DCzootripper
Well-Known Member
OK, you are a tourist going to america and are obsessed with zoos, but You can only go to one state. What state do you choose, what zoos do you go too, I am excited to see the results of this thread!
While Henry Doory is truly one of the best in the nation, if I was visiting the US from outside the country for zoos, I would certainly not pick for Nebraska, which would essentially be for a single zoo.If you're traveling around the state, the above suggestions work fine, although it feels remiss not to mention that the Omaha's Henry Doorly Zoo in Nebraska is the best in the nation, and the Lee Simmons Safari Park may be of higher interest to a non-American interested in viewing native wildlife, so I would recommend heading there.
I could understand New York or Ohio, but Illinois is a terrible choice. i would be embarassed for a European to have to see Brookfield and I love Lincoln Park but ZooChat always seems very unimpressed with it.While Henry Doory is truly one of the best in the nation, if I was visiting the US from outside the country for zoos, I would certainly not pick for Nebraska, which would essentially be for a single zoo.
I think Texas and California would be by far the best options here, although noting that the travel distance between the notable collections in these states are quite significant. If this was a shorter duration trip and travel time needed to be minimized, I would probably pick either New York, Ohio or Illinois.
But considering the size of the state (about the size of France…although the great zoos are clustered in a smaller area) you could compare Texas to a regional area…like maybe the Tri-State (New York, northern New Jersey and south-west Connecticut) along with the smallish zoos of greater New England as a nice alternative.
You vastly underrate your local collections. I hear constant talk about Lincoln Park, and Brookfield is an excellent, if somewhat flawed, zoo. The triad of Brookfield, Lincoln Park and Shedd together easily make up one of the best combinations of zoos in the US.I could understand New York or Ohio, but Illinois is a terrible choice. i would be embarassed for a European to have to see Brookfield and I love Lincoln Park but ZooChat always seems very unimpressed with it.
Omaha is actually a good facility and I mentioned Simmons Safari Park so "only one zoo" is completely false.
Plus I didn't see a need to repeat other posters and wanted to include another option.
The way that people either hugely overrate or underrate their local zoos always interests me. It makes sense that as we get familiar with a place, we’d hold it to a higher standard, thus becoming more critical (underrating). And then in other instances, nostalgia bias and an exaggerated excitement when something new happens as we’ll get to see it more often makes us treat the place as better than it is (overrating). For the longest time, with London, I was always in the former camp, but now I’m firmly in the latter!You vastly underrate your local collections. I hear constant talk about Lincoln Park, and Brookfield is an excellent, if somewhat flawed, zoo. The triad of Brookfield, Lincoln Park and Shedd together easily make up one of the best combinations of zoos in the US.
I have no hate on Lee Simmons, but it is not a zoo worth prioritizing for an international visitor. I find it bizarre you think Lee Simmons is worth a visit but that the Chicago collections aren't. Stop being so tough on your local zoos, they're amazing.
I made a very genuine mistake in not including the Shedd - that was dim of me. That is a world-class institution and my focus narrowed too much on zoos to give it the consideration it deserves. That's a my bad. It's absolutely worth a visit for anyone, unless they detest cetacean keeping.You vastly underrate your local collections. I hear constant talk about Lincoln Park, and Brookfield is an excellent, if somewhat flawed, zoo. The triad of Brookfield, Lincoln Park and Shedd together easily make up one of the best combinations of zoos in the US.
I have no hate on Lee Simmons, but it is not a zoo worth prioritizing for an internation visitor. I find it bizarre you think Lee Simmons is worth a visit but that the Chicago collections aren't. Stop being so tough on your local zoos, they're amazing.
Florida is strong, your list is missing the major facilities of ZooTampa and the Florida Aquarium. ZooTampa doesn't have the collection that it once did, but it is still a great place, and the remodeled manatee center will open soon which should improve that area of the zoo a lot. The Florida Aquarium is a really good aquarium, one of the best that I have seen, and it is only getting better over the next couple of years. Gatorland in Orlando is quite good, if you are into crocodilians. Naples Zoo and Brevard Zoo are really up and coming zoos on the smaller/medium size; they don't get a lot of publicity on ZooChat due to the locations. The new Mote Sea in Sarasota should be really good smaller/medium aquarium when it opens later this year.I’ve seen Florida pop up a few times in the thread, and while it certainly has a lot of facilities I’m not sure about the quality? I only really see DAK, SeaWorld, Miami, and maybe Jacksonville, Busch, and St. Augustine spoken highly of on the site. Feels weaker than Texas or California. Still probably worth a visit, still probably better than at least the Ohio cluster.