TwentyTwentyZoo Wrapped - Your Year in Numbers

ZooBinh

Well-Known Member
Premium Member
5+ year member
Happy New Year! I’m kidding. I’m well aware that we’re all well into the year, but I’ve been itching at this thread idea for a bit now, and decided it was now or never. So here’s the deal- I’m sure we all visited a few zoos, some maybe more than others. I know I did, and I also know I love making statistics and crunching numbers... So why not share what we all saw throughout the year!

I’m aware there’s some other threads that ask about your year and its zoo visits in review here and there around the forum, but I feel that this thread here is different and unique from the others.


My inspiration behind this thread was the format of Spotify Wrapped and a few similar trends that floated around social media where users would recap their years in various categories (romance, travels, even Starbucks drinks!, etc.). Seeing this, a version for zoos on ZooChat seemed only necessary to me ;).

To participate, structure your post in the following manner:
--
How many zoos did you visit?


  • How many states/provinces/countries did your zoo visits take you to?
  • How many of these collections were zoos? Aquariums? Other facilities?
  • How many of these zoos were new to you in twenty-twenty-two? (I can rhyme :p)
  • Choose your three favorite/most memorable visits of the year
  • Choose and share three of your best memories from the year, could be from any zoo visit! And on the inverse, three of your worst.

What species did you see (this is where the bulk of the number crunching comes in :)?

I’m sure this goes without saying…but please don’t provide a list of all the species you saw this year…I don’t think many of us would want to scroll through that ;).

  • How many species did you see? Share some of your favorites!
    • Of these species, how many were mammals, birds, etc.? How did this affect your total- if you keep track?
  • How many lifers did you see in 2022? Share some notable ones.
  • Any gut punch misses? Share your stories here.

Make your mini TwentyTwentyZoo gallery here, share two or three of your favorite or most memorable pictures (if you took any) here, and provide some context if you’d like :).
--


Now, even though I typed out and provided a pretty structured outline of what your post could/should look like, I’m aware that some of these things may not apply to everyone. For example, if you don’t keep track of what species you see and have a lifelist or whatnot, you’re obviously not going to be able to tell us exactly how many species you saw. Modify your post where you see fit, there’s no pressure involved :). I’ll provide my TwentyTwentyZoo Wrapped in a post tonight, and hopefully that’ll guide anyone who needs any ideas. Now, let’s all share our fun!
 
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ZooBinh's TwentyTwentyZoo:

This year was actually pretty eventful in terms of visiting zoos for me, the most eventful year actually! This year, I visited a total of 16 zoological collections.

In terms of geography, my visits were confined to just the United States, but a myriad of states within the country! It looked a little something like this:

upload_2023-3-14_19-56-49.png

So that's a total of...7 states and 1 federal district, including my home state, Ohio. Here's where I went, going in order of which the states were visited:

  • Ohio
    • Cincinnati, OH - Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Gardens (visited twice, in January and July)
    • Dayton, OH - Boonshoft Museum of Discovery (visited a few times throughout the year)
    • Columbus, OH - Columbus Zoo and Aquarium (visited in May)
    • Toledo, OH - Toledo Zoo and Aquarium (visited in July)
  • Tennessee
    • Nashville, TN - Nashville Zoo at Grassmere (visited in March)
  • Kentucky
    • Louisville, KY - Louisville Zoo (visited in March)
    • Newport, KY - Newport Aquarium (visited in November)
  • Virginia
    • Norfolk, VA - Virginia Zoo (visited in June)
  • District of Columbia
    • Washington, DC - Smithsonian's National Zoo (visited in July)
  • North Carolina
    • Asheboro, NC - North Carolina Zoo (visited in July)
  • Pennsylvania
    • Pittsburgh, PA - Pittsburgh Zoo and Aquarium (visited in November)
    • Pittsburgh, PA - National Aviary (visited in November)
  • Florida
    • Tampa, FL - The Florida Aquarium (visited in December)
    • Tampa, FL - ZooTampa at Lowry Park (visited in December)
    • Orlando, FL - Aquatica Orlando (visited in December)
    • Orlando, FL - SeaWorld Orlando (visited in December)

For all intents and purposes, any facility known for keeping animals and could be understandably considered a zoological collection was considered a zoological collection. Out of my sixteen locations, there were 11 zoos, 2 aquariums, 2 zoological theme parks, and 1 museum. I included the National Aviary as a zoo, the Orlando theme parks, as, well, theme parks, and the Boonshoft Museum as a museum (they have a "Discovery Zoo" exhibit and are accredited by the AZA). Out of the sixteen, six were new to me (highlighted in green), and another four were places I revisited that I had not been to in recent years (highlighted in blue).

Memories were plentiful this year, and there were of course visits that stuck out to me more than others...my three favorite visits would have to be:

  • Toledo Zoo and Aquarium - though I was insanely rushed here (only had a three or so hours), the zoo was wonderful, the property was gorgeous, and the collection was spectacular. There was so much to take in, I can't wait to visit again.
  • National Aviary - another new facility to me, I'd wanted to visit the place since I was a little kid. The aviary lived up to my expectation, and with some *wonderful* docents and staff to make conversation and even more wonderful birds, thinking of this visit only warms my heart.
  • SeaWorld Orlando - now I barely recalled the bulk of the park in itself since my first visit in 2013 as a first-grader, but the nostalgia that rushed to me was absolutely overwhelming, as I realized the huge influence this park had on me as a kid in my love for animals. This visit was just pure fun for me, I felt relaxed, and I just enjoyed everything the park had to offer.

Following are my favorite memories...

My first good memory to share would be the conversation I had with two ladies back in July at the Cincinnati Zoo, who I noticed wore a lanyard with the Giraffe Conservation Fund's logo on it. They had various other shirts and accessories that were associated with conservation organizations, and I think one of the ladies was wearing an Ol Pejeta shirt? My memory fails me. But anywho, I spoke to them, and they shared that they were just regular people who had a passion for conservation, and did what they could here and there to contribute, whether it be volunteering or donating here and there. We conversed and one of the ladies shared that she had visited the Ol Pejeta Conservancy in Kenya (where the two remaining Northern White Rhinos are kept), and that they actually became friends with one of the main security guards/caretakers of the rhinos. It was a pleasant conversation and experience, and was a good reminder that no matter who we are, we can all take part in conservation efforts :).

My second good memory would be a story I shared previously on this thread here, but for those who haven't seen that thread, the story goes like this: I visited Louisville with the intention of seeing the rare pigeons and birds they kept, most notably the Pink Pigeon and Papuan Mountain Pigeons. Shortly before my visit, I learned some of the bird exhibits were closed due to the spread of the avian flu, so that was quite disheartening. But when I visited, I noticed that the blue penguins and oriental white stork, as well as some other outdoor birds were on display. I spoke to a keeper, who then told me that their walkthrough aviary and indoor bird exhibits were open again, raising my hopes after learning I visited right when they opened again. But then I learned that the exhibits where the pigeons I wanted to see were exhibited were under renovation, and my heart dropped again. However, I walked into their walkthrough aviary and lo and behold, I saw my beloved mountain pigeons! I had missed the pink pigeons initially and planned to return to the exhibit at the end of my visit, but I was running short on time and wasn't sure if I would be able to make it back in time. The last stop of my visit was the giraffe house, which has a few other exhibits in it, and believe it or not, I walked in and the first bird I saw was none other than the pink pigeon. May not be the most exhilarating story for others, but it has definitely stuck with me.

My third good memory correlates to one of my top three visits, and is the reason for that visit being so great. This would be the Orca Encounter at SeaWorld Orlando. I knew I loved the orca show as a kid, but man, I was not prepared for the wave of nostalgia and how inspired I felt to be rushing back to me in that moment. Something about the cheesy inspirational music and the atmosphere and the crowd and the magnificent orcas...this would have to be the sole zoo visit in my life where I was genuinely moved to tears- happy tears, that is. Whatever drugs they put in the air of that stadium...I just felt great afterwards, my soul was relaxed and just allowed me to genuinely enjoy the rest of my day at SeaWorld.

...and my worst memories.

My first bad memory would be the realization I'd left my SD card at home while at the Cincinnati Zoo. This was the same visit as the first good memory. A horrible moment, as you'll see most of my worst memories are. The zoo had no SD cards in stock to sell for me, so that was incredibly disappointing. Instead of focusing on pictures, I instead just enjoyed the zoo more wholly and made the best of it. Still didn't ruin my visit.

My second bad memory would be at ZooTampa, where my camera died...and made me miss photos of so many rare species (bay duiker, lowland anoa, yellow-footed rock wallaby...). I ran around the entire zoo looking for batteries for sale, and unfortunately I wasn't able to get any...it still stings to this day.

My third bad memory...this is where it gets hard, I didn't have many bad experiences. Since I can't think of any, I'll just share a story that would probably ruin the day for others. It was in the Wetland exhibit at the National Aviary, and I was searching the bushes in the back of the exhibit for Scarlet-Faced Liocichla, and as I was doing so I leaned on the railing and moved along the fence, and kept moving...until I felt something wet. I thought maybe the rain that fell in the exhibit was still there on the fence...until I looked down and saw something that was thick...and a milky cream color. I had bird **** on me. I think it was an ibis that had perched on the railing a bit earlier. No one noticed, but I snook out of the exhibit, found a paper towel and hand sanitizer, cleaned myself up, and returned to my search for the liocichlas...

Now that I'm done reminiscing, let's look at some more numbers! In 2022, I saw...

118 invertebrates
485 fish
62 amphibians
255 reptiles
291 birds
212 mammals
...for a grand total of 1423 species.

Compared to the numbers of my lifelist at the end of 2022:

118/207 - 57.00% of invertebrates
485/614 - 78.99% of fish
62/74 - 83.78% of amphibians
255/288 - 88.54% of reptiles
291/385 - 75.58% of birds
212/240 - 88.33% of mammals
1423/1808 - 78.70% of all species

Out of these 1423 species, there were 481 lifers, composing 33.80% of the species I saw in 2022, and 26.60% of species I had on my lifelist at the end of 2022. Now, though I've shared these numbers with you all, there is one *minor* disclaimer. The numbers I had accounted for the species I saw in 2022 (the first set of numbers), due to the way my lifelist is formatted, may include a few numbers for subspecies here and there. Though the numbers for how many species I've seen collectively is accurate, there may be small inaccuracies here and there, and I changed some numbers to help remedy that, but the amount of subspecies I counted were so miniscule in comparison that I decided not to try too hard and make sure they were all excluded.

Now, even though there were 1423 species I saw this year...here were some of my favorite species I saw:
  • Asian Elephant - my favorite animal
  • Aardwolf - always a pleasure to see these at Cincinnati
  • Peruvian Pigeon
  • Papuan Mountain Pigeon
  • Orca
Notable lifers:
  • Commerson's Dolphin - this should go without being said, I went and got two-park access at SeaWorld just for this suckers.
  • Pin-Tailed Whydah
  • Bay Duiker - this required me to wait 45 minutes in line to go on a bus ride that killed my camera...so it was definitely a treat to see
I've talked about what I've seen, but let's talk about what I didn't see!

  • Chimpanzee - probably the biggest miss of the year. I know. How could I have never seen a chimp?! Turns out, I just...don't visit zoos that have chimps! Bonobos, yes, quite often actually, but never chimps. The only zoo I visited this year with chimps was the North Carolina Zoo...and I heard the apes on the other side of the zoo...but when I got to the exhibit, they no-showed.
  • Beluga - quite unfortunate, but the two at SeaWorld decided to stay in their off-show pool
  • Red-Legged Honeycreeper - though I looked really hard for these dudes at the National Aviary, they didn't pop out.
  • Siberian Musk Deer - I didn't find out the individuals at Columbus passed until I was at the zoo...after missing them in 2021 too. :(
  • Blue Duiker - I stood around the exhibit for a while at Tampa, but it ended up never being seen...

Now, let's take a quick walk down memory lane...but visually. By this I mean nothing else other than, of course, than my little twentytwentyzoo gallery!

Beautiful Fruit Dove (4) Edit.jpgBeautiful Fruit Dove at the Louisville Zoo

Commerson's Dolphin (8).JPG
Commerson's Dolphin at Aquatica Orlando

Southern White Rhino (9).JPG
Southern White Rhinoceros at Nashville Zoo

Wow, that was a hefty amount of typing! That's my TwentyTwentyZoo Wrapped, and despite the bit of effort it took, I'm excited to see what everyone else has to share!
 

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How many zoos did you visit?
  • How many states/provinces/countries did your zoo visits take you to?
    15 states, 2 provinces (one was drive through). One state and the province were entirely new to me. Three states I'd been to/through before, but hadn't been to zoos in.
  • How many of these collections were zoos? Aquariums? Other facilities?
    37 zoos, 11 aquariums, 4 specialized places (2 herps, 1 waterfowl, 1 insects), 4 tiny places. 6 that were solely about animals but didn't have anything alive.
  • How many of these zoos were new to you in twenty-twenty-two?
    Of the 57, 44 were new!
  • Choose your three favorite/most memorable visits of the year.
    Zoo Sauvage, Biodome, Squam Lake.
  • Choose and share three of your best memories from the year, could be from any zoo visit! And on the inverse, three of your worst.
    Best:
    Nashville - Meeting new best friends, baby fanaloka, and the entire incident with getting stuck in the aviary, my camera breaking, and me spilling lemonade :oops:
    Miller Zoo - 5 cheetah exhibits! FIVE!
    Aquarium du Quebec - gorgeous setting, and I finally got to see a harp seal.
    Worst:
    Louisville - iykyk.
    New England Aquarium - it was SO busy.
    Creation Kingdom - the ratel and caracal exhibits didn't open until two weeks after my visit :(
    And several rolls of film not turning out, including my roll from most of Sauvage and wild belugas. First time I've ever had that happen.

What species did you see (this is where the bulk of the number crunching comes in :)?
  • Of these species, how many were mammals, birds, etc.? How did this affect your total- if you keep track?
    277 mammal species, 387 birds, and 381 herps. No clue for fish, but 19 shark species.
  • How many lifers did you see in 2022? Share some notable ones.
    No idea on total since my life list is still a mess. But the biggest for me were wolverine, mink, fanaloka, harp seal, bush dog, takin, and northern rockhopper.
  • Any gut punch misses? Share your stories here.
    I deliberately didn't go to Pittsburgh so I can't say elephant seal :D Caracal being bts at several places, it was the only felid held by more than five total places that I didn't see last year. Ratel at Creation Kingdom. Bontebok at Nashville. Dozens of bird species because of avian flu, and at Ripley because of the lack of rain. That one was expecially hard as the other eiders were in the closed exhibits.

Make your mini TwentyTwentyZoo gallery here, share two or three of your favorite or most memorable pictures (if you took any) here, and provide some context if you’d like :).

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How many zoos did you visit?

New York - Bronx Zoo
Colorado - Cheyenne Mountain Zoo (x2)
Nebraska - Omaha's Henry Doorly Zoo and Aquarium
Iowa - Reiman Gardens

Three zoos, one botanical garden

Two zoos were new to me (Bronx and Cheyenne Mountain)

My favorite visits - Bronx and Cheyenne

Three favorite memories

1. Getting to hangout with my friends at the Omaha Zoo for my friend's 18th birthday
2. Seeing the last mountain tapir at Cheyenne Mountain before it's passing
3. Getting to hangout with my mom at the Bronx Zoo and have a little mom-son day out :)

Not going to get into stats, but here are some notable species I saw this year (most being from Bronx ofc)

African brush tailed porcupine
African wild cat
Anhinga
Asian black bear
Bearded barbet
Brown kiwi
Cape griffon vulture
Congo peafowl
Coquerel's sifaka
Gelada
Golden mantled flying fox
Gray gibbon
Greater bulldog bat
Green junglefowl
Javan langur
Kihansi spray toad
King brown
Lake Titicaca frog
Little blue penguin
Long tailed hornbill
Maleo
Mountain goat (not rare but never had seen)
Mountain tapir
Northern Luzon cloud rat
Occelated turkey
Perentie
Potto
Red backed bearded saki
Red bird of paradise
Red fody
Ring tailed mongoose
Spirnghaas
Strom's stork
Sulawesi hornbill
Taipan
White throated bee eater
Western capercaillie

A few pictures
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Zoos planned for this year: Belize Zoo, Omaha's Henry Doorly Zoo, North Carolina Aquarium at Roanoke, Saint Louis Zoo, perhaps Blank Park?
 

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How many zoos did you visit?

New York - Bronx Zoo
Colorado - Cheyenne Mountain Zoo (x2)
Nebraska - Omaha's Henry Doorly Zoo and Aquarium
Iowa - Reiman Gardens

Three zoos, one botanical garden

Two zoos were new to me (Bronx and Cheyenne Mountain)

My favorite visits - Bronx and Cheyenne

Three favorite memories

1. Getting to hangout with my friends at the Omaha Zoo for my friend's 18th birthday
2. Seeing the last mountain tapir at Cheyenne Mountain before it's passing
3. Getting to hangout with my mom at the Bronx Zoo and have a little mom-son day out :)

Not going to get into stats, but here are some notable species I saw this year (most being from Bronx ofc)

African brush tailed porcupine
African wild cat
Anhinga
Asian black bear
Bearded barbet
Brown kiwi
Cape griffon vulture
Congo peafowl
Coquerel's sifaka
Gelada
Golden mantled flying fox
Gray gibbon
Greater bulldog bat
Green junglefowl
Javan langur
Kihansi spray toad
King brown
Lake Titicaca frog
Little blue penguin
Long tailed hornbill
Maleo
Mountain goat (not rare but never had seen)
Mountain tapir
Northern Luzon cloud rat
Occelated turkey
Perentie
Potto
Red backed bearded saki
Red bird of paradise
Red fody
Ring tailed mongoose
Spirnghaas
Strom's stork
Sulawesi hornbill
Taipan
White throated bee eater
Western capercaillie

A few pictures
View attachment 611087
View attachment 611088
View attachment 611095 View attachment 611094 View attachment 611093 View attachment 611092 View attachment 611091 View attachment 611090 View attachment 611089

Zoos planned for this year: Belize Zoo, Omaha's Henry Doorly Zoo, North Carolina Aquarium at Roanoke, Saint Louis Zoo, perhaps Blank Park?
I probably should have clarified, though I did say that it was acceptable to modify the overall structure where things didn't apply, etc., to keep your notable species as a selection of a few you had a good memory associated with, not necessarily to just list the rare species you saw in the year. And to also keep the photo showcase to just two to three photos, hence the 'mini gallery' title. Your post has been posted by now, so if you feel (and are able) that you can edit, then by all means go ahead, but this would better off serve as a reminder/guideline to those looking to contribute to the thread :)! Just so everything is kept neat and consistent in the thread.
 
  • No idea on total since my life list is still a mess. But the biggest for me were wolverine, mink, fanaloka, harp seal, bush dog, takin, and northern rockhopper.
Out of all the zoos you visited, was Roger Williams really the first place where you saw a takin?!
 
Out of all the zoos you visited, was Roger Williams really the first place where you saw a takin?!

Yep! Only been to one other zoo that holds them, Rosamond Gifford in 2021, and they weren't out. My visit to Omaha was just before they did that phase of Asia. Only other holders in the northeast are Cleveland and Wilds, and only other one in a state I've been to is Tennessee Safari Park over near Memphis (and Pueblo, but I was only in Colorado for a few hours).
 
>How many states/provinces/countries did your zoo visits take you to?
Seven countries including the one I currently reside at (Turkey). Three were countries I have never been in before (Czechia, Austria, Hungary)

>How many of these collections were zoos? Aquariums? Other facilities?

22 zoos (no I will not pull a "no true Scottsman" and exclude that one garbage collection), and one stand-alone aquarium. Albeit one of the zoos was specialized in monkeys so idk if I would split it from the other zoos.

>How many of these zoos were new to you in twenty-twenty-two? (I can rhyme :p)
Out of 23 zoos, fifteen were new collections.

>Choose your three favorite/most memorable visits of the year
Tiergaten Schönnbrün
Prague Zoo
Burgers Zoo

>Choose and share three of your best memories from the year, could be from any zoo visit! And on the inverse, three of your worst.
Best three plus honorable mention
1. Seeing a polar bear dive in Schönnbrün
2. Seeing my favorite zoo exhibit: Africa Up Close in Prague Zoo
3.Köln/Cologne zoo being better tha what I remember since my visit there in 2014

HM: Well, the entire European trip. I really needed a good time out from Turkey with al the news at Turkey.

Worst three (and a dishonorable mention)
1. My journey to Dierenpark Zie-Zoo and back to my hostel
2. Wasting my first 30 minutes at Pairi Daiza waiting by the nearest toilet by the enterance during a day where there were hordes of school trips instead of looking for a new loo sooner (and I did noee the Spix's macaws)
3. Karatay Zoo (My expectations were low but dear heaven is it bad)

DM: Ithe visit to the Izmir wildlife park. I understand that with the current economy here in Turkey seeing zoos get kneecapped is not a surprise, but good lord did IWP get the short end of the stick. It was just heartbreaking to see Izmir fall from grace.

>How many species did you see? Share some of your favorites!
Of these species, how many were mammals, birds, etc.? How did this affect your total- if you keep track?

I did not keep track of the number of species. Other than my lifers I want to share some great "reunions" and species I just like:

Martial Eagle
Common Brushtail Possum
Shoebill
Polar Bear
Short-beaked Echidna
American Black Bear
Peccaries (all three species)
Aardvark
Chinese Pangolin
Yellow-footed Rock Wallaby
Grey Kangaroo (both Eastern and Western)
Muskox
White-faced Capuchin
Tasmanian Devil
Black-tailed Prairie Dog
Striped Skunk
Australian Lungfish
Blue-streaked Cleaner Wrasse


>How many lifers did you see in 2022? Share some notable ones.
I do not have a count but here are some memorable ones:

Rakali
Greater Bushbaby
Eastern Quoll
Yellow-necked Francolin
Pesquet's Parrot
Brown Hyena
Dall's Sheep
Moose
Bighorn Sheep
American Mountain Goat
Siberian Musk Deer
Northern Talapoin
Woolly Monkey
Kowari
Plains Viscacha
Soccorro Dove
Cuban Hutia
Crowned Sifaka
Greater Bamboo Lemur
Bush Dog
Jaguarundi (I may have seen this species in previously in Berlin but I would not count on it)


>Any gut punch misses? Share your stories here.

Spix's Macaw
Black-backed Jackal
Side-striped Jackal
Horned Screamer
Congo Peafowl
Asian Golden Cat (they were kept bts)
Gambian Pouched Rat (they were kept at a very dark enclosure in the two places I went where I knew they stayed)
Margay (I may have seen this species in previously in ARTIS but I would not count on it)

Personal Gallery:


This year I already went to the Ankara "Domestic animals Park", that one shopping mall zoo and the Keçiören Aquarium (I had not uploaded pics of the latter because of how dark that place is and procrastination). For the rest of the year I may or may not visit a few hideous places in Istanbul to add to the ZC gallery. Due to the fact that I plan on moving abroad, I do not know if I have the time to visit a big roster of zoos due to possible classwork and time to settle. But then again there is 2024.
 
How many zoos did you visit?
  • My zoo visits took me to three countries this year (the United Kingdom, Belgium and the Netherlands). I visited a further two, although sadly, no zoo visiting was involved. All four of the foreign countries visited this year were entirely new to me!

  • I visited 9 zoos this year, of which 5 (London, Colchester, Exmoor, Burgers' and Antwerp) are what I would consider to be traditional zoos, 2 (Horniman Museum and Hemsley) are somewhat complete, but very small, 1 (Chessington) has enough on offer to pass as such, but is mainly a theme park, and 1 (Hawk Conservancy Trust) is objectively specialist.

  • Of the 9, 5 were new (Burgers', Antwerp, Hemsley, Chessington and Hawk Conservancy).

  • My three most memorable visits were beyond doubt that to Burgers' (easily the greatest zoo which I have visited), Antwerp (a historic zoo that manages to be above average in quality and thoroughly beautiful in a small space) and Hemsley (a tiny zoo that offered plenty of lifeticks and had me falling in love with its ambience.

  • My three best memories are:
    Burgers' Zoo - the Bush (the best zoo exhibit which I have ever seen).
    Hemsley - the Aardwolf.
    Antwerp Zoo - the Eastern Gorilla.

    And my worst:
    Antwerp Zoo - the closure of the bird house shortly before my visit.
    Chessington - being too distracted by my first theme park to visit the aquarium.
    Hemsley - my camera running out of battery the very second the aardwolf ventured outside!
What species did you see?
  • I did not keep track of species seen across the year, sadly. My favourite were getting to see my favourite animal, the Northern Rufous Hornbill, yet again at Colchester, as well as West Indian Manatees at Burgers' and the Spotted Fanaloka at Exmoor. Several other species should make this list for rarity alone, but they are saved for the next section.
  • I did, however, keep track of lifeticks. I saw 72, with Burgers' and Antwerp offering the most with 28 and 24 lifeticks respectively. It is entirely possible that I missed a few fish in Antwerp's aquarium, which I did not have a species list for, but as far as I am aware, 72 is my total and I am very happy with it. My three favourites were, of course, the Eastern Gorilla at Antwerp, the Aardwolf at Hemsley and the Shoebill at Exmoor, all of which were the sole motives behind my visits (or in the case of the latter, return visits) to the collections in question, but other brilliant ones included:

    - the Guianan Bearded Saki at Colchester.
    - the Ring-tailed Vontsira and Brazilian Porcupine at Hemsley.
    - the Honey Badger and Indochinese Binturong at Exmoor.
    - the Wahlberg's Eagle and Pearl-spotted Owlet at the Hawk Conservancy
    - the Hamlyn's Owl-faced Monkey, Black-and-rufous Sengi, Nutria and Cape Buffalo at Antwerp.
    - the Rose-bellied Bunting, Montezuma Quail, Giant Sweetlips, Splitfin Flashlightfish, Great Barracuda and White-bearded Wildebeest at Burgers'.

  • Of course, there were a few painful misses too. The aforementioned closure of Antwerp's bird house meant that I missed the Black Weaver, although all the building's other rarities were generous enough to venture outdoors. I also missed the Screaming Piha among other rarities in the Bush as well the Bobcats in the Desert at Burgers'. But I haven't got much to complain about, with all three of my primary targets showing.
Mini 2022 Personal Gallery:
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The first view upon entering my current favourite zoo exhibit, the Burgers' Bush.
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My camera didn't want to co-operate when I visited Exmoor Zoo, so this was the best photo I could get of what may well be the most impressive bird which I have ever seen.
djj3gcnn_pA0PVIJ2TrvFqg9O02Szot9y1oRdBHMYYB6GtfsXzdLueZfDqsINZDIUHb2uRFP77UVITVH4XHFlyAMlyoL3rEsdvsX2YO7U89Q-KvggcZsGe5E2Q8r8_3q52J6VSH2FN1zV9GyhyiA3TdCzGf56mkgz9tIDGC_bXyH6UzB1gFFkK2RIQv4Xg

A Hamlyn's Owl-faced Monkey at Antwerp.
B_aXbzJ9kiQzE3N8ehEWFsEs1byW8MkGWr7Lh3D0T-H0wJeAIhjOs5V5U1WaJvc86mfB34Um1Y9aa9FxsLoiZUVjkwZRGsvYT5QuJbrgu2AQPMDYHXfB6F_CNUVn5xxmg0RhiJWPaZLnXYsaSw0HLMjmWDvAshyVjhyF_txu-3okpcQXCK7XTf74SMPEGw

Amahoro, the last Eastern Gorilla in captivity, at Antwerp.

I am cautiously confident in saying that 2023 will be better than 2022. Last year, I did not visit a single zoo until May, but this year, by March, I have already visited three, and have plans to visit a further two (both abroad) next month, which should offer a fair few lifeticks. However, whether or not that does prove to be the case, 2022 was fairly good for zoos. Not many collections visited in total, but those that I did go to offered plenty of exciting memories, perhaps more so than previous years in which I visited more individual institutions. Thank you for creating this thread that encouraged me to look back on what a wonderful year I just had!
 
I probably should have clarified, though I did say that it was acceptable to modify the overall structure where things didn't apply, etc., to keep your notable species as a selection of a few you had a good memory associated with, not necessarily to just list the rare species you saw in the year. And to also keep the photo showcase to just two to three photos, hence the 'mini gallery' title. Your post has been posted by now, so if you feel (and are able) that you can edit, then by all means go ahead, but this would better off serve as a reminder/guideline to those looking to contribute to the thread :)! Just so everything is kept neat and consistent in the thread.
I'm so sorry! I can't edit it anymore, I'll try to be more careful next time
 
Happy New Year! I’m kidding. I’m well aware that we’re all well into the year, but I’ve been itching at this thread idea for a bit now, and decided it was now or never. So here’s the deal- I’m sure we all visited a few zoos, some maybe more than others. I know I did, and I also know I love making statistics and crunching numbers... So why not share what we all saw throughout the year!

I’m aware there’s some other threads that ask about your year and its zoo visits in review here and there around the forum, but I feel that this thread here is different and unique from the others.


My inspiration behind this thread was the format of Spotify Wrapped and a few similar trends that floated around social media where users would recap their years in various categories (romance, travels, even Starbucks drinks!, etc.). Seeing this, a version for zoos on ZooChat seemed only necessary to me ;).

To participate, structure your post in the following manner:
--
How many zoos did you visit?


  • How many states/provinces/countries did your zoo visits take you to?
  • How many of these collections were zoos? Aquariums? Other facilities?
  • How many of these zoos were new to you in twenty-twenty-two? (I can rhyme :p)
  • Choose your three favorite/most memorable visits of the year
  • Choose and share three of your best memories from the year, could be from any zoo visit! And on the inverse, three of your worst.

What species did you see (this is where the bulk of the number crunching comes in :)?

I’m sure this goes without saying…but please don’t provide a list of all the species you saw this year…I don’t think many of us would want to scroll through that ;).

  • How many species did you see? Share some of your favorites!
    • Of these species, how many were mammals, birds, etc.? How did this affect your total- if you keep track?
  • How many lifers did you see in 2022? Share some notable ones.
  • Any gut punch misses? Share your stories here.

Make your mini TwentyTwentyZoo gallery here, share two or three of your favorite or most memorable pictures (if you took any) here, and provide some context if you’d like :).
--


Now, even though I typed out and provided a pretty structured outline of what your post could/should look like, I’m aware that some of these things may not apply to everyone. For example, if you don’t keep track of what species you see and have a lifelist or whatnot, you’re obviously not going to be able to tell us exactly how many species you saw. Modify your post where you see fit, there’s no pressure involved :). I’ll provide my TwentyTwentyZoo Wrapped in a post tonight, and hopefully that’ll guide anyone who needs any ideas. Now, let’s all share our fun!

Zoos Visited in 2022: 16
States/Provinces: 6 U.S States, plus 1 Canadian Province- which was my first ever zoo outside the United States.
Types of Facilities: Out of these 16 facilities, nine were zoos in the traditional sense, two were aquariums, one was a science museum, one was a theme park, one was an aviary, and two were specialist facilities that don't easily fit any categories.
Zoos New to Me: I started to keep track of which zoos I visit in 2020. As such, eleven of these sixteen zoos were new to my lifelist. However, I have visited some of these facilities before I started to keep track, and only six of these zoos were completely new.
Three Favorite Zoos Visited:
1. Cleveland Metroparks Zoo
2. Roger Williams Park Zoo (a local zoo I've visited hundreds of times, and yet it still ranks amongst my favorites despite visits to many more facilities)
3. Rosamond Gifford Zoo
Three Best Memories:
1. Rosamond Gifford Zoo- Asian Elephant Twins, need I say more?
2. Cleveland Metroparks Zoo- re-connecting with an old (feathery) friend. Stanley, the red-crested turaco at Cleveland Metroparks Zoo, used to be at one of my local zoos back home in Massachusetts, and he was a very sociable bird, often coming right up to visitors in the walk-through aviary and even landing on peoples' heads on occasion. He was a personal favorite of mine due to his personality, and even when he was moved out of the walk-through aviary into an exhibit he would often come right down in front of the glass and interact with visitors. He was never a good fit for my local zoo though since he was too gregarious in the aviary, so he sadly was sent to Cleveland- where this year I saw Stanley again!
3. Utica Zoo- seeing striped hyenas for the first time. First time I walked past the exhibit, the hyenas were indoors their holding. However, on my second time around the hyenas were outside and rather active, which made an exciting and interesting display of a beautiful species I've never seen before. It's also rewarding anytime I see active large carnivores since usually they are either asleep or pacing, so seeing active carnivores- especially a species as beautiful as the striped hyena, is a real treat!
Honorable Mention: Franklin Park Zoo- Gorillas outside, and finding the abandoned Bear Pits. In 2022, the Franklin Park Zoo opened Gorilla Grove, an outdoor exhibit for its gorillas, who were indoors only for my entire lifetime due to a series of escapes in the old outdoor enclosure. Bringing the gorillas back outside was a long-awaited project for the zoo, and it was rewarding to finally see this zoo, which has been stagnant for over a decade, finally have a big investment into its animals. On this visit, I also took the time to visit their abandoned bear dens, located slightly outside the zoo, which was a very interesting trek through zoo history to see, and walk into, some old exhibits of a very different style of anything I've seen in use today. While there were obviously no animals in these exhibits, a visit to an abandoned zoo was very much a rewarding experience.
Three Worst Memories:
1. Philadelphia Zoo- an overall disappointing visit. It doesn't help that this was during the avian flu closure, and part of why I was originally excited to see Philadelphia is the large bird collection, but overall this zoo fell flat to me. A lot of the primate exhibits seemed small, outdated, and/or poorly designed, and the big cat exhibits also didn't impress me, especially the lion exhibit was poorly designed and one of the smallest I've ever seen. Furthermore, the Zoo360 that the zoo innovatively built was almost entirely unused during my visit- the only animal I saw utilizing Zoo360 was an amur leopard sleeping in a transfer chute. Due to this lack of use, the Zoo360 system did not impress me, although I'm sure many who have seen it in action have rewarding memories of it. Overall, however, this visit was filled with disappointing exhibits, a lack of birds, and the zoo's most notable aspect (Zoo360) almost entirely unutilized.
2. Cleveland Metroparks Zoo- missing a lifer by a matter of weeks. Cleveland Metroparks Zoo recently sent their last sun bear to Honolulu Zoo, and this was one of the lifers I was really hoping to see during my visit to Cleveland. Unfortunately, that simply didn't work out, and sun bears remain a species I am unsure if I will ever see in a US zoo- as the ones left are quickly dying and most are located out of my geographic reach.
3. Hawk Creek Wildlife Center- a bizarre experience. For a zoo that advertises itself as great for photography, I was surely not expecting every exhibit to be behind either steel bars or chain link. Over half the collection was also off exhibit on my visit, including some notable species I was really hoping to see (Egyptian Vulture, Verreaux's Eagle), which made this a rather disappointing visit to a bizarre specialist facility that is clearly not set up well for their occasional days with visitors (the zoo is only open about a weekend a month).
Honorable Mention: Wild Animal Park- a staff member throwing a chicken. Yes, the chicken was alive. The center of the Wild Animal Park has a large, overcrowded goat exhibit that has to have nearly a hundred goats in it, along with some chickens and other classic farm animals. When I first arrived, there were two staff members holding a chicken near this exhibit, until one of them proceeded to throw it back into this goat exhibit. I seriously did not expect to ever see a zoo staff member throwing a live animal, but that was certainly a surprising occurrence at a facility that left a bad taste in my mouth that only worsened when I read more about its owner.

How Many Species?
I keep track of all the mammals, birds, and reptiles I see in zoos- although as of 2023 I've expanded my lifelist to include amphibians. In 2022, I saw a total of 178 mammals, 191 birds, and 120 reptiles, for a total of 489 species. (Note- numbers are approximate. I do not keep track of every year I see a species, only a running list of facilities, and then my first and most recent times seeing a species, as such for species I've already seen in 2023 I had to estimate what I saw in 2022, and especially for some birds at Rosamond Gifford I'm not 100% certain of accuracy).
How Many Lifers?
76 Mammals I saw in 2022 were new to my lifelist. Some of these were notable rarities, such as Striped Hyena at Utica Zoo, Mhorr Gazelle at Philadelphia Zoo, and Golden-Bellied Mangabey at Cleveland Metroparks Zoo. However, a bigger number of these were "filling in the gaps" of common species I've simply yet to see due to the relative newness of my lifelist, such as Prehensile-Tailed Porcupine at Philadelphia Zoo, both species of Orangutan at Philadelphia and Cleveland Metroparks Zoo, Egyptian Fruit Bats at Bird Kingdom, and Greater Kudu and Asian Small-clawed Otters at Disney's Animal Kingdom. Perhaps my favorite mammal lifer of 2022 was the Aye-Aye- which I saw at both Philadelphia and Cleveland Metroparks Zoos.

89 Birds I saw in 2022 were new to my lifelist. This included rarities as notable as Martial Eagle and Osprey at Hawk Creek, Wedge-Tailed Eagle at Buffalo Zoo, Chestnut-Naped Green Imperial Pigeon at Cleveland Metroparks Zoo, and Black Collared Starling at Disney's Animal Kingdom. This also included some species that "filled in the gaps" of common species, such as Rainbow Lorikeets at Bird Kingdom, Boat-Billed Herons at Franklin Park Zoo, and Common Raven at Disney's Animal Kingdom. The raven, along with the golden eagle, are the 2022 lifelisters I saw at the most zoos in 2022, as I saw both at a total of three zoos.

48 Reptiles I saw in 2022 were new to my lifelist. This includes the gharial at Cleveland Metroparks Zoo, Travancore Tortoise at Philadelphia Zoo, and a number of new venemous snake species (especially rattlesnakes) at Philadelphia and Buffalo Zoos.

Overall, this means I added a total of 213 species to my lifelist in 2022. That means a total of 43.5% of the species on the species I saw this year were added to my lifelist, which is a pretty impressive total I doubt will ever be matched again, seeing that many of these lifers were simply filling in gaps of common species I didn't see in 2020 or 2021. The group that had the biggest proportion of lifers was birds, with 46.6% of the bird species I saw being lifers. Reptiles saw the smallest proportion of lifers with 40% of reptile species I saw being lifers. The only lifer I was sad to barely miss in 2022 was Cleveland's Sun Bear.
 
How many zoos did I visit?

Last year, I visited a total of 17 zoological collections. My zoo visits took me to five US states: Massachusetts, New York, Rhode Island, Indiana, and Colorado.

Here is a list of the zoos I visited (with bold facilities being ones that I visited for the first time in 2022):

1. Denver Zoo, CO
2. Indianapolis Zoo, IN
3. Blue Hills Trailside Museum, MA
4. Capron Park Zoo, MA
5. Ecotarium, MA

6. Franklin Park Zoo, MA
7. Stone Zoo, MA
8. Woods Hole Science Aquarium, MA
9. World War I Memorial Park Zoo, MA
10. Bronx Zoo, NY
11. Central Park Zoo, NY
12. Hudson River Wetlab, NY
13. New York Aquarium, NY
14. Prospect Park Zoo, NY
15. Queens Zoo, NY
16. Staten Island Zoo, NY

17. Roger Williams Park Zoo, RI

Out of these 17 collections, I have included 12 zoos, 3 aquariums, and 2 museums/nature centers. 11 of these places (64.7%) were new to me in 2022. As a side note, I also visited 4 other wildlife refuge parks and natural history museums that don’t count towards this list, but might still be worth briefly mentioning.

My top 3 visits of the year

My top three visits of the year were to the Bronx Zoo, the Denver Zoo, and the Indianapolis Zoo (probably in that order).

My top 3 memories of the year

1. Bronx Zoo- this was my first major zoo visit in two years, as my interest in the hobby dwindled over COVID. The first thing I saw when I got to the zoo was the predator-prey lion exhibit—an area I had completely forgotten about until I was surprised to accidentally stumble upon it. The exhibit was incredibly immersive, and the surprise of seeing it sent chills down my spine. This was a great way to start the day at what is now my favorite zoo.

2. Indianapolis Zoo- my greatest memory here was the elephant chat, at the end of which guests can line up for a chance to touch Tombi the elephant on her side. Elephants are one of my favorite animals, which made this unexpected opportunity unforgettable. Indianapolis has lots of other free opportunities for visitors to interact with the animals, as well, which were also highly enjoyable. I go into much more detail on my great visit at this link, if anyone is interested in reading more.

3. Franklin Park Zoo- the opening of Gorilla Grove, which as Neil mentioned was a major milestone project over a decade in the making. In addition to elephants, gorillas are another of my favorite animals, and it was meaningful to see my home zoo finally achieve this major goal.

What species did I see?

I don’t really keep a life list, but there were some pretty cool animals that I saw that I wanted to give shout-outs to.

- Kihansi Spray Toad
- Maleo
- Wolf Eel
- Northern Sea Robin
- Leucistic Lion
- Feathertail Glider
- Iranian Emperor Spotted Newt
- Sambar Cobra
- European Legless Lizard
- Blind Cave Fish
- Leucistic Raccoon
- Taxidermy Passenger Pigeon
- Moose (wild)
- Elk (wild)
- Bison (semi-wild)

Personal Gallery

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How many zoos did I visit?

I visited a total of five institutions in four US states last year. The four states I visited were Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky, and Georgia.

Here is a list of all the places I visited (the places in bold are new to me). Of the five institutions, two were zoos and the other three were aquariums.
1. Detroit Zoo (Hometown zoo, visited 4 times)
2. Georgia Aquarium
3. Zoo Atlanta
4. Greater Cleveland Aquarium
5. Newport Aquarium

Top 3 visits of 2022?
In order, I would say Georgia Aquarium, Zoo Atlanta, then the second of three Detroit Zoo visits.

Top three memories of the year?
Georgia Aquarium- This Aquarium has been on my bucket list for a very long time, ever since I gained an interest in zoos and aquariums. The first exhibit I checked out was Ocean Voyager and I was in awe with this exhibit. Seeing the exhibit in person is really a treat. I could've spent my entire visit sitting near the big window watching all the fish swim by.
Zoo Atlanta- While the weather wasn't great when I visited, crowds were exceptionally low and animals were active.
Detroit Zoo- I got to the polar bear exhibit early in the day and got a great show from them. Suka and her daughter Astra were actively playing and diving into their saltwater pool. I was able to snap a photo of one of them diving into the water from the tunnel.

Honorable mention- I did see a lot of wildlife at the Detroit Zoo I don't normally see. The Cotton Family Wetlands had many species of wildlife such as a double-crested cormorant, black-crowned night heron, wood ducks, and the endangered Blanding's turtle.

Worst memories of the year?
Zoo Atlanta- I wasn't appropriately dressed for the weather so I caught a cold later in the week.
Detroit Zoo- I waited almost an hour for food at the restaurant across from the Arctic Ring of Life which was disappointing.
Detroit Zoo- I got to the zoo just before it was about to open. Normally the gates to the parking lot open before the zoo opens, but whoever was in charge of opening the gates that morning never showed up to work that day. So, I got stuck in a line waiting for that to happen.

How many species did you see?
I do not keep a life list of the species I have seen in captivity, but I am generally aware of what species I have/have not seen before.

Notable lifers I saw?
Here are the lifers I saw that were most notable to me.
Whale shark
Manta ray
Tiger shark
Hammerhead shark
Tasseled wobbegong
Kori bustard
Giant panda
Schmidt's guenon
Wolf's guenon
Wattled crane
Diamondback terrapin

Personal photo gallery
I upgraded my phone last year to a newer model. Unfortunately, all of the photos on my new phone are saved as .heic instead of .jpg, as my old phone did. That being said, I can't post any of my photos from my visits to the Newport Aquarium, Greater Cleveland Aquarium, and three of my four visits to the Detroit Zoo.
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How many zoos did you visit?

  • My Zoo visits took me to 3 provinces of 1 Country. (South Africa: Gauteng, Limpopo, Northwest)

  • Visited the following collections: Johannesburg Zoo (13 times) Pretoria Zoo Bothongo, Emerald Animal World and Eventieria Wildlife Park. 5 Zoos in total.
  • All of the facilities were zoos in one way or another. Bothongo is a odd one. It's Nature Reserve with camps and enclosures for exotic hoofstock and carnivores at the Visitor Centre.
  • Out of the five, only two were new to me. Eventieria Wildife Park and Emerald Animal World.

  • Three Best Memories
    -Seeing the Aardwolf in the infamous walk- through enclosure at Bothongo. It was a great moment following the animal around as it traversed along the visitor pathways. Really friendly aardwolf as well!
    -Now, it might sound a bit cliche or uninteresting to say the seeing the capybaras at the Pretoria Zoo was a great memory... however it genuinely was! Not only are they the only capybara in sub-saharan Africa but Pretoria's first major addition in nearly a decade!
    -Starting my part-time volunteer work at Johannesburg Zoo made every visit unforgettable in it's own way.

  • Three worst Memories:
    -Eventieria Wildlife Park isn't necessarily the greatest zoo in the world with many subpar and down-right bad enclosures.
    -The Safari section of Emerald Animal World being fully booked missing out on seeing Tsessebe!
    -The loss of Makokou the last Western Lowland Gorilla at the Johannesburg Zoo.

    What species did you see?

  • I saw a total of 563 species last year.
    162 mammals
    211 birds
    104 reptiles
    10 Amphibians
    76 Fish species
    (Note that this always includes wild, since I don't keep my lists seperate)
  • Some notable lifers include Suni, Aardwolf, Brown Hyena, Golden-bellied Capuchin, Black-Horned Capuchin, klipspringer and Cape Clawless otter.
  • Gut Punch misses... The Purple-faced langur at Eventieria, Okapi at Pretoria and Tsessebe at Emerald.

    Make your mini TwentyTwentyZoo gallery here:

    I had only gotten my new camera towards the end of the year so not my best works, looking forward to sharing the ones I'm really proud of net year :p

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