I was at
Vancouver Aquarium on Saturday, April 21st (exactly a week later as planned due to one of my kids fracturing his wrist and needing a hospital visit

) and here are my thoughts on the facility. It was my family's first visit in 20 months and the aquarium opened this week after being closed for almost a full year.
- Being able to visit the aquarium was terrific and we had a great time. The crowds were not overwhelming, due to reduced numbers via Covid regulations, and we had a blast. The new 4D show proceeded like normal in a theater, but we were fine with that as we've been in a movie theater on a weekly basis all summer long.
Octopus: Blue Planet II is the excellent 12-minute flick, with footage narrated by David Attenborough, and it is included with the price of admission. The restaurant was fully open and the food there, while very expensive at Vancouver prices, was delicious.
- The heavily advertised 'new' Marine Mammal Rescue Exhibit isn't new at all. In fact, it is the main pool that used to hold Killer Whales back in the day, then Pacific White-sided Dolphins, and now a solitary California Sea Lion and at least one Harbour Seal. The aquarium has put up a bunch of fresh signs and called it 'new', which is disappointing. It's been there forever!
- The last ever cetacean ('Helen' the Pacific White-sided Dolphin) left for an unnamed U.S. facility in April. Vancouver Aquarium is now finished with whales, dolphins and porpoises forever and it's the end of a long legacy with cetaceans. In the outdoor exhibits I saw one California Sea Lion, 1 Harbour Seal, 5 Steller's Sea Lions, 4 Northern Fur Seals, 5 Southern Sea Otters and 5 African Penguins. For all the talk of not having cetaceans in captivity, and for all of the protests and negative press, the aquarium's attendance has plummeted since the death of the last Beluga Whales in late 2016. That year saw the aquarium achieve a record-breaking 1.17 million visitors, and now with no cetaceans and a pandemic the attendance is nowhere near that total.
- The aquarium was not looking in tip-top shape. On one hand, I kept thinking to myself that the facility has been closed for almost a year and so there should have been plenty of time to correct signs, spruce up paint in some sections or fine-tune the aesthetics. On the flip side, the facility has been running a 'bare bones' staff with just enough workers to keep the place afloat and so perhaps there hasn't been the opportunity to make subtle changes. There has recently been a job fair with the intent of hiring 100 new employees and there were a lot of staff members wearing "in training" name tags on their shirts. My guess is that it's going to take the best part of another year to truly get things up and running smoothly.
- The big shark tank is down to a single Blacktip Reef Shark and the days of 4 of those species and even a Zebra Shark are gone. There is a single Yacare Caiman left. A big snake tank near the caiman exhibit is now gone. At least 3-4 large tanks in the main foyer are all gone. The Electric Eel is gone. The two Garden Eel species are gone. Mudskippers are gone. In the Amazon section there are 4 terrariums in a row with either zero signage whatsoever or the wrong signs. (Example: a sign for Knifefish on an exhibit with a Boa Constrictor!) There are probably a dozen tanks in the aquarium with either zero signage or old, outdated signs.
So...a mixed bag. My kids had a blast and it was 4 hours that were well spent. Watching 5 otters frolic in the water as they were fed by trainers was superb, plus the Giant Pacific Octopus was extremely active and a treat to watch. From a zoo nerd perspective, the aquarium needs to tweak a whole bunch of small things to move back up amongst the best aquatic zoological establishments in North America. There will probably be a surge in popularity as visitors are excited to see the aquarium open again, after it faced permanent closure, but the American company that now owns the facility is surely thinking of what new exhibit can be added to entice repeat customers. The big expansion of 2014 is a distant memory and a few rescued pinnipeds won't get the average British Columbia resident coming back on numerous occasions each year.