FunkyGibbon
Well-Known Member
I disagree! Seeing animals in the wild can be wonderful. Seeing them in a zoo can be wonderful. Neither is intrinsically better than the other - although they’re certainly different.
To compare to other areas of life in which I am passionately interested: is it better to see a musician live, or to listen to their recordings? To watch a play on the stage, or a film on a screen? A football match on TV or in the flesh at a stadium full of fellow supporters?
Personally, I don’t much go for the idea of zoos imitating the experience of seeing animals in the wild. If I do settle down to watch Match of the Day on TV, I don’t want it to be the same as the experience of visiting Fratton Park, where my view is impeded, the traffic is appalling, it’s usually cold, and I’m surrounded by deeply irritating fellow supporters.
There are certainly advantages and disadvantages to both. I've seen orangutans in the wild, and in terms of actually 'seeing' them I much prefer the zoo experience, where views will likely be much closer, unimpeded and less fleeting.
And yet.
There is something about the day and a half that I spent walking in Danum trying to find them and mostly failing (having been unlucky the previous year at the Kinabatangan) that made the eventual moment far more special, coming as it did when I had almost given up hope. It's not just the thrill of discovery, it's the uniqueness of the occasion (barely spoiled by said orangutan deciding to urinate on me from 40 metres up). It's a symphony of distance travelled, of a childhood dreaming of this moment, of the smells and sounds and heat around you.
To borrow from your own analogy, one may well prefer to listen to the single in order to appreciate the song as art, and yet bands will also put out live albums, acknowledging that there is something about a stadium of screaming fans that has value even if it's diluted into your own living room.
Masoala is the live album of a Madagascan rainforest. Of course it's not the real thing, but most people can't afford tickets to that. At this point I must have seen thousands of aviaries in zoos all around the world, but that huge half cylinder of steel and plastic towers above all of them, by an almost farcical margin, as the best zoo experience of my life.
My love for this exhibit is not entirely bird-based, although it did grant me stunning views of the only ground roller in Europe. The forest itself is the star and to some extent it overshadows the inhabitants. I am one of those who looks askance at Plzen's failings (whilst still enjoying my visits) and it doesn't trouble me much to give Zurich the win here. If the opponent was Walsrode I would be much more anguished trying to pick apart the various merits of offering a 'wild' experience vs actually showcasing birds.
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