North Georgia Wildlife Park species list + review (12/23/24)

biggest_dreamer

Well-Known Member
North Georgia Wildlife Park (aka North Georgia Zoo, North Georgia Safari Park) is a hybrid drive-thru/tour facility in Cleveland, GA. They have a handful of rare species, which is what initially set them in my sights, but they also have a less than stellar reputation and are known for continuously breeding and selling animals. I was apprehensive before going, but finally bit the bullet yesterday.

The first thing you’ll notice is that the price is excessive. $40 for a single adult is more than all but the most renowned AZA facilities charge. It’s made all the tougher to swallow considering the abysmal quality of so much of this place, but I guess that’s just what you have to pay if you’re in Georgia and want to see a honey badger.

I arrived at around 10:40 am compared to an advertised opening time of 11, so I prepared to sit in my car for a few minutes. To my surprise a staff member stepped out and told me they could go ahead and take people, so I went through the process of redeeming my pre-purchased ticket. The staff here were all universally exceptionally nice and accommodating, which I wasn’t expecting given the place’s poor reputation and how aggressively their website warns about late and rescheduling fees for every little thing. So if anyone from the zoo winds up reading this, let the primary takeaway be that everyone I interacted with was amazing.

I should also note that this place offers a ton of encounters and meet & greets, and advertises them aggressively on their website and on-site signage.

The zoo is divided into two halves, each of which is sort of further split into two distinct portions. The drive-through portion is small and guests are invited to circle around as many times as they’d like. The on-foot portion requires you to cross the road, and features an open petting zoo area and a gated-off tour-only area with guided tours included as part of each ticket purchase and offered every hour starting at noon. Since I had a bit over an hour to kill before my tour, I started with the drive-through.

By and large, the drive-through portion is not actually a safari park, as you might expect - it’s more or less a typical zoo, except you stay in your car. It seems like this would make for some weird interactions where you’ve got species that people can easily spend quite a while watching, such as penguins and otters, except you can’t exactly stop and watch them without holding up the line. I didn’t run into this, because I was the only car driving through this portion for the length of my stay, and neither the penguins nor otters actually came out, but it still feels like a bizarre setup, made worse by the fact that what felt like the best angle for viewing the penguins would require you to stop halfway up a hill.

Worse than that, though, was the general quality of the exhibit. Most of them were truly abysmal. The penguins and otters both had decently large exhibits, but no natural substrate as far as I could tell. Most other species got the opposite of this: they lived in tiny mud pits with no visible enrichment. Half a dozen flamingos were huddled up in a space about the size of my closet. A supposed alligator exhibit had no standing water, just a waterlogged canoe (???). Almost all of the exhibits felt cobbled together, and felt like they were made with whatever construction scraps were on hand that day. Nothing here felt great, and a lot of it was heartbreaking. Some (some) of the birds, notably the hornbills and augur buzzard, and perhaps parrots to a lesser extent, seemed to have an okay setup, and thankfully the honey badgers seemed to have an okayish amount of space (assuming the back half of their exhibit was accessible) and actual enrichment. But basically everything else? Abhorrent.

Italics are signed, unseen.

Drive-Through enclosures species list
  • Cattle (mostly Highland)
  • Water buffalo
  • American alligator
  • Ostrich
  • Alpaca
  • Asian small-clawed otter
  • African penguin
  • Dromedary
  • (unsigned exhibit that I believe is for African porcupine)
  • Red river hog (3 or 4 separate exhibits)
  • Grey crowned crane, southern screamer
  • Southern ground hornbill
  • Augur buzzard
  • Common eland
  • Llama
  • Common warthog
  • Blue wildebeest
  • Honey badger
  • Eclectus sp.
  • Emu
  • Fallow deer
  • White cockatoo
  • Military macaw
  • Blue-and-gold macaw
  • Fancy pigeon
  • Indian peafowl, southern screamer, duck sp.
  • Domestic turkey
  • Plains zebra, donkey, horse
  • Domestic yak
  • Nilgai
  • Nyala
  • Capybara
  • Lesser flamingo
  • Sheep
  • Goat
  • Pig
  • Zebu
  • Greylag goose
  • Helmeted guineafowl (free-roaming)
Aside from the honey badgers and perhaps augur buzzard or lesser flamingos, nothing here should really entice zoo nerds. The whole thing was pretty short - I did five loops during the hour I was waiting for my tour time, mostly trying to see the honey badgers which were no-shows through my fourth loop. At that point I asked a nearby worker, who said they were just about to let them out and weigh them. I did one more lap to give them the time they needed, and was rewarded with getting to see the badgers emerge from their indoor enclosure for the day and lose their minds over some honey on a spoon to coax them onto their scale. The badgers were very active and charismatic, truly a light in an otherwise very dismal place.

The drive-through area also boasts a very small safari loop, but it’s so small, steep, and devoid of animals that I genuinely wonder why they bother. I only did this portion once, and was in and out in under three minutes. There were no more than a dozen animals inside, and about half of them were llamas.

“Safari Park” species list
  • Llama
  • Plains bison
  • Emu
  • Highland cattle
  • Domestic yak
  • Common eland
After my fifth loop, I said goodbye to the honey badgers, thanked the employee I had spoken with, and headed for the walk-through area. As mentioned, the first part of this is a freely accessible petting zoo. Nothing noteworthy here, for good or bad reasons, thankfully.

Petting Zoo species list
  • Llama
  • Dromedary
  • Chicken
  • Goat
  • Pig
  • Sheep
  • Domestic rabbit
  • Helmeted guineafowl
  • Laughing kookaburra
The final portion of the facility was for the guided tour, and honestly? I found myself genuinely surprised by some of the exhibits here. There were quite a few really bad ones, particularly for the cats and foxes, but there were just as many actually good ones. A large and well-furnished new lar gibbon enclosure dwarfed plenty of AZA gibbon enclosures I’ve seen. Another large new very attractive exhibit housed Indian peafowl and Patagonian maras of all things. A nocturnal house that just opened last spring housed four small mammal species in decently large and especially well-furnished spaces. The wolves, singing dog, and peccaries all had decently large naturalistic spaces - not the greatest, but certainly not disappointing. But all of these surprisingly strong exhibits also just made for even greater whiplash when juxtaposed to some of the less stellar ones just next door. And to be fair, none of the guided tour exhibits were nearly as bad as the average quality of the drive-through.

Guided Tour species list
  • American alligator
  • Bat-eared fox
  • Cape porcupine
  • South American coati (the guide unsurprisingly called it a “mountain coati”)
  • North American beaver
  • Red kangaroo
  • Eurasian eagle owl
  • Lesser yellow-headed vulture
  • Common buzzard
  • Red-necked wallaby, swamp wallaby
  • Gray wolf
  • New Guinea singing dog
  • Lowland paca
  • Asian small-clawed otter
  • Ring-tailed lemur
  • Red-ruffed lemur
  • Serval
  • Caracal
  • Canada lynx
  • Lar gibbon
  • Reeve’s muntjac
  • Golden pheasant
  • Linnaeus’s two-toed sloth
  • Spectacled owl
  • Red-tailed hawk
  • Binturong
  • Fennec fox
  • Flemish Giant rabbit
  • Egyptian fruit bat (nocturnal house)
  • Galago sp. (nocturnal house)
  • New world porcupine sp. (nocturnal house)
  • Southern tamandua (nocturnal house)
  • Nyala
  • Indian peafowl, Patagonian mara
  • Capybara
  • Great curassow
  • Tortoise sp.
Of note are the two nocturnal house species I could not easily ID, which the tour guide simply referred to as a “bushbaby” and “Mexican hairy porcupine”. I asked if she knew what species of bushbaby it was, to which she said “I think the lesser one?” These were big guys so that definitely wasn’t the case. I put them on my list as northern greater galagos, but if anyone wants to double check that there’s a couple of photos here. The porcupine was even tougher to see in the red light, but @Smaggledagle has sold me on it being a black-tailed hairy dwarf porcupine.

If the tour area was the only part of the zoo, I would’ve had some hope that this was a formerly subpar facility making strides to improve themselves. But looking at the greater picture? I have no idea what to make of this place. I get the impression that they’re very financially stable, between the exorbitant entrance fee, plethora of aggressively-marketed add on experiences, as well as the large number of genuinely pleasant staff members. So why are so many of the exhibits so dumpy? I mean, we all know why. I just wish places like this would do better since they clearly have the means to. If the entire place were as high quality as the handful of exhibits I highlighted, I could easily see this place being considered one of the best non-AZA facilities in the country. Unfortunately, that’s so far from being the case, and it’s very difficult to actually recommend it in any capacity in its current state. I just hope they can continue to improve things, because the potential is definitely there, at least on the tour side.

Tagging @Torgos who made a thread earlier this year asking about this place.
 
Thank you for the review and species list! I've thought about visiting this place but the price and fact that its not self-guided made me hold off on it. I don't think I'd visit any time soon now, but its nice to see that they have an interesting species list and at least some exhibits that are good in quality. Do you happen to have any photos of this place you'd be willing to post on here?
 
Do you happen to have any photos of this place you'd be willing to post on here?
Sure, I just uploaded a handful to the US (other) category. I generally am not great about taking habitat photos so most of what I got are attempts at close-ups on the animals, but these should get the general vibe across, maybe.
 
North Georgia Wildlife Park (aka North Georgia Zoo, North Georgia Safari Park) is a hybrid drive-thru/tour facility in Cleveland, GA. They have a handful of rare species, which is what initially set them in my sights, but they also have a less than stellar reputation and are known for continuously breeding and selling animals. I was apprehensive before going, but finally bit the bullet yesterday.

The first thing you’ll notice is that the price is excessive. $40 for a single adult is more than all but the most renowned AZA facilities charge. It’s made all the tougher to swallow considering the abysmal quality of so much of this place, but I guess that’s just what you have to pay if you’re in Georgia and want to see a honey badger.

I arrived at around 10:40 am compared to an advertised opening time of 11, so I prepared to sit in my car for a few minutes. To my surprise a staff member stepped out and told me they could go ahead and take people, so I went through the process of redeeming my pre-purchased ticket. The staff here were all universally exceptionally nice and accommodating, which I wasn’t expecting given the place’s poor reputation and how aggressively their website warns about late and rescheduling fees for every little thing. So if anyone from the zoo winds up reading this, let the primary takeaway be that everyone I interacted with was amazing.

I should also note that this place offers a ton of encounters and meet & greets, and advertises them aggressively on their website and on-site signage.

The zoo is divided into two halves, each of which is sort of further split into two distinct portions. The drive-through portion is small and guests are invited to circle around as many times as they’d like. The on-foot portion requires you to cross the road, and features an open petting zoo area and a gated-off tour-only area with guided tours included as part of each ticket purchase and offered every hour starting at noon. Since I had a bit over an hour to kill before my tour, I started with the drive-through.

By and large, the drive-through portion is not actually a safari park, as you might expect - it’s more or less a typical zoo, except you stay in your car. It seems like this would make for some weird interactions where you’ve got species that people can easily spend quite a while watching, such as penguins and otters, except you can’t exactly stop and watch them without holding up the line. I didn’t run into this, because I was the only car driving through this portion for the length of my stay, and neither the penguins nor otters actually came out, but it still feels like a bizarre setup, made worse by the fact that what felt like the best angle for viewing the penguins would require you to stop halfway up a hill.

Worse than that, though, was the general quality of the exhibit. Most of them were truly abysmal. The penguins and otters both had decently large exhibits, but no natural substrate as far as I could tell. Most other species got the opposite of this: they lived in tiny mud pits with no visible enrichment. Half a dozen flamingos were huddled up in a space about the size of my closet. A supposed alligator exhibit had no standing water, just a waterlogged canoe (???). Almost all of the exhibits felt cobbled together, and felt like they were made with whatever construction scraps were on hand that day. Nothing here felt great, and a lot of it was heartbreaking. Some (some) of the birds, notably the hornbills and augur buzzard, and perhaps parrots to a lesser extent, seemed to have an okay setup, and thankfully the honey badgers seemed to have an okayish amount of space (assuming the back half of their exhibit was accessible) and actual enrichment. But basically everything else? Abhorrent.

Italics are signed, unseen.

Drive-Through enclosures species list
  • Cattle (mostly Highland)
  • Water buffalo
  • American alligator
  • Ostrich
  • Alpaca
  • Asian small-clawed otter
  • African penguin
  • Dromedary
  • (unsigned exhibit that I believe is for African porcupine)
  • Red river hog (3 or 4 separate exhibits)
  • Grey crowned crane, southern screamer
  • Southern ground hornbill
  • Augur buzzard
  • Common eland
  • Llama
  • Common warthog
  • Blue wildebeest
  • Honey badger
  • Eclectus sp.
  • Emu
  • Fallow deer
  • White cockatoo
  • Military macaw
  • Blue-and-gold macaw
  • Fancy pigeon
  • Indian peafowl, southern screamer, duck sp.
  • Domestic turkey
  • Plains zebra, donkey, horse
  • Domestic yak
  • Nilgai
  • Nyala
  • Capybara
  • Lesser flamingo
  • Sheep
  • Goat
  • Pig
  • Zebu
  • Greylag goose
  • Helmeted guineafowl (free-roaming)
Aside from the honey badgers and perhaps augur buzzard or lesser flamingos, nothing here should really entice zoo nerds. The whole thing was pretty short - I did five loops during the hour I was waiting for my tour time, mostly trying to see the honey badgers which were no-shows through my fourth loop. At that point I asked a nearby worker, who said they were just about to let them out and weigh them. I did one more lap to give them the time they needed, and was rewarded with getting to see the badgers emerge from their indoor enclosure for the day and lose their minds over some honey on a spoon to coax them onto their scale. The badgers were very active and charismatic, truly a light in an otherwise very dismal place.

The drive-through area also boasts a very small safari loop, but it’s so small, steep, and devoid of animals that I genuinely wonder why they bother. I only did this portion once, and was in and out in under three minutes. There were no more than a dozen animals inside, and about half of them were llamas.

“Safari Park” species list
  • Llama
  • Plains bison
  • Emu
  • Highland cattle
  • Domestic yak
  • Common eland
After my fifth loop, I said goodbye to the honey badgers, thanked the employee I had spoken with, and headed for the walk-through area. As mentioned, the first part of this is a freely accessible petting zoo. Nothing noteworthy here, for good or bad reasons, thankfully.

Petting Zoo species list
  • Llama
  • Dromedary
  • Chicken
  • Goat
  • Pig
  • Sheep
  • Domestic rabbit
  • Helmeted guineafowl
  • Laughing kookaburra
The final portion of the facility was for the guided tour, and honestly? I found myself genuinely surprised by some of the exhibits here. There were quite a few really bad ones, particularly for the cats and foxes, but there were just as many actually good ones. A large and well-furnished new lar gibbon enclosure dwarfed plenty of AZA gibbon enclosures I’ve seen. Another large new very attractive exhibit housed Indian peafowl and Patagonian maras of all things. A nocturnal house that just opened last spring housed four small mammal species in decently large and especially well-furnished spaces. The wolves, singing dog, and peccaries all had decently large naturalistic spaces - not the greatest, but certainly not disappointing. But all of these surprisingly strong exhibits also just made for even greater whiplash when juxtaposed to some of the less stellar ones just next door. And to be fair, none of the guided tour exhibits were nearly as bad as the average quality of the drive-through.

Guided Tour species list
  • American alligator
  • Bat-eared fox
  • Cape porcupine
  • South American coati (the guide unsurprisingly called it a “mountain coati”)
  • North American beaver
  • Red kangaroo
  • Eurasian eagle owl
  • Lesser yellow-headed vulture
  • Common buzzard
  • Red-necked wallaby, swamp wallaby
  • Gray wolf
  • New Guinea singing dog
  • Lowland paca
  • Asian small-clawed otter
  • Ring-tailed lemur
  • Red-ruffed lemur
  • Serval
  • Caracal
  • Canada lynx
  • Lar gibbon
  • Reeve’s muntjac
  • Golden pheasant
  • Linnaeus’s two-toed sloth
  • Spectacled owl
  • Red-tailed hawk
  • Binturong
  • Fennec fox
  • Flemish Giant rabbit
  • Egyptian fruit bat (nocturnal house)
  • Galago sp. (nocturnal house)
  • New world porcupine sp. (nocturnal house)
  • Southern tamandua (nocturnal house)
  • Nyala
  • Indian peafowl, Patagonian mara
  • Capybara
  • Great curassow
  • Tortoise sp.
Of note are the two nocturnal house species I could not easily ID, which the tour guide simply referred to as a “bushbaby” and “Mexican hairy porcupine”. I asked if she knew what species of bushbaby it was, to which she said “I think the lesser one?” These were big guys so that definitely wasn’t the case. I put them on my list as northern greater galagos, but if anyone wants to double check that there’s a couple of photos here. The porcupine was even tougher to see in the red light, but @Smaggledagle has sold me on it being a black-tailed hairy dwarf porcupine.

If the tour area was the only part of the zoo, I would’ve had some hope that this was a formerly subpar facility making strides to improve themselves. But looking at the greater picture? I have no idea what to make of this place. I get the impression that they’re very financially stable, between the exorbitant entrance fee, plethora of aggressively-marketed add on experiences, as well as the large number of genuinely pleasant staff members. So why are so many of the exhibits so dumpy? I mean, we all know why. I just wish places like this would do better since they clearly have the means to. If the entire place were as high quality as the handful of exhibits I highlighted, I could easily see this place being considered one of the best non-AZA facilities in the country. Unfortunately, that’s so far from being the case, and it’s very difficult to actually recommend it in any capacity in its current state. I just hope they can continue to improve things, because the potential is definitely there, at least on the tour side.

Tagging @Torgos who made a thread earlier this year asking about this place.
 
Thank you for the review and species list! I've thought about visiting this place but the price and fact that its not self-guided made me hold off on it. I don't think I'd visit any time soon now, but its nice to see that they have an interesting species list and at least some exhibits that are good in quality. Do you happen to have any photos of this place you'd be willing to post on here?

I actually only live a few hours away from Cleveland, GA.
I have been there one time last summer.
I have plenty of photos if interested.
 
Definitely a Gallagos.
Yeah, that part wasn't in question, I just wasn't sure which species of galago it was. Another user has since clarified that it appears to be the Garnett's/northern greater galago based on some pictures.

I'd be glad to have some more pictures of the place uploaded, since I mostly shied away from taking pictures of the many subpar areas and some of the animals weren't out due to the cold.
 
Yeah, that part wasn't in question, I just wasn't sure which species of galago it was. Another user has since clarified that it appears to be the Garnett's/northern greater galago based on some pictures.

I'd be glad to have some more pictures of the place uploaded, since I mostly shied away from taking pictures of the many subpar areas and some of the animals weren't out due to the cold.

I live in Spartanburg, SC and was there with my sister and my niece last summer.
I will probably go back this spring to participate in some of the encounters I didn't experience the last time.
I agree that there are certainly some exhibits that need to be updated and/or enlarged.
But it is a family-owned small zoo and they said they are working on making improvements all the time.
I talked to several family members and zookeepers while I was there, and they seem to be heading in the right direction.
As long as they keep meeting or exceeding the minimal care requirements and keep trying to improve the animal's living conditions, I will contribute by patronizing their establishment.
I used to not be a big fan of zoos when I was younger, but over the past 60 years I have seen the loss of many species, and I am seeing many more heading to extinction. Zoos, aquariums and wildlife parks may well be the last hope for the survival of many species.
SSPs may be the only way to keep a viable population going until humanity learns to value the natural world around them and then endeavors to set aside suitable wild spaces to be repopulate d by these endangered species.
And all zoos, great and small, will need to be part of these programs.
I have always had a great love for all the wild cats. I am old and I am glad I won't be around when there will be no more Cheetahs running down gazelles on the African savannah or no more tigers prowling the forests of Asia. I can't imagine a world without Snow Leopards or Clouded Leopards.

Tell me what pictures you may like to see posted.
 
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