DAY 14: Monday, July 25th
Zoo/Aquarium Review # 13: San Diego SeaWorld
SeaWorld’s website:
SeaWorld San Diego - Theme Park, California Attractions
SeaWorld Map:
http://seaworld.com/assetrepo/documents/sandiego/SWC_ParkMap.pdf
San Diego SeaWorld can be an exhausting experience if one does not plan a tentative route ahead and avoid doubling back too often. Many people discuss the fact that San Diego Zoo is a major struggle to tour in a single day, but that zoo is around 100 acres in size while SeaWorld is double that total (198 acres to be exact). The only way around is to walk, and I’d be intrigued as to how many kilometers I logged today. Sometimes I’d be pushing a baby/stroller combination that weighs around 40 pounds, and at other times I’d be carrying my 25-pound daughter beneath the scorching sun.
The park regularly receives around 4 million visitors each year, although in the past couple of years there has been an overall 9% decline in attendance. That is a major hit for such an enormous theme park, and thus a new exhibit named Turtle Reef opened this summer and a new rollercoaster will debut in summer 2012. The new attraction will be called “Manta”, it will use a specific powering system that is only in use at one other rollercoaster in the world, and the Forbidden Reef animal exhibit will be incorporated into the ride. This will include a 100,000 gallon tank with 65 bat rays, 10 guitarfish and more than 400 other fish. At the moment this area is a construction zone, but the high fences mean that it is difficult to peek inside and SeaWorld is so large that the closed-off area barely impacted our visit.
THE BEST:
Turtle Reef – This massive 300,000 coral reef gallon tank is colorful, packed with turtles and a beauty to behold. I’m not sure what was on exhibit before, but this is the big new attraction for the summer of 2011. There are green sea turtles, black sea turtles (what is the meaning of that name? – a true species?) and hawksbill turtles in the exhibit, and a sign announces that there are over 60 in the tank. The turtles range in age from 2 years old to over 50. There is a separate pair of turtle exhibits near the Aquarium de la Mer, but they are nondescript and partly hidden away.
Penguin Encounter – There are 5 species of penguin (emperor, king, adelie, macaroni and gentoo) in a fairly accurate recreation of an Antarctic region that features over 300 of the birds. The long viewing windows are great to see from the top level, but not so cool on the bottom by the glass as there is a conveyor belt that hurries visitors along. Outdoors is a grassy magellanic penguin exhibit, and I’d read before that the park also had Humboldt penguins but unless I missed them they are not there anymore. There certainly was not any signage up anywhere.
Adjacent to the indoor penguin enclosure is an even better habitat, and it features 3 species of alcids ( tufted puffin, common murre, rhinoceros auklet) in a very long exhibit with steep cliffs and a deep pool that has underwater viewing opportunities. I thought that this enclosure, with glass that was far cleaner, was the highlight of Penguin Encounter. Naturally there was a gift shop to exit through, much like all of the SeaWorld exhibit complexes.
Sesame Street Bay of Play – If you don’t have kids you probably would not spend a single minute here, but with a toddler we enjoyed this new (2008) 2-acre addition to the park immensely. The area would be heaven to a child that was about 6 years old, as there are all sorts of climbing ropes, a small waterpark, Sesame Street characters, a giant trampoline, a sand pit, a musical stage and a wealth of games for kids to engage in. Many of the aquariums that I have visited on this trip have children play areas that include fun games on conservation of the world’s oceans but SeaWorld is all about playtime and there is no message contained with this area.
THE AVERAGE:
Shark Encounter – This is a crowded area where visitors pass through an underwater tunnel via a conveyor belt and view sharks swimming all around them. Species include blacktip reef sharks, white-tipped reef sharks, sand tiger sharks and Australian leopard sharks, but the conveyor belt means that the tunnel experience lasts about 25 seconds. SeaWorld has no choice but to have the belt for transporting people through or the crowds would be insane, but it is still disappointing to have only 25 seconds to view sharks. The animals can also be seen from above via a series of pools but underwater viewing is really the only true way to view sharks.
Rocky Point Preserve – The many dolphins interact with visitors for exorbitant fees (and at least 3 different interactive price levels) in an exhibit that is too shallow and allows for no resting zones for the mammals. The sea otters fare much better in a nice exhibit with an extremely deep tank.
Pacific Point – This is a pair of pinniped exhibits, one with California sea lions and the other with sea lions and a few harbor seals. The exhibits are average and the sea lions are huge crowd pleasers with their barking and slapping of flippers, but the only downside is that the public is allowed to purchase fish to feed the animals and this means that some of the sea lions beg for food. At one point there were 4 sea lions leaning dangerously close to outstretched visitor hands in a quest for some fish, and it reminded me of the old habit of feeding bears in pits many decades ago.
Wild Arctic – This area is superb for visitors as the amount of detail in the presentation of the 3 exhibits is startling. Millions of dollars must have been spent on the immersive environment of the Arctic, with chilly temperatures, camping gear strewn everywhere, crates of supplies in a large garage that also contains a helicopter, and the hull of a massive ship. Stunning! However, the beluga whale, polar bear and walrus exhibits feature practically zero natural substrate and they are all too small for the occupants. The underwater viewing windows are amazing, the polar bear den with sound effects is wildly popular, the entire experience leaves the crowds squealing with delight…but sadly the backdrop and land areas are obviously fake and disappointing, and the exhibits should have been created as twice the size as what they are.
THE WORST:
Crowds – I deliberately planned our road trip itinerary so that the three mega-parks in San Diego could be seen on weekdays, but even on a Monday SeaWorld was packed to the rafters. At 8:45 in the morning, before the place had even opened, there were lineups just to pay $14 for parking and locate a decent spot in the enormous lot. By 9:30 there was already a lengthy line at the main rollercoaster, we had to wait before entering Wild Arctic, and the hordes of people came with their wallets open and their bank accounts quivering in excitement.
Visitors squeezed onto the conveyor belt beneath Shark Encounter, packed the 10 gift shops (and that does not include at least 10 more gift shacks/huts), managed to jam themselves into the countless restaurants, and every single show of the day in every single stadium was always sold out. Announcements would air and hundreds of people would turn away in disappointment, and to think that this was all on a Monday! It is the middle of summer but I can scarcely imagine what SeaWorld looks like on a hectic long weekend. To be honest the overwhelming crowds taint the experience, as whenever I stopped for 5 seconds to consult the map then I was quickly told to move out of the way by the souvenir-wielding hordes coming up behind me.
Random Aviaries – There are a series of randomly placed aviaries dotting the grounds, with tiny, half-hidden signs that offer a few lines of information. Species include: East African crowned crane, chestnut-mandibled toucan, chestnut-breasted malkoha, crested wood-partridge, green woodhoopoe, black vulture and various macaws that are used in the dolphin/pilot whale show. What is the point of the aviaries? To fill up space and make the lawns prettier? If that is the case then the plan has backfired as every single one of the aviaries are black metal cages. I think that the park would look better if all of the aviaries were actually removed, as they are eyesores more than anything else and barely anyone stops to see what is in the cages.
Trio of Small Aquariums – There are 3 small, enclosed aquariums at the park that absolutely do not fit in with the overall theme of the establishment. All 3 facilities feature traditional glass tanks set in the walls, and they are studious, dark, dingy and drab. There are not any gift shops, there are no SeaWorld characters for kids to cuddle with, and there is the sense that those buildings have been around a long time and are awaiting demolition.
Aquarium de la Mer features an assortment of sea creatures in a long gallery of tanks that are almost all about 3 feet wide and maybe 3-4 feet deep. They are standard exhibits that do not excite anyone, and it is almost as if SeaWorld is attempting to maintain the fact that the park is more than just stadiums, shows and large-scale rollercoasters. Freshwater Aquarium is a series of small rooms that have everything from fish, frogs and turtles, and while some of the exhibits are nice the building is so tiny that the crowds blot out the view of the tanks. World of the Sea Aquarium is easily the best of the trio, and worthy of being in a different category in my review. There is a long entrance with no live animals and only ocean artifacts, and then 4 huge tanks. Coral Reef Community, Rocky Reef and Kelp Forest, Gamefishes and a Green Sea Turtle Tank are all quite nice but nothing that cannot be seen at California’s other great aquatic institutions.
Tidepool – Hands down the worst of this trip, as there was nothing but sea stars to touch. The huge bat ray touch tank is closed due to construction on the rollercoaster “Manta” and so the current tide pool area is boring and unnecessary.
Shamu Stadium – The killer whale show was the major disappointment of the day, as the brand new show “One Ocean” was sorely lacking in quality. The struggle to wade through the mass of sweaty people in order to sit and bake in the sun was understandable considering the circumstances, and the hundreds of strollers lined up outside the stadium had to be seen to be believed. I think that 5,000 people can fit into the orca stadium, and as it was completely full and if one considers that there might well be one stroller for every 10 people then there could have been 500 strollers lined up down the long walkway!
The show began with a series of video images and then a brief introduction by a trainer. Then 5 minutes went by with nothing but more video images, a killer whale came out and splashed the crowd and finally things began to get in motion. Then the show fizzled. There was no narration whatsoever, no comments on the behavior of the whales or how to stop climate change, no one talking at all for the duration of the show. There was nothing but crappy piped-in music from some elevator music store from hell, and never at any time did a trainer enter the water with an orca. I can remember seeing multiple humans swimming with the whales on my visit in 2006, and my wife and I can both recall trainers shooting up into the air via the aid of the whales. Does anyone know if SeaWorld now has a policy of not entering the water with the orcas?
I have always been conflicted with the idea of having whales in captivity, as they are mammals that have often struggled in the past to adapt to a small, captive environment. Seeing the whales at SeaWorld led me to once again question the tactics of a facility that has belugas in a tank that is far too small and is actually aesthetically painful to look at; killer whales with zero signs up or zero announcements from trainers about anything whatsoever about the whales from mating to eating to size or even where the animals are located in the world. Then what is the point? Having no useful information on large mammals swimming around in fish bowls all of their lives is somewhat depressing to think about.
RIDES: My wife and I have gone on a few rollercoasters and funky rides many years ago, but neither of us enjoys them and we are most definitely not rides people. With two kids along then there was no way we could go on a ride even if we wanted to, unless we went separately and thus alone. We did not go on the Journey to Atlantis rollercoaster, the Bayside Skyride, the Skytower Ride, Shipwreck Rapids, Riptide Rescue or any of the 3 kiddie rides in the Sesame Street Bay of Play zone. We might have taken our daughter on one of those rides if by the afternoon the lineups were not intensely long.
STADIUMS: There is Shamu Stadium (orca), Dolphin Stadium (dolphin, pilot whale, macaw), Sea Lion and Otter Stadium (California sea lion, river otter), Pets Stadium (mainly dogs) and Cirque Stadium (human acrobats) and so a visitor could possibly spend all day going from show to show at the 5 huge stadiums. In 2006 my wife and I saw 3 different shows on our all-day tour of SeaWorld but this time around with two young kids (and one being a tiny baby) we were limited to the subpar killer whale show.
OVERALL:
San Diego SeaWorld is an entity that is all-powerful, all-persuasive and all-consuming. The reek of commercialism is everywhere, from the multitude of gift shops to the lack of any kind of substantial conservation message in any of the exhibit complexes. The theme park is all about entertainment, and for that it succeeds grandly and brilliantly. It was easily our longest day of the trip as we spent 7 full hours at the park, and this review is the longest as I’m on my 11th page in my word document! I’ve re-read my review twice already, which I always do as I fine-tune it, and it seems as if there is a negative slant to much of my experience. It’s just that perhaps I expect more out of SeaWorld than what is on offer. With 4 million visitors streaming through the gates each and every year would it be too hard for the establishment to erect more signs about the conservation of animal species, or climate change, or anything substantial in terms of information?
Maybe I’m being too harsh here as my family and I had a lot of fun in our 7 hours of touring SeaWorld. My daughter had arguably the best day of the entire trip, we saw all of the animal attractions, we had a terrific lunch of BBQ ribs at the Calypso Bay Smoke House restaurant, and there were many highlights. We didn’t even go on a single ride and we only saw one show so it is easy to believe that some families spend many days at the 198-acre park. SeaWorld is all about fun, fun, fun in the San Diego sun, and my only wish is that they would aim a little higher in their goals rather than be concerned solely with entertaining the masses.