You should clearly stay away from nocturnal houses then.I know it's not animal related, I just thought it was a weird thing to see at zoo because zoos should just be about conversation and animals( not mushy couples)
You should clearly stay away from nocturnal houses then.I know it's not animal related, I just thought it was a weird thing to see at zoo because zoos should just be about conversation and animals( not mushy couples)
I definitely will nowYou should clearly stay away from nocturnal houses then.![]()
Were anyone else in the queue hurt in the fight-I’ve seen a mother White Rhino charge at the safari truck in front of us on Kilimanjaro Safaris at DAK. Luckily, no one was injured and the animal care keepers came out in a truck and moved her and her calf off-show.
-I’ve witnessed a fight in the line for Everest at DAK. Someone allegedly cut in line, and things got ugly. A crew of cast members had to break it up and escort the people off-property.
I know right, that's so annoyingEvery time I go to a zoo that has jaguars, someone says “look at that leopard Timmy” even though they are standing in front of a massive sign saying Jaguar
The weirdest thing I saw in zoos was definitely the New Guinea Short-beaked Echidna & New Guinea Ground Cuscus' exhibit at Plzen Zoo. It was not the enrichment of the exhibit I find weird, it's the exhibit's place in the zoo: you can only find it, if you need to go to the toilet.... I think that says it all.
It really is too weird!Fortunately, the exhibit is not situated IN the toilet directly but in the dark-lighted corrdior in front of the toilet. You won't pass it on the way around the zoo, not very subtle, especially because of the rarity of those species.
Seeing three cheetahs running at full speed at the same time just for fun (i.e not for treats, training, going inside/outside, etc.).
No, thankfullyWere anyone else in the queue hurt in the fight
Thats good to knowNo, thankfully
Horrible!When I was a child visiting Taru Jurug Zoo, I distinctly remember seeing a macaque chained by its neck, the chain was attached to a pole inside of a male orangutan enclosure. The orang sat silent on top of its climbing structure, while the macaque paced around restlessly. To this day, I don't know why they placed them like this, was it to rouse the orangutan to do something? Did the zookeepers think the orang needed a friend? I don't think I'll ever know.
If the zoo name sounds familiar, this is also one of the zoos that had a female orangutan who learned to smoke spent cigarette butts from visitors, thankfully the orangutan has been rehabilitated and the zoo is now in much better condition.
Macaques can be very aggressive, so it was probably to deter the orangutan from coming to the ground, to encourage natural climbing behaviors I think.When I was a child visiting Taru Jurug Zoo, I distinctly remember seeing a macaque chained by its neck, the chain was attached to a pole inside of a male orangutan enclosure. The orang sat silent on top of its climbing structure, while the macaque paced around restlessly. To this day, I don't know why they placed them like this, was it to rouse the orangutan to do something? Did the zookeepers think the orang needed a friend? I don't think I'll ever know.
If the zoo name sounds familiar, this is also one of the zoos that had a female orangutan who learned to smoke spent cigarette butts from visitors, thankfully the orangutan has been rehabilitated and the zoo is now in much better condition.