DAY 4: Monday, August 5th
Time for the second and final part of the review...
Zoo/Aquarium #13: Chiang Mai Zoo (Chiang Mai, Thailand) -
Part 2 of 2
The next section of Chiang Mai Zoo is a semi-forested area that is almost exclusively Asian animals, as well as an outdoor reptile zone. Not all the signage is updated, but from what I could figure out here's the species list during my August 5th visit.
Reptile/Amphibian species list, including a few from inside the Aquarium (17 species): False Gharial, Siamese Crocodile, Smooth-fronted Caiman, Green Tree Python, Leopard Gecko, Solomon Island Prehensile-tailed Skink, Green Iguana, Aldabra Giant Tortoise, African Spurred Tortoise, Black Giant/Asian Forest Tortoise, Giant Asian Pond Turtle, Yellow-headed Temple Turtle, Asian Box Turtle, Red-eared Slider, Eastern Snake-necked Turtle, Chinese Soft-shell Turtle and Chiang Mai Crocodile Newt.
Seeing many of those animals outdoors is a nice treat, with a highlight being the Smooth-fronted Caiman exhibit.
There's also a large, rather muddy Aldabra Tortoise exhibit.
Nearby can be found a series of
Gibbon Islands (perhaps 4 of them), with Pileated Gibbons, White-cheeked Gibbons and White-handed Gibbons (below).
There's a spacious Painted Stork aviary and exhibits for species such as Malayan Porcupine, Lowland Paca, Banteng, Nilgai and Indian Rhino.
Of course, there's a couple of cages with Red-shanked Douc Langurs.
Birds in this Asian zone are represented by the following
5 hornbill species: Oriental Pied Hornbill, Rhinoceros Hornbill, Plain-pouched Hornbill (!!), Great Hornbill and White-crowned Hornbill.
There's also a Red Panda exhibit that looks a lot like the Red-shanked Douc Langur enclosures, but the indoor area for the pandas is very different.
There's a massive walk-through aviary that consists almost entirely of loads of Jungle Fowl, which is a bit disappointing. The aviary is of a substantial size and there's also a long row of pheasant aviaries within the larger space.
Bird species list (22 species): Humboldt Penguin, Emu, Greater Flamingo, Woolly-necked Stork, Painted Stork, Grey Crowned Crane, Silver Pheasant, Chinese Ring-necked Pheasant, Golden Pheasant, Reeves’s Pheasant, Lady Amherst’s Pheasant, Siamese Fireback, Brahminy Kite, Changeable Hawk Eagle, Rhinoceros Hornbill, Wreathed Hornbill, Oriental Pied Hornbill, Great Hornbill, White-crowned Hornbill, Plain-pouched Hornbill, Red Junglefowl and Nicobar Pigeon.
Jungle Fowl walk-through aviary:
One of the best parts of
Chiang Mai Zoo is the
Asian Hoofstock area, which consists of a series of overhead walkways that allow visitors to peer down at a number of ungulates in large herds. Here can be found Banteng, Chital, Axis Deer, Barking Deer, Javan Rusa Deer, Hog Deer and Southern Red Muntjac and all in large numbers. There's multiple paddocks and the animals can be seen on level ground, but most of the viewing is done by an overhead visitor trail. Another Asian Hoofstock zone nearby has a similar lineup of species, plus some Eld's Deer, Sambar Deer and Asian Water Buffalo.
There's a large Bornean Orangutan exhibit that has live trees, at least 4 or 5 wooden climbing platforms, and is mostly surrounded by a water moat.
There's a whole section in the northwest corner of
Chiang Mai Zoo that is full of brand-new exhibits. Other than a few deer species and some ponies, these exhibits all sit empty even though there's a couple of large buildings (semi off-show) and a series of what appear to be newly constructed carnivore exhibits. Apparently, this entire zone was built for Sun Bears and Asiatic Black Bears, but there's been some issues with the design of the enclosures and so I have no idea what the zoo has decided to do with this area in the future. It's yet another example of Chiang Mai Zoo having a section that's in need of an overhaul but there's tons of potential here as these exhibits are modern and spacious.
There's a small Australian zone that includes Koalas and Green Iguanas, but it's all a bit disappointing as it's very tiny and some of the statues are quite garish and ugly.
For a separate fee, there's an
Aquarium that takes at least half an hour to tour. It's got a nice setting, with thick jungle as a backdrop and set on cement pilings over a lake.
Along the walkway to the Aquarium can be found an outdoor turtle exhibit (3 species) and a beautiful outdoor mangrove habitat with Giant Mudskippers (below).
The Aquarium has plenty of nice, modern, recently refurbished exhibits and the zoo actively promotes the Aquarium and the extra fee seems justified. There's zones such as Jungle Explorer, Monster Creatures, Ocean Explorer, Under the River (Giant Catfish in the Mekong River), Peculiar & Unbelievable and Under the Ocean.
This 'ruined temple' themed tank is spectacularly designed and it is a substantial size.
Another floor to ceiling tank holds Tiger Shovelnose Catfish and Silver Arowana.
There's also a room filled with 'structure tanks' that's pretty cool. A space shuttle, the Leaning Tower of Pisa, the Eiffel Tower, an Easter Island head, Toronto's CN Tower, etc. These tanks are eye-catching and unique.
There's an obligatory, but still very impressive, long Shark Tunnel tank.
The final section of the zoo is a bit of a hodgepodge of an older area. By Southeast Asian standards, the Asian Elephant exhibit is okay and there weren't any chains in sight.
There's random statues in this area:
There's a whack of other mammal exhibits for species such as Llama, Red Kangaroo, Small-clawed Otter, Binturong, Assam Macaque, Northern Pig-tailed Macaque, Rhesus Macaque, Squirrel Monkey and Ring-tailed Lemur.
There's 4 or 5 old, grotto-type exhibits that are all decent exhibits for smaller mammals and they currently work out okay. I suspect that all these enclosures held much larger species in a previous era.
Mammal species list (47 species): Asian Elephant, Indian Rhino, Common Hippo, Pygmy Hippo, Giraffe, Plains (Burchell’s) Zebra, Banteng, Asian Water Buffalo, Nilgai, Common Eland, Defassa Waterbuck, Scimitar-horned Oryx, Aoudad, Guanaco, Mainland Serow (didn’t see), Axis Deer, Javan Rusa Deer, Sambar Deer, Eld’s Deer, Hog Deer, Southern Red Muntjac, African Lion, Tiger (Bengal), Jaguar, Leopard, Giant Panda (currently none), Sun Bear, Asiatic Black Bear, Orangutan, Pileated Gibbon, White-handed Gibbon, White-cheeked Gibbon, Red-shanked Douc Langur, Northern Pig-tailed Macaque, Assam Macaque (empty?), Rhesus Macaque, Squirrel Monkey, Ring-tailed Lemur, Bat-eared Fox, Small-clawed Otter, Red Panda, Koala, Red Kangaroo, Binturong, Malayan Porcupine, Capybara, Black Giant Squirrel and Lowland Paca.
Summary:
Chiang Mai Zoo is a solid, good zoo but it's nowhere near as great as Khao Kheow Open Zoo. I feel that Chiang Mai needs an inflection of cash in order to either demolish (likely) or refurbish the abandoned Bird Park, or to overhaul the empty Mainland Serow exhibit, or to fix up the deserted Cape Fur Seal complex, or to figure out what's happening with the brand-new carnivore enclosures. The zoo has almost 50 mammal species and the addition of Giant Pandas, and perhaps some other Asian mammal rarities, in 2027 will be exciting. Konstantin and I enjoyed our visit and the thick tropical jungle adds to the enjoyment of a tour of this zoo. However, this is a zoo that could and should be better than it is. There are too many areas that need some work, a little love and attention, for this to be a great zoo and yet it's a strong candidate for being Thailand's #2 zoo. Nevertheless, there's some genuinely great stuff here and the highlights would be the Asian Hoofstock yards, the African Savanna, Common Hippos, Aoudad mountain exhibit, outdoor reptile zone and full-sized Aquarium.
Itinerary (so far):
DAY 1: Friday, August 2nd
1- Bangkok Snake Farm (Bangkok, Thailand)
2- Peuan Deratchan Mini Zoo (Bangkok, Thailand)
3- Bangkok Butterfly Garden (Bangkok, Thailand)
4- Pata Zoo (Bangkok, Thailand)
5- Sea Life Bangkok Ocean World (Bangkok, Thailand)
DAY 2: Saturday, August 3rd
6- Wildlife Rescue Center No. 1 (Nakhon Nayok, Thailand)
7- Sriayuthaya Lion Park (Nong Khanak, Thailand)
8- Lopburi Zoo (Lopburi, Thailand)
DAY 3: Sunday, August 4th
9- Khao Kheow Open Zoo (Chon Buri, Thailand)
3-part review
10- Pattaya Crocodile Farm (Pattaya, Thailand)
11- Underwater World Pattaya (Pattaya, Thailand)
12- Monsters Aquarium (Pattaya, Thailand)
DAY 4: Monday, August 5th
13- Chiang Mai Zoo (Chiang Mai, Thailand)
2-part review
14- ??
15- ??
16- ??
17- ??