Gunnar, a red-tailed hawk, is back home after taking a “vacation” a few days ago.
After escape, Gunnar, Woodland Park Zoo’s red-tailed hawk, returns home
After escape, Gunnar, Woodland Park Zoo’s red-tailed hawk, returns home
The iconic Northern Trail section of the zoo (Grizzly Bears, Grey Wolves, North American River Otters, North American Porcupines, Steller's Sea Eagles, Snowy Owls, Great Grey Owls, both Rocky Mountain Elk and Roosevelt Elk together) is an AZA award-winning section of Woodland Park Zoo and it's still spectacular 25 years after its inception.
In 2020 the zoo is "re-imagining" this area, changing its name to Living Northwest Trail. There will be "large-scale screens in the redesigned Salish center and storytelling throughout linking to our Coast Salish heritage and to conservation challenges and successes. We will empower our guests to be their own conservationists with interactive features, a Western pond turtle display and virtual experiences that are accessible to all".
The best news of all is that the zoo will have new additions in the form of two species: Canadian Lynx and Fisher. The zoo is only tweaking an already fantastic exhibit complex, but at least there is now a sign of forward progress after a few years of relative stagnation. I'm excited!![]()
Are they replacing existing species to add lynx and Fisher or adding new enclosures?