Driving from MA to TX, seeking advice on zoos en route

My father recently died, and for personal reasons I have decided I would rather take a week off work and spend an extra thousand dollars to drive across the country then to just ship his car and fly back to Texas.

My plan is to see at least attraction in the morning and then drive 4 to 6 hours every day until I get back to Houston where I now live. Not everything I am going to see is a zoo or potentially going to see but zoos, aquariums, and botanical gardens are kind of my default "I will do this if there is nothing more compelling" plus the Cincinnati zoo and Pittsburgh Aviary are two of the three things that I am definitely going to see and part of the reason for the trip (the third is the St. Louis Botanical Garden). I might potentially see more than one attraction if it is convenient and if anything I am doing in the afternoon is indoors.

When it comes to zoos, my main interests are birds, species you don't see elsewhere often (for example the Scripps Institute of Oceanography had a lot of seahorse relatives that are not sea dragons or pipefish), and really interesting exhibit design. To give examples: I feel that the three best individual exhibit areas I have seen are the Brazos River Country at Cameron Park Zoo in Waco, which single-handedly makes an otherwise unremarkable zoo more than worth visiting and Wings of Asia aviary and the jungle loop section, both at Zoo Miami. I have been to fewer aquariums recently, but the single exhibit that most stood out to me was the Mississippi River exhibit at the Audubon Aquarium in New Orleans.

The route has to take me through Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, and St. Louis because of the things I want to see in those cities, but I am still trying to make a couple of other decisions about the route, as well as several decisions contingent on which route I take, for which I have I guess broadly six zoo-related questions:

1. To get to Pittsburgh in a reasonable time, the natural stopping point is Scranton (or Wilkes-Barre, but the attractions there seem kind of bare). In Scranton it seems like the top thing to do is Steamtown and the Trolley Museum next door, but I see that there is also the Electric City Aquarium and Reptile Den. This appears to be a small operation, and small zoos intrigue me because they do things differently. In my experience that usually translate to doing things a little bit worse in almost every way than the bigger AZA zoos, but sometimes they surprise me and when you have a combination of passionate management and interesting exhibit design I can find them more fun than anything an AZA zoo offers. So naturally, I am wondering: has anyone been here, and if so first of all is it worth visiting? And second of all is it more worth visiting than Steamtown and the Trolley Museum?

2. I have an acquaintance from Ohio who was trying to persuade me to do the Columbus Zoo instead of Cincinnati, but from everything I can tell Cincinnati is a much better zoo for birds, plus fact that it has keas and had both the last known the passenger pigeon and Carolina parakeet, which are also the reasons I wanted to visit it in the first place. However in looking into this I learned about the Newport Aquarium. This is the reason for adding the "maybe a second attraction as long as it's indoors and relatively close by" rule. However, I'm still not completely sure it's worth it with also going to the Cincinnati zoo and the longest stretch of driving ahead of me (unless I break it up, see point three). Obviously only I can decide if that's worthwhile, but in terms of worthwhileness compared to the Cincinnati Zoo, how worthwhile is it?

3. I can take up to six days to do this trip, although I could potentially do it in five. There are two places I could break it up. One option is to do it in the stretch between Cincinnati and St. Louis. This offers the opportunity to see attractions in Louisville, Indianapolis, and nearby areas and there are a lot of zoos. This includes a "bird park" north of Indianapolis that has no website and where pictures feature things like turkeys, so much as I love birds it doesn't seem compelling. There are also the Indianapolis, Miller Park, and Louisville Zoos. In terms of birds, unusual animals, and interesting exhibit, do any of those stand out enough to merit breaking up the trip here?

4. If I did the trip in five days or broke up the Cincinnati St. Louis leg, the ideal place to stop between St. Louis and Houston would be Little Rock, but I have already been to Garvan Woodland Gardens in the summer (I'd love to go back, but in the spring or fall), and it doesn't look like there is anything else that is particularly interesting to me, not even the zoo. (TripAdvisor still has the Heifer Museum listed, which sounds fascinating but has sadly closed forever.) Is the Little Rock Zoo worth visiting in light of the things I like in zoos? (Or while I know this is not strictly on topic is there anything else that is a hidden gem in the Little Rock area besides Garvan Woodland Gardens?)

5. The alternative if I did the trip in six days is breaking up that last stretch between St. Louis and Houston into three parts. The only obvious way I see to do that without adding too much time is going through Springfield, MO. Springfield has a few things other than zoos that are potentially appealing, but it also has the Johnny Morris Wonders Of Wildlife National Museum & Aquarium, and the Dickerson Park Zoo. From the description it seems like their aquarium might be more interesting. Are either of these worth making a 2 to 3 hour detour for and which one is more interesting in light of the things I mentioned liking?

6. If I were to break St. Louis to Houston leg into three parts, is there anything especially worth seeing between Springfield, MO and Houston? Right now my tentative plan if I do that is to get a hotel in Texarkana and then see the forestry museum in Lufkin, but if Springfield is worth visiting I welcome any plans that would beat that. I know that there is the Ellen Trout Zoo, also in Lufkin however based on the website it doesn't look like it would have all that much I would find especially interesting, although I could be wrong because I haven't been.

I also welcome any other advice on things I might not have thought of in regards to this trip.
 
I'm sorry for your loss, my condolences. I don't know much about midwestern zoos bird collections, although if you're in St Louis, I think World Bird Sanctuary in Valley Park is a definite place to look into visiting. They hold some real rarities there.
 
I'm sorry about your father!

1. I visited Electric City two years ago and posted photos of each exhibit in the media gallery here: Electric City Aquarium & Reptile Den - ZooChat They've since added a new wing which I need to go check out (I currently have a dog that limits my travels). They now have an asian leopard cat, one of the few places with the species on exhibit. As for it vs the museum, it really depends on your interests.

2. I think both Columbus and Cincinnati are fantastic, but they are quite different from each other. I unfortunately can't attest to the birds - my Columbus visit was in November so most of the aviaries were closed/birds off exhibit, and my visit to Cincinnati was at the end of May, with most birds off because of avian flu. Both have rare mammals. Cincinnati's new blue penguin exhibit is fantastic, if you haven't seen the species before.

If you're really into gardens, you might want to consider a bit of a detour in PA down to the Philly area and visit Longwood!
 
Thank you both!

I never even knew that the World Bird Sanctuary existed. I am definitely going to have to try to make St. Louis a two attraction trip even if that means being outside in the afternoon.

I did consider stopping in Philadelphia instead of Scranton. Because of how the roads in Northern Pennsylvania work it's not actually all that much longer distance-wise. The problem is that I would be going through the two major metro areas of New York and Philadelphia itself and I am not prepared to deal with that level of traffic. Especially not on my first day of the trip: I feel like it would put me in a bad mindset and make the rest of the trip hard.

Thank you for taking those photos, @TinoPup. I think I actually came across them when I was trying to figure out whether Electric City is worth visiting. Unfortunately, photos can only show so much. Monkey Jungle in Miami is a fantastic place to visit despite only having a handful of kinds of animals, because of an exhibit design that photos simply cannot do justice. The Texas Reptile Zoo in Austin is a fantastic place to visit because of the passion and knowledge of the owner. I was wondering if anything stood out in regard to the intangibles for the Electric City facility?
 
I’m sorry for your loss.

I can only speak to the Midwestern portions of the trip. I view Columbus and Cincinnati as quite comparable. Cincinnati has a dedicated aviary, but their Kea listed on the website are off exhibit in the Summer. Columbus has kiwi. I think Cincinnati’s bird collection is probably stronger overall. Toledo, weirdly enough, probably has the best in Ohio since they have kagu and a few other rarities. A species list was just posted today.

The Newport Aquarium is on par with most middle tier aquariums but nothing exceptional. Unless you really want to see the bow mouth guitarfish you can skip it.

Indianapolis is not much of a bird zoo. They have lots of macaw and cockatoo species now, but otherwise their aviary is pretty limited. It has a lot of ABC mammal species but otherwise not a whole lot.

I really like Louisville, personally, but I don’t think they have a dedicated aviary and the islands building where most of the birds are was closed when I went, so I don’t know how good their collection is.

If you’re traveling between Pittsburgh and Cincinnati it may be worth stopping at The Wilds. It’s a conservation center that loads you into open air busses to drive through part of their hoofstock breeding grounds. Almost no birds to speak of, but lots of rare mammals and some gorgeous views.

St. Louis Zoo is top notch and free, but if you’re already visiting the Botanical Gardens and World Bird Sanctuary it probably isn’t worth adding something.

Miller Park Zoo has piping guan and nothing else likely to be of interest to you. I didn’t even see the guan when I did my visit.

EDIT: I grew up north of Indianapolis and have literally never heard of the bird center in the area.
 
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I've never been to Cincinnati Zoo but I have been to Columbus Zoo. Columbus has a very strong bird collection but I know Cincinnati is known for its bird collection. Both have a number of zoological bird rarities.

Here's a full list of species at Cincinnati Zoo from July 2021: Cincinnati Zoo & Botanical Garden Updated Species List [Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden]

Here's a full list of species at Columbus Zoo from May 2022: Columbus Zoo and Aquarium Species List - May 30th, 2022 [Columbus Zoo and Aquarium]

Hopefully these will help you make your decision. One thing to consider is that some zoos currently have areas closed due to bird flu, if seeing birds is a major priority for you you may want to do some digging beforehand to see what zoos have their bird areas open and which have them closed.
 
Thank you both!

I never even knew that the World Bird Sanctuary existed. I am definitely going to have to try to make St. Louis a two attraction trip even if that means being outside in the afternoon.

I did consider stopping in Philadelphia instead of Scranton. Because of how the roads in Northern Pennsylvania work it's not actually all that much longer distance-wise. The problem is that I would be going through the two major metro areas of New York and Philadelphia itself and I am not prepared to deal with that level of traffic. Especially not on my first day of the trip: I feel like it would put me in a bad mindset and make the rest of the trip hard.

Thank you for taking those photos, @TinoPup. I think I actually came across them when I was trying to figure out whether Electric City is worth visiting. Unfortunately, photos can only show so much. Monkey Jungle in Miami is a fantastic place to visit despite only having a handful of kinds of animals, because of an exhibit design that photos simply cannot do justice. The Texas Reptile Zoo in Austin is a fantastic place to visit because of the passion and knowledge of the owner. I was wondering if anything stood out in regard to the intangibles for the Electric City facility?

I'm not sure what more you want from the photos; I post photos of every single exhibit, along with general views of the inside of the facility. Other than photos of the the updates they've done since my visit, you aren't going to find more info than that. What do you mean by intangibles? Some of the croc exhibits were a bit small but overall it was a nice facility and I was pleasantly surprised by it.
 
I’m sorry for your loss.

I can only speak to the Midwestern portions of the trip. I view Columbus and Cincinnati as quite comparable. Cincinnati has a dedicated aviary, but their Kea listed on the website are off exhibit in the Summer. Columbus has kiwi. I think Cincinnati’s bird collection is probably stronger overall. Toledo, weirdly enough, probably has the best in Ohio since they have kagu and a few other rarities. A species list was just posted today.

The Newport Aquarium is on par with most middle tier aquariums but nothing exceptional. Unless you really want to see the bow mouth guitarfish you can skip it.

Indianapolis is not much of a bird zoo. They have lots of macaw and cockatoo species now, but otherwise their aviary is pretty limited. It has a lot of ABC mammal species but otherwise not a whole lot.

I really like Louisville, personally, but I don’t think they have a dedicated aviary and the islands building where most of the birds are was closed when I went, so I don’t know how good their collection is.

If you’re traveling between Pittsburgh and Cincinnati it may be worth stopping at The Wilds. It’s a conservation center that loads you into open air busses to drive through part of their hoofstock breeding grounds. Almost no birds to speak of, but lots of rare mammals and some gorgeous views.

St. Louis Zoo is top notch and free, but if you’re already visiting the Botanical Gardens and World Bird Sanctuary it probably isn’t worth adding something.

Miller Park Zoo has piping guan and nothing else likely to be of interest to you. I didn’t even see the guan when I did my visit.

EDIT: I grew up north of Indianapolis and have literally never heard of the bird center in the area.

Regarding Louisville, Islands was open on my visit at the end of May.
 
Have you ever been to the Saint Louis Zoo? Since you'll be going through there anyways, it's a zoo worth checking out. Incredible facility and superb bird house.
 
Thanks everyone!

I realized that it's going to take me longer to write a response than I thought and I have a lot of stuff to do with my father's house before the movers get here so I will respond in detail tomorrow, but I wanted to say to @TinoPup since I directly asked him for more information is that I meant things that would not show up on a photograph but that make it more compelling than you might expect from photographs alone. I gave the examples of the exhibit design that is far more expansive than you can capture in any photograph for Monkey Jungle and the passion of the owner of the Texas Reptile Zoo which you can't photograph at all. But it's sounding like there isn't really any of that there?
 
Thanks everyone!

I realized that it's going to take me longer to write a response than I thought and I have a lot of stuff to do with my father's house before the movers get here so I will respond in detail tomorrow, but I wanted to say to @TinoPup since I directly asked him for more information is that I meant things that would not show up on a photograph but that make it more compelling than you might expect from photographs alone. I gave the examples of the exhibit design that is far more expansive than you can capture in any photograph for Monkey Jungle and the passion of the owner of the Texas Reptile Zoo which you can't photograph at all. But it's sounding like there isn't really any of that there?

Nothing major, no. But it seems to be of great quality, it *felt* nice, if that makes sense? The one keeper I spoke with knew a lot, and many of their animals are rescues from the pet trade (including fish). The arch fish tank is really neat. I liked that it's organized by type of animal, and the snake area is a separate room that isn't part of the path and can be skipped (my mom is terrified of snakes).
 
So to follow up on everybody else, first off: thanks again.

That's a shame about the keas. I know they're alpine parrots, and I guess in the Midwest you can keep them outside the rest of the year. Summer would not have been my choice of season to do this but he died at the end of May and his car registration expires in August, so it was a limited window of all summer months.

Based on the species lists birdsandbats linked, it looks like Columbus has a much more interesting reptile collection, but Cincinnati still wins for birds as long as the Australian aviary is open. The other thing about Columbus is that it means that I am getting only two hours of driving done the day before, which is not ideal. So it would have to have something that would really stand out to me.

Toledo would only add about an hour and a half if I did it instead of Cincinnati, but it means that it would be a seven hour drive, which is beyond my tolerance, to St. Louis the next day, or I definitely have to make a stop in Indianapolis which by implication means I need to skip Springfield and find something to do in Little Rock. I found the species list for the Toledo zoo posted yesterday, and there are at least two species of parrot and two species of pheasant I haven't seen and would like to. I wouldn't mind seeing kagu and coua again, though I have seen both in San Diego zoo and Houston/San Antonio. Same for blue-faced honeyeater, which I have seen many times in San Antonio but always love watching. Interestingly though, the aviary has two ungulates from groups I have long wanted to see: pudu and chevrotain. Elsewhere they have tuatara and Tasmanian devil, which are two species I have always wanted to see.

Bowmouth guitarfish are actually a species I would be interested in seeing. I guess another thing that I have interest in our species that are interesting from an ecological or taxonomical perspective and those are both. If that's the only species worth seeing there, then it still might not be worth an extra stop on its own, I will have to see how I am feeling.

I appreciate all the information you gave me and thanks for telling me about The Wilds, but the thing about exotic hoofstock is that I live in Texas. I have seen exotic hoofstock from the roads, driving out to Hill Country, and there are plenty of places within an overnight trip that I can pay to get up and close and personal with a lot of hoofstock. I also, it's not that there aren't ungulates I find it interesting, but I don't particularly find large antelopes last year with large impressive horns/antlers worth seeing unless they are from a place other than Africa, mainland Asia, or North America.

If St. Louis Zoo is free, then depending on timing I might try to see just the aviary, based on what multiple people have now told me. However before Houston got rid of almost all of its birds or took them off exhibit (including kagu, shoebill, and maleo) in order to put in the Galapagos exhibit (I am totally not bitter that they did this just after I moved to Houston), I spent four hours there, three of which were in the bird exhibits, so if it's as good as people are saying, I'm probably not gonna be able to do all three on the same day.

I may have to plan a trip back to the Midwest next fall so I can catch the St. Louis, Columbus, and Toledo zoos, actually see the keas at Cincinnati, plus maybe Chicago and Omaha.
 
I know that the Franklin Park Zoo in Boston also has Keas, and you may be able to visit if you’re starting your trip in Massachusetts. They were still on exhibit when I last visited in May.
 
@enantiornithines

Thankfully we also have a 2021 species list for the Newport Aquarium:

Newport Aquarium Species List - April 5th, 2021 [Newport Aquarium]

Edit: The Wilds has Bactrian Deer, Persian Onager, 50+ Pere David’s Deer, and a small pack of dholes. That’s basically the highlights. Fossil Rim Wildlife Center is a similar concept located in Texas so if you live near there The Wilds might not be worth the visit.
 
It sounds like I will definitely have to make a separate trip that includes Toledo.

Unfortunately, I am not from near Boston and there was nowhere near any time to make a trip into Boston. I was just up here to pack up stuff from my father's house that I wanted. However I still have family here and the last time I was up on my father was alive I realized that I had not been to several Boston-area attractions.

My father and I went to the MFA together that trip, and my plan was that with more advanced planning the next time I was up I was going to do the Arnold Arboretum and Gardner Museum as well as the New England Aquarium (which I did a lot as a kid, but haven't been to in at least a decade). Obviously every trip I made since that time was connected to my father's injury and death, so I didn't really do any of that. But I will add the Franklin Park Zoo to the list of things I need to do in the Boston area next time I make a planned trip back to Massachusetts.

Did the Franklin Park Zoo have keas in 2014? Because I still lived in Massachusetts at the time and that was when I went to San Diego with my extended family with the goal of seeing the bonobos, the kagu, the keas, and the kiwis. I managed to see the bonobos, and I found the kagu right before we were leaving, and I discovered that the kiwis were off exhibit at the time, but I was really salty that I was not able to find the keas before my mother and aunt decided that two and a half hours at the San Diego Zoo was more than enough. (I was well into my 20s, but my cousin was driving, so I had to go with them.) It would be really ironic if there were keas in Boston I hadn't known about the whole time.
 
Is the Little Rock Zoo worth visiting in light of the things I like in zoos?

I wrote a review on Little Rock Zoo last year if it helps at all (4th post down): Slender Lorises, Duct Tape, and Whataburger: A Fish on Dry Land

If St. Louis Zoo is free, then depending on timing I might try to see just the aviary, based on what multiple people have now told me. However before Houston got rid of almost all of its birds or took them off exhibit (including kagu, shoebill, and maleo) in order to put in the Galapagos exhibit (I am totally not bitter that they did this just after I moved to Houston), I spent four hours there, three of which were in the bird exhibits, so if it's as good as people are saying, I'm probably not gonna be able to do all three on the same day.

You could probably clear the main bird portions of the zoo in less than 2 hours (Bird House, Bird Gardens, Cypress Swamp Flight Cage) as they are all in the same part of the zoo.
 
Did the Franklin Park Zoo have keas in 2014? Because I still lived in Massachusetts at the time and that was when I went to San Diego with my extended family with the goal of seeing the bonobos, the kagu, the keas, and the kiwis. I managed to see the bonobos, and I found the kagu right before we were leaving, and I discovered that the kiwis were off exhibit at the time, but I was really salty that I was not able to find the keas before my mother and aunt decided that two and a half hours at the San Diego Zoo was more than enough. (I was well into my 20s, but my cousin was driving, so I had to go with them.) It would be really ironic if there were keas in Boston I hadn't known about the whole time.

Haha, yes, Franklin Park did have Keas back in 2014. They've had them going back at least as far as 2012 (according to this picture from the zoochat gallery).

They likely had Kiwis back then too. I know they've had them at least since 2015, but I was unable to find confirmation of the exact year the species was added to the collection.
 
I wrote a review on Little Rock Zoo last year if it helps at all (4th post down): Slender Lorises, Duct Tape, and Whataburger: A Fish on Dry Land

You could probably clear the main bird portions of the zoo in less than 2 hours (Bird House, Bird Gardens, Cypress Swamp Flight Cage) as they are all in the same part of the zoo.

It’s a little bit away, but the insect house is also very good for what it is if you’re willing to walk to it. One of the zoo highlights IMO.
 
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