Van Beal
Well-Known Member
Australasia -> The Outdoors
Guests were left at the exit of the Australasian Biomes Pavilion, and facing viewing windows into the outdoor habitats for our two larger ratite species. The first new species visible from outside is viewed through chicken-wire and glass layered the former before the latter to prevent the inhabiting Blue-winged Kookaburra Dacelo leachii (1.0) from colliding with the glass. This solitary male, named 'Giggles,' is housed in his 100 sq. meter and 4 meter-high aviary which is centered around a relatively lush and sizeable gum tree, with multiple feeders within guest view.
Possible Look of Kookaburra Aviary -> image courtesy of @gulogulogulo
Blue-winged Kookaburra -> image courtesy of @Haliaeetus
From the kookaburra aviary, guests walk past a barrier which is probably lower than anticipated at just a meter high, though the habitat it separates guests from is also 2 feet below the ground level of the path. The view into this 450 sq. meter space allows you to, when weather permits, view 'Peleke' the previously mentioned male Komodo Dragon that has access to this outdoor habitat.
As you pass the dragon's outdoor space, the final two habitats come into view, just ahead of the three-way convergence of the paths that I mentioned to end the last post. These two habitats, one open-topped and viewable through a window in a small, rocky wall, while the other is an aviary. The first habitat is 450 sq. meters, which is very light on the foliage toward the front, but becomes thicker and more 'overgrown' as it heads toward the back wall, concealing the entrance to the backstage areas for our pair of Tasmanian Devil Sarcophilus harrisii (1.1), named 'Cleo' and 'Hobart.' The aviary is identical, size-wise at least, to the kookaburra aviary (so 100 sq. meters surface and 4m high). Besides that, not much is the same. This aviary is less rustic wood, and more metallic fencing, while the interior is a very rocky space, with a few stunted conifers, replicating the alpine regions that the Kea Nestor notabilis (1.1) inhabits on New Zealand's South Island.
Possible Look of Devil Habitat -> image courtesy of @Zooish
Tasmanian Devil -> image courtesy of @Therabu
Possible Look of Kea Aviary -> image courtesy of @Shirokuma
Kea -> image courtesy of @vogelcommando (also this image displays that the bird has a rather long bill, which I did not know)
And with this, visitors come to the three-way path convergence, of which guests can only go forward or turn tail back the way they came, as the construction down the other path prevents anyone besides staff and construction personnel from accessing the future site of Aquatic Worlds, an aquarium attraction that is set to be completed in 2025. Various other projects are also being undertaken and planned, including the expansion of the Indian Subcontinent (an area currently set just as the Indian Rhino and Rhesus Macaque habitat), as well as the addition of a third Plaza Pond, which will be used for a species already housed in the zoo. Minor renovations will also be made to both Rumah Pulau and the Australasian Biomes Pavilion, and phaseouts and the introduction of new species will occur (the planned phaseouts and new species will be briefly explained at the end of this version of the zoo, and some of these new species are unique in North America, which is something I avoided in this version).
Anyways, sometime in the next couple of days, though chances are high that it won't be tomorrow, the first post on the Native Lands will be made, so stay tuned, enjoy, and feel free to ask about the future of this zoo, which I will gladly discuss in the meantime!
Guests were left at the exit of the Australasian Biomes Pavilion, and facing viewing windows into the outdoor habitats for our two larger ratite species. The first new species visible from outside is viewed through chicken-wire and glass layered the former before the latter to prevent the inhabiting Blue-winged Kookaburra Dacelo leachii (1.0) from colliding with the glass. This solitary male, named 'Giggles,' is housed in his 100 sq. meter and 4 meter-high aviary which is centered around a relatively lush and sizeable gum tree, with multiple feeders within guest view.
Possible Look of Kookaburra Aviary -> image courtesy of @gulogulogulo
Blue-winged Kookaburra -> image courtesy of @Haliaeetus
From the kookaburra aviary, guests walk past a barrier which is probably lower than anticipated at just a meter high, though the habitat it separates guests from is also 2 feet below the ground level of the path. The view into this 450 sq. meter space allows you to, when weather permits, view 'Peleke' the previously mentioned male Komodo Dragon that has access to this outdoor habitat.
As you pass the dragon's outdoor space, the final two habitats come into view, just ahead of the three-way convergence of the paths that I mentioned to end the last post. These two habitats, one open-topped and viewable through a window in a small, rocky wall, while the other is an aviary. The first habitat is 450 sq. meters, which is very light on the foliage toward the front, but becomes thicker and more 'overgrown' as it heads toward the back wall, concealing the entrance to the backstage areas for our pair of Tasmanian Devil Sarcophilus harrisii (1.1), named 'Cleo' and 'Hobart.' The aviary is identical, size-wise at least, to the kookaburra aviary (so 100 sq. meters surface and 4m high). Besides that, not much is the same. This aviary is less rustic wood, and more metallic fencing, while the interior is a very rocky space, with a few stunted conifers, replicating the alpine regions that the Kea Nestor notabilis (1.1) inhabits on New Zealand's South Island.
Possible Look of Devil Habitat -> image courtesy of @Zooish
Tasmanian Devil -> image courtesy of @Therabu
Possible Look of Kea Aviary -> image courtesy of @Shirokuma
Kea -> image courtesy of @vogelcommando (also this image displays that the bird has a rather long bill, which I did not know)
And with this, visitors come to the three-way path convergence, of which guests can only go forward or turn tail back the way they came, as the construction down the other path prevents anyone besides staff and construction personnel from accessing the future site of Aquatic Worlds, an aquarium attraction that is set to be completed in 2025. Various other projects are also being undertaken and planned, including the expansion of the Indian Subcontinent (an area currently set just as the Indian Rhino and Rhesus Macaque habitat), as well as the addition of a third Plaza Pond, which will be used for a species already housed in the zoo. Minor renovations will also be made to both Rumah Pulau and the Australasian Biomes Pavilion, and phaseouts and the introduction of new species will occur (the planned phaseouts and new species will be briefly explained at the end of this version of the zoo, and some of these new species are unique in North America, which is something I avoided in this version).
Anyways, sometime in the next couple of days, though chances are high that it won't be tomorrow, the first post on the Native Lands will be made, so stay tuned, enjoy, and feel free to ask about the future of this zoo, which I will gladly discuss in the meantime!