. They're being killed by poachers, and their forests are being cut down. Because gorillas are so closely related to humans, they're catching our diseases too, which is wiping out the population. Mountain gorillas live together in family groups. Each group has a male leader who's called a silverback, because he's large and has silvery hair on his back. A silverback may weigh three times as much as an average person, and will make all the decisions for the group. Imagine being told by this guy when you can eat, sleep, and when to move home. Would you argue with him? Gorillas can die when they're kept in captivity, so their habitat must be protected if they are to be saved. Find out what you can do to help these gentle giants. 15 years ago, the black rhino was quite a common animal, but now it's been hunted to near extinction. There are only a few thousand left. In Zimbabwe and other African countries, special areas have been set aside to encourage the black rhino to breed, and now the population does seem to be growing. But there's a long way to go before they're out of danger of extinction. Find out more about how we can help pandas, gorillas, rhinos, and other special animals who need our help in saving special animals. Aren't some animals just amazing? For instance, the whale shark is the biggest fish in the ocean, but only eats microscopic plankton. So how come it has jaws large enough to swallow a car? And the chameleon. The chameleon can change color in seconds, swivel its eyes in opposite directions, and has a tongue as long as its body and as sticky as, well, a chameleon's tongue. Cheetahs are the fastest animals on earth. They can run at up to 70 miles an hour. That's the same speed that cars drive on motorways. Anacondas are snakes that live underwater around the Amazon in South America. They can grow up to nine meters long. That's the length of a bus. Piranhas are ferocious fish that will eat anything that falls into the water. Even though they're as small as goldfish, they can devour a cow in just a few minutes. You'll find all of these, plus many more fantastic and fascinating creatures, in the amazing animals section. There are so many different animals out there, and that's what the A to Z of animals is all about. You'll get to know hundreds of fantastic animals, from aardvark to zebra, with loads and loads in between. From polar bears to wildebeest, to ranchulas to cheetahs, hippos to monkeys, bats, elephants, eagles, scorpions, iguanas, hedgehogs, starfish, killer whales, octopuses, frogs, badgers, parrots, and a whole alphabet more. All these wonderful creatures will be in the A to Z of animals. It'll be a permanent reference work for you any time you need to look something up. As you've seen, animals, animals, animals will be bringing you everything. Lots of animals for you to enjoy, lots of information for you to use, lots of things you can do to help. You'll build up a wonderful collection, and just by understanding more about animals, you'll be helping them at home, in your countryside, and all around the world. Look out for the fantastic new animal friends that you will make coming soon. Let's adopt Danny the Labrador guide dog trainee. Get to know the penguin family from Antarctica. Let's adopt Chico the killer whale. Looking after pet guinea pigs. Get to know the otter family from Scotland. Looking after your pet dog. Saving rhinos. Saving brown bears. And in part three of animals, animals, animals, you'll get a fantastic set of divider cards, absolutely free, to file your sheets in order. So when you're finally allowed to get that pet rabbit, you'll know exactly where to find the information. We're really pleased you're joining us with animals, animals, animals. Make sure you don't miss any of this exciting collection. Place a regular order with your news agent, or even take out a subscription and get a fantastic free gift. Soon you'll enjoy everything you've just seen and much, much more. Animals, animals, animals. Don't you just love them? Thank you.