Van Beal
Well-Known Member
Hi, and welcome!
My spec zoo is a rather sizeable institute on the coast of British Columbia’s Tchentlo Lake. The region is mostly conifers, but every now and again some of our outdoor habitats have been planted with more… suitable, shall I say, plant life for the region it’s inhabitants can be found in.
The big ringer at the entrance is a series of eight ticket booths (and a zoo member-only passage) decorated with Native American animal motifs. Now passing through the ticket booths you enter what is called the Concentric Gardens. A round “plaza” of alternating path rings and raised plant beds, which display the many native plants of the area. In the middle of this area is a 100ft^2 enclosure centered by a large pond. This habitat is home to 1.1.0 Muskrat Ondatra zibithecus and 1.0.0 Green Heron Butorides virescens.
To either side of the Concentric Gardens is a large building, each different in building style and materials used. The one to the right, being more of wood, is the Animal Conservation and Education Centre, or ACEC, while the other is the zoo’s mini-museum, the Hall of Extinction, where you visit displays of some of the most famous extinct creatures to walk this planet…
More on the Hall of Extinction and ACEC in the next post, but for now let me know what kind of things you’d maybe like to see!
My spec zoo is a rather sizeable institute on the coast of British Columbia’s Tchentlo Lake. The region is mostly conifers, but every now and again some of our outdoor habitats have been planted with more… suitable, shall I say, plant life for the region it’s inhabitants can be found in.
The big ringer at the entrance is a series of eight ticket booths (and a zoo member-only passage) decorated with Native American animal motifs. Now passing through the ticket booths you enter what is called the Concentric Gardens. A round “plaza” of alternating path rings and raised plant beds, which display the many native plants of the area. In the middle of this area is a 100ft^2 enclosure centered by a large pond. This habitat is home to 1.1.0 Muskrat Ondatra zibithecus and 1.0.0 Green Heron Butorides virescens.
To either side of the Concentric Gardens is a large building, each different in building style and materials used. The one to the right, being more of wood, is the Animal Conservation and Education Centre, or ACEC, while the other is the zoo’s mini-museum, the Hall of Extinction, where you visit displays of some of the most famous extinct creatures to walk this planet…
More on the Hall of Extinction and ACEC in the next post, but for now let me know what kind of things you’d maybe like to see!