BenFoxster
Well-Known Member
Why are you still griping about this? The zoo pulled the birds for their own safety during the avian flu epidemic. I would far rather not see them than have the zoo leave them unprotected and lose them to disease.
As far as the penguins go, same deal and you've been told already that it was temporary as an avian flu safeguard. The penguins are back in their normal exhibit now and there's zero reason to hold it against the zoo.
Which is many of the newest parts of the zoo and also among what has made the zoo famous among zoo-goers...
As someone else already pointed out, Africa Rocks replaced a whole long trail of exhibits like the ones you're complaining about. Urban Jungle and Center Street are the main remnants of what the zoo used to be, and it wouldn't surprise me to hear of planned renovations to those areas in the next year or two. San Diego has been very conscientious of welfare, and many larger species that used to be at the zoo were shunted to the Safari Park once Elephant Odyssey began construction.
If you think it's terrible now, you would have absolutely hated it back in the 2000's when Horn and Hoof Mesa & Cat and Dog Canyon were still intact, and there were elephants, rhinos, and tapirs in the exhibits along the Urban Jungle loop. The zoo is making a lot of effort to update its exhibits and maintain welfare, and at a pretty solid pace too.
Yet grottos are still rather prominent and far from gone - I've seen similar exhibits that still exist at SF, Oregon, Sacramento, Woodland Park, for example. Often they've seen some upgrades over the years and look a great deal better than they used to.
Woodland Park comes to mind in terms of lots of vegetation, and they're even famous for it. Personal preference for less vegetation is fine, though an animal having naturalistic surroundings and easy hiding places is a plus for the animals. Personally I like having to search a bit.
1. Firstly, I understand now what was best for all the birds (including penguins) and I don't hold it against them anymore, that was my error. All I was saying was that it was disappointing at the time, imagine you went to the zoo and saw the exhibit I showed in the video I linked above? Like I said I could never find anything about the exhibit arrangements prior, it took an hour after hearing about it on Zoo Chat after the trip to find a post from San Diego's social media explaining the circumstance.
2. I was under the impression that the zoo was extremely popular long before the newer exhibits came to be? I thought since the 80's and 90's the zoo was considered to be "the greatest zoo in the world." I'm just being a bit more harsh because I was so hyped beforehand, I thought I was going to the best zoo in the world. It didn't seem much better than any other zoo I'd ever been to.
3. I never said the zoo was terrible, and I certainly don't doubt welfare is great here. Even with the bear grottos I don't think any animals are suffering (though I still think the majority of the exhibits could be bigger, especially the cheetah and lion exhibits), the only exhibit I thought to be "depressing" was the temporary penguin enclosure - prior to knowing it was temporary. Considering the zoo's success breeding a sun bear cub and Andean bear cubs, they definitely have to be doing something right (ironically I didn't see their sun bear cause the sun bear was off exhibit per an exhibit sign too) - though imagine how much better their breeding success would be with modern bear enclosures!
I never said anything bad about naturalistic surroundings and hiding spaces for animals - the opposite the more naturalistic the exhibit the better for both the animal and for my enjoyment, the more naturalistic the better! I don't have many other pictures, but if you were to see the enclosures surely you'd have agreed that the plants were overgrown too. The entire front fencing of the leopard and serval enclosures were entirely covered by large weeds, vines, and plants from top to bottom. You could only spot glances at the leopard (one of my favorite animal) and it was standing right in front of the exhibit fence too, it was standing on its hind legs eating a large meat hanging from a rope but all anyone in the crowd could make out was its tail. If the animals want to hide that's fine, but if the zoo itself doesn't let you see their animals because they can't trim the vegetation just a bit, then I have a problem. The majority of the zoo was like this and I hardly got to see any of the animals. I assume the weeds and branches got too overgrown and they hadn't had a chance to trim anything for a while.