Zoo de Granby
This was the last zoological institution that we have visited on this trip. The zoo is located about an hour away from Montreal and was founded in 1950s. Besides the proper zoo, there is a water park, an amusement park with rides and games arcade, and a “dinozoo” with animatronic dinosaurs, so this definitely is a popular family destination that even sells 2-day tickets (so I imagine that some families spend a whole weekend at the zoo). The zoo itself is not too large and showcases for the most part a typical ABC collection. There appear to be no Canadian species, and the collection is split between 4 zones, each with appropriate theming: Africa, South America, Asia, and Australia. There is also a petting farm (which we didn’t go to) and a nocturnal cave. The zoo’s layout is very easy to navigate. There is a central plaza with visitor facilities (giftshop, food venues, restrooms), from which the paths to different zones radiate. On the map, each path has a different color: Australian path is colored green, Asian – yellow, dinozoo – brown, South American – red, and African – orange. The zoo also has a monorail going above some of the exhibits, but, fortunately, all exhibits can be seen by walking.
The cave is located close to the Asian zone’s entrance and is truly built to resemble a cave, with narrow labyrinthine paths, fake stalactites and stalagmites, and semi-dark glass-fronted terrariums set into the rockwork. In some places the paths were so narrow that I could barely squeeze through with a backpack, and once or twice I bumped my head into the ceiling (I am 5 feet 10 inches tall and of an average build, so I imagine that for a large person this building could get claustrophobic). I did not take any notes, but from what I remember the pavilion housed a
kinkajou (asleep during my two visits to the cave), a colony of
Jamaican fruit bats, several reptile tanks (I remember a
Cuban boa,
Children’s python,
Elaphe taeniura ridleyi ratsnake, and a
Goniurosaurus hainanensis gecko), and some tarantulas and cockroaches.
The
Australian zone is nicely themed, but the collection is very predictable. There is a walk-through yard with lots of
Bennett’s wallabies and a few
eastern grey kangaroos, and
emus and
black swans in attached non-walkthrough enclosures, a walk-through aviary for
rainbow lorikeets, and an aquarium building with several coral reef tanks and
stingray touch pool.
The
Asian zone was a highlight for me and the main reason for my adding this zoo to our itinerary, due to the presence of
Japanese serows. The zoo has a pair since 2018, and they are housed in a grassed paddock, together with a pair of
African crowned cranes (the zoo also has a pair of Manchurian red-crowned cranes, which would be a more appropriate species to mix with serows, and I was told that the zoo felt safer about starting serows with African cranes initially, and is going to eventually replace African cranes with Manchurian if everything goes well). Japanese serows, of course, are becoming a great rarity outside of Japan – ZIMS only shows 4 institutions housing them currently (2 in Canada and 2 in the US, with the largest herd of 3.3 in Roosevelt Park Zoo in North Dakota), and the species appears to be completely gone from Europe in the recent years. I have seen the species before in San Diego and Los Angeles zoos, but didn’t take any photos, so was naturally very keen to secure good photographs. This turned out to be a challenge. When we first came to their enclosure, they were lying right next to the fence which made good photos impossible. After completing one zoo round, I had to leave my family in the amusement park zone and came back to the serows enclosure a total of 5 times(!), before they got up and started grazing. It was a cloudy day, and the enclosure is mostly in the shade, so taking photos was still difficult. At the end my patience was rewarded. and I did get a couple of decent ones

.
Besides the serows, the Asian section includes an aviary for
Himalayan monal pheasants,
Asiatic black bears in a grassy enclosure completely surrounded by rockwork with a few viewing windows,
snow leopards in a nice rocky exhibit (with several viewing points, including from inside the Mongolian yurt replica),
red pandas (their viewing area has lots of Chinese theming and many hanging lanterns),
Przewalski’s horses and
Bactrian camels in two a basic yards,
Manchurian red-crowned cranes,
Siberian tigers in two adjoining exhibits with indoor viewing area simulating Russian gold mine,
Amur leopards,
Japanese macaques, and a mountainous paddock for
domestic yaks mixed with
Himalayan tahrs. There are also two enclosures that don’t fit into overall Asian theme – between the macaques and yaks there is a large yard for a herd of
alpacas, and a semi-spherical metal cage houses a family of
mantled guereza monkeys. According to the zoo sign, that cage was originally built to house polar bears, and the monkeys are kept there during the summer for animal welfare reasons (the only alternative is, apparently, to house them entirely indoors all year round).
The
South American zone has two large outdoor exhibits for
jaguars and
Andean condors. Both are round, fully covered with ironwork, and have some viewing windows. The jaguar exhibit is attached to a South American pavilion which has a number of Mayan-temple themed glass-fronted exhibit for a variety of (mainly South American) species. There is an indoor jaguar exhibit, exhibits for
macaws (green-winged and blue-and-yellow),
Geoffroy’s spider monkeys, mixed exhibit for
white-faced sakis with
white-tufted marmosets and
two-toed sloth,
Goeldi’s monkeys mixed with
green aracaris,
golden lion tamarins mixed with more
white-tufted marmosets, terrariums for
green basilisk and
boa constrictor, and tanks for
anaconda,
spiny softshell turtles, and
piranhas. At the end of the pavilion there is an all-indoor exhibit for 2
patas monkeys which is obviously out of place. Attached to the pavilion are fully covered outdoor enclosures for
Patagonian maras,
spider monkeys, and a
capybara mixed with
red-billed toucan. Outside, there are also a couple of paddocks for
llamas and more capybaras, and two pools for
American alligators separated by a low hanging bridge. Finally, there is a small shed right next to the alligator exhibit, with windows into two indoor exhibits for
spectacled caimans.
The
African zone starts with a
camel ride station (with dromedary camels). Then there is a future exhibit for
white rhinos (currently under construction), a mixed exhibit for
meerkats and
crested porcupines, two medium-sized but grassy yards for
African elephants (the zoo has 1.1 living together, the male Tutume was born in Berlin Tierpark, while the female Sara was wild-caught in Namibia) with a large pool in one of the yards, fairly large and open African savanna exhibit (with
Baringo giraffes,
Grant’s zebras,
elands,
ostriches, and
marabou storks), and a new exhibit for
African lions (which includes an attached indoor exhibit where the lions can be viewed in winter). The nearby
African pavilion houses
gorillas (2.0 from Calgary Zoo),
mandrills (indoor exhibit only),
spot-necked otters (indoor exhibit only, and rather dark), and
crested porcupines (the exhibit looked empty, so I am not sure if it is for the same individuals that live with meerkats). There is also a terrarium for
veiled chameleon, and a small indoor walk-through aviary (
white-cheeked turacos,
superb starlings, and a few
waxbill species). I believe that the guereza monkeys are also housed in this building during winter, while the summer yard for gorillas is outside. Further along the path there is a small island for
ringtailed lemurs, an exhibit for
Aldabra tortoises (kept, for some reason, with domestic geese), and a lake with a flock of
Caribbean flamingos. The last exhibit along the African loop (or the first, depending on the walking direction) is the one for
common hippos (currently houses 2.1, with 1.0 born at the zoo a few years ago). There is a covered underwater viewing area, and the hippos can also be viewed from the other side of the exhibit, when on land.
This concludes the Zoo de Granby review and my Canadian road trip. Serows were the highlight for me, but I did like the rest of the zoo as well. It has a pretty complete ABC collection (missing only sea lions, polar bears, and penguins) and had no bad exhibits or weak points (besides species such as mandrills or otters being kept permanently indoors). My kids enjoyed the amusement park section a lot, and it turned out to be a blessing for me as well, since I was able to leave them there with my wife and concentrate on getting the shots of serows

.