Snowleopard's 2011 Road Trip

Shirokuma, I reached the Safari Park from downtown San Diego by taking a commuter train from downtown going North, then tranferring to another commuter train going East to Escondido, then transferring to a bus from there that goes several miles directly to the front gate of the park. I beleive it was a two-hour process. I did not do it round trip in a day, instead I stayed the night in Escondido and visited the park two days in a row, which is preferable. It is truly worth it.
 
@snowleopard: I'm sort of surprised you would put Elephant Overlook in the average category. It is one of the top 5 largest elephant exhibits and it has many varying elevations so it certainly provides great exercise for the elephants, not to mention the elephants actually use most of the yard unlike Oakland where they just sort of hang around in the same part of the exhibit. IMO there is no better place to see elephants in America. Simply seeing a herd of 17 highly active young elephants is spectacular and a very unique experience as most zoos feature elephant exhibits with aging animals that hardly move around. Just saying.
 

I agree it looks awesome! And if they can bring it some young active animals it will make it one of the best. Its amazing by next year the number of world class elephant exhibits there will be in America. By next year Denver and Tuscon will open. Add that to Cleveland, OKC, San Diego Zoo, SD Safari Park, DC, Los Angeles, Oakland, Disney, North Carolina, Nashville, Dallas, Indianapolis, Columbus, Kansas City, St. Louis and the list is truly incredible for how many excellent elephant exhibits there will be.
 
I agree with BlackRhino that the elephant exhibit should be listed in the best section. I don't see how it is only an average exhibit considering it's size. I do agree the viewing could be better, but I think it is better than what SL described.

Then when you consider the number of elephants and the consistent presence of baby elephants, it really makes it a joy to visit.

The tiger exhibit should not be in the worst category imo. Yes, it is hit and miss in terms of seeing the tigers and the viewing isn't great (it's not bad though), but this is a great exhibit for the cats and that alone should keep it from being in the worst section.
 
A quick note before my daily update: I agree that I might have made a poor choice by classifying Elephant Overlook in the "average" category in my review of San Diego Zoo Safari Park. I'm not sure that I've ever done this before in my almost 100 reviews posted on ZooChat, but I agree that it should have gone in my "best" category and I've now changed it on my laptop as I save all of my reviews. That means that at San Diego Zoo Safari Park almost everything is in the best category, except for Gorilla Forest which is decidely average and Tiger Territory which I'm sticking to my guns on as it is terrible for visitors but perhaps great for tigers. The zoo wouldn't be totally revamping the entire area if the exhibit was a success.

DAY 18: FRIDAY, July 29th

I type this from Yuma, Arizona, as we have finally left California after a long journey through many wonderful attractions. Other than the extreme heat the first thing that we noticed is that the beautiful Comfort Inn motel that we are in is 50% cheaper than the San Diego motels, and I suppose that it is the off season in Arizona. After the first couple of days of driving on this trip we have visited a zoo/aquarium/theme park for 16 consecutive days. Here has been the itinerary for the past 5 days:

Monday: San Diego SeaWorld – 7 hours
Tuesday: San Diego Zoo – 7 hours
Wednesday: San Diego Zoo – 7 hours
Thursday: San Diego Zoo Safari Park – 7 hours
Friday: San Diego SeaWorld – 5 hours

After that schedule anyone would be exhausted! The amount of walking has been incredible, the steep canyon trails at the zoo and safari park have been strenuous, and to finish a7-hour day and then have to come back to a motel room only to work for 3 more hours dealing with two little kids has been very tiring. In the past my wife and I have regularly had long zoo days, as for example we spent about 7 hours at Toronto Zoo, 10 hours at San Diego Zoo, 9 hours at Omaha’s Henry Doorly Zoo, 8 hours at National Zoo, etc. But try doing that day after day with kids along for the ride and only a superhero could survive with the energy that they began with. We have loved our week in San Diego but we also appreciate the smaller zoos and aquariums as they take less time and have their own intriguing quirks.

The 5 days spent at the mega-attractions in San Diego have been tiring but wonderful, and I am grateful to have a wife that is willing to see anywhere from 20-40 zoos and aquariums almost every single summer. Is she a saint or what? Ha! Now we are in Arizona and the weather has altered drastically. After a few days of very hot weather in San Diego we experienced a shock to arrive in Yuma today and find that it was 41 degrees Celsius (around 106 Fahrenheit) and that the forecast for our 6 days in Arizona is all in the 40’s (possibly hitting 110 Fahrenheit). We’ll have to get early starts to beat the heat and also watch out that our young kids don’t overheat as sunshine and dehydration can be perilous to youngsters if parents are not observant.

AN ADDITION TO MY SEAWORLD REVIEW: July 29th

I already typed up enormously long and detailed reviews of the trilogy of mega-parks in the San Diego area, but since a second visit to SeaWorld took place today I thought that I’d offer up a few new observations. We saw another two shows and toured a few more of the same attractions that we saw the first time around.

Dolphin Show – In terms of sheer entertainment this show is absolutely spectacular! It began with a ten-minute introduction by a worker who discussed many fun facts about the animals that were going to be in the show, and he made the crowd aware that the splash zone was a dangerous place to sit. Once the show began my daughter sat enraptured by the performances of the acrobats, trapeze artists, approximately 7 dolphins, macaws, doves, an African crowned crane, black vultures (the birds all flew overhead once or twice) and the blasts of water that soaked many visitors. We sat high up in the stands but the music, the amazing stunts and the leaping dolphins had the crowd madly clapping every few minutes. The only disappointment was the absence of the park’s two pilot whales, as they had been discussed at length (age, height, and weight) before the show so something must have happened off-stage at the last possible moment. This show was a thousand times better than the sub-par orca show that I witnessed on Monday, and the trainers entering the water was a major factor in the show’s success.

Pets Show – Pets Stadium was the site of an amusing, kid-friendly, cute and sometimes cheesy show that involved over 60 cats and dogs, doves, macaws, pigs and a brief appearance by two emus. There were many funny tricks and I chuckled a few times but anyone without kids would probably not enjoy the antics.

Wild Arctic – The polar bear exhibit has zero natural substrate and I wonder if it is the smallest exhibit of its kind in all of North America? In an era when zoos like Detroit, Toronto and Columbus are showcasing polar bears in large grassy fields SeaWorld has them in a tiny concrete bowl designed to look like an Arctic winter wonderland. Maybe a small seal species should replace the polar bears, but that is unlikely to happen anytime soon. The beluga whales and walruses don’t fare much better, but the visitor section of Wild Arctic is exceptional.
 
Since today was a driving day only (no zoos), I am surprised you only went as far as Yuma (which for those of you who do not know, is right on the California/Arizona border). It is I think exactly halfway between San Diego and Tucson and I assumed you would be coming all the way here. I also assume since you will now be driving tomorrow morning from Yuma to Arizona Sonora Desert Museum (over three hours), that you will not be arriving for their 7am opening time!
 
DAY 19: Saturday, July 30th

@Arizona Docent: We spent 5 hours at SeaWorld and then drove to Yuma on Friday, while today we did errands in the morning and then had a 3.5 hour drive from Yuma to Tucson. Right now we are about 30 minutes from the Arizona Sonora Desert Museum, as that establishment is out in the desert surrounded by nothing but outstanding views.

Today was the first time in 17 days that we did not tour either a zoo or an aquarium! It was a day of eating a superb buffet breakfast at Golden Corral, shopping at Target (a mega store sort of like Wal-Mart but one that we prefer over any other “big box stores”), checking out a Dollar Tree store so that my wife could pick out loot bags for the upcoming 2nd birthday of my daughter Kylie in September, and then driving 3.5 hours from Yuma to Tucson while the two kids slept like angels in the backseat of the minivan.

There are certain sections to our epic journey, and now that we have recovered sufficiently from the 5-day jaunt through the San Diego area we now embark on a 5-day excursion through the state of Arizona. Every day the temperature should be between 100-110 Fahrenheit (in the 40’s Celsius), motels are cheaper than California, the highways are nowhere near as packed, and stepping out of the vehicle feels as if we are entering either a sauna, a furnace, or the fiery pits of hell. We’ll definitely be taking advantage of some of the early opening times of a couple of the zoos, as 7:00 a.m. is the norm for a couple of the establishments during the heat of summer.

Itinerary:

Sunday: Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum
Monday: Reid Park Zoo + drive 2 hours
Tuesday: Phoenix Zoo
Wednesday: World Wildlife Zoo & Aquarium
Thursday: Sea Life Arizona + drive back to California
 
That makes a lot more sense. I thought you had driven from San Diego to Yuma today (Saturday), not last night.
 
A quick note before my daily update: I agree that I might have made a poor choice by classifying Elephant Overlook in the "average" category in my review of San Diego Zoo Safari Park. I'm not sure that I've ever done this before in my almost 100 reviews posted on ZooChat, but I agree that it should have gone in my "best" category and I've now changed it on my laptop as I save all of my reviews. That means that at San Diego Zoo Safari Park almost everything is in the best category, except for Gorilla Forest which is decidely average and Tiger Territory which I'm sticking to my guns on as it is terrible for visitors but perhaps great for tigers. The zoo wouldn't be totally revamping the entire area if the exhibit was a success.

Well I'm glad you came to your senses regarding the elephant exhibit. ;)

Regarding the line in bold, so would the hoofstock exhibits at the SD Zoo been in your worst categories? Yeah, if the tiger exhibit was great for both people and cat they wouldn't be revamping it, but that doesn't mean it's awful. It's absolutley astonishing to me to see someone that is so concerned with exhibit size and exhibit quality for the animals rate an exhibit that is so good in both of those regards as being awful. The viewing is not terrible either, it's just a large and well planted exhibit, something you normally praise zoos for. That makes it hard to see the tigers at times. I bet if you saw the tiger(s) out and relatively close as I have many times this wouldn't be in the worst category.
 
DAY 20: Sunday, July 31st

Zoo/Aquarium Review # 16: Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum

ASDM’s website:

Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum

Zoo Map:

ASDM Exhibits

Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum is a must-see for any serious fan of zoological collections, and it has over 300 animal species and over 1,200 plant species. It was bizarre visiting an attraction in July and being told that I was in the off season and that the park would not be as busy as normal. Usually every North American zoo jacks up the cost in the summer but in Arizona hardly anyone visits zoos due to the immense heat during July and August. This park is simply fantastic, and as long as a visitor can deal with the fact that there are no hippos, gorillas, tigers or elephants, and only denizens from the Sonoran Desert, then anyone seriously interested in exhibit design should visit this fabulous institution. Omaha's "Desert Dome" is an excellent replication of a desert environment, but in Arizona it is the real thing. As if I needed proof the temperature gauge just inside the zoo had 95 degrees listed at 9:30 a.m.

The entire park is gorgeously planted in an actual desert, and it has often been declared that the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum has the #1 natural setting of any single zoo on the planet. For those of you that have visited this establishment, can anyone name another zoo that makes better use of its background? One has to embark on a 12 mile scenic drive outside of the city of Tucson, and amongst miles of cacti, shrubs and desert lays the park. It is an absorbing, beautiful, stunning setting that is surely unmatched.

THE BEST:

Wild Animals – There were birds constantly flying over my head as I strolled along the pathway through the center of a desert, and I only saw 2 wild lizards after spotting at least 50 on my visit in 2008. On the visitor map is a note explaining that sometimes lizards, rattlesnakes and even coyotes all make their way into direct contact with visitors and so I was told to be vigilant and to keep my eyes out for any “intruders”.

Desert Loop Trail - "Invisinet" was designed at this park, and it works wonders in terms of brilliant exhibitry on this half-mile path. The javelina (peccary) exhibit is 20,000 square feet and the small herd grunts and squeals its way across the rough terrain. There is a chuckwalla/eastern collared lizard habitat that consists of short glass windows around a slice of desert, and the coyote habitat is magnificent as the canids prowl within feet of visitors with only a thin barrier between the captive animals and the paying public.

Mountain Woodland – There are mountain lions, white-tailed deer, wild turkeys, Mexican gray wolves and a black bear in naturalistic exhibits. Thick-billed parrots, an American kestrel and a western screech owl are all in basic aviaries set into rockwork and this area still holds up well as the exhibit design is top-notch. The puma habitat is open-topped, the deer can come surprisingly close to visitors, and it is nice to see that the zoo has finally filled the black bear exhibit with an actual bruin.

Desert Grassland – There is an active group of black-tailed prairie dogs digging furiously underground, burrowing owls, a desert box turtle exhibit, a marsh pool with frogs and invertebrates and a host of reptiles in wonderful enclosures. Species list includes: prairie rattlesnake, Mohave rattlesnake, desert-grassland massasauga, desert-grassland kingsnake, harvesting ant, giant vinegaroon, western tarantula, long-nosed snake and western box turtle.

Life on the Rocks – This is a great area of the park that has many exhibits that have glass viewing and are built into the surrounding rocks. There are over 20 exhibits and over 30 species displayed in this relatively new development. Many of these terrariums are situated at about knee-height, so I was bending over and crouching down in an attempt to spot elusive animals. There are all sorts of frogs, snakes, scorpions, spiders, lizards, ground squirrels, owls, insects and a skunk in this section. There is a large rock that you can lift up and then beneath it is a scorpion prominently displayed in a glass-fronted exhibit. The only problem with this section is that it was quite tough actually locating the animals and one habitat had a couple of snake species and a handful of frog species that were all almost impossible to find.

Partial species list for Life on the Rocks: western diamondback rattlesnake, bark scorpion, stripe-tailed scorpion, tiger rattlesnake, speckled rattlesnake, kissing bug, black widow spider, gila monster, gopher snake, coachwhip snake, Sonoran whipsnake, western tarantula, black-tailed rattlesnake, giant crab spider, desert night lizard, Sonoran lyre snake, banded gecko, lowland leopard frog, canyon tree frog, longfin dace, Sonora sucker, loach minnow, giant spotted whiptail lizard, black-throated sparrow, black-tailed gnatcatcher, elf owl, red-spotted toad, California leaf-nosed bat, Harris’ antelope squirrel and hog-nosed skunk.

Riparian Corridor - The word "riparian" apparently means "stream-side", and here are river otters, beavers, fish tanks, coatis, desert bighorn sheep and an outdoor marsh pool for invertebrates such as diving beetles. The coati exhibit is the best of the bunch as it is extremely naturalistic, the beaver and otter underwater viewing areas are a bit dated but still great, and the desert bighorn sheep have a large fake mountain to climb on.

Hummingbird Aviary – There are at least 5-7 species of hummingbird in a large, 3,300 square foot walk-through aviary and it is another brilliant exhibit, with plenty of opportunities for close contact with the birds. Species list (not all of the birds are on exhibit at any one time): calliope, Anna’s, Costa’s, broad-billed, magnificent, rufous and black-chinned.

Cat Canyon – The 4 enclosures house an ocelot, two bobcats, a porcupine and a gray fox in exhibits that were built in 1973 but almost 40 years later hold up better than most other small mammal habitats at countless other zoos. The bobcat exhibit is the only one that is not covered with a mesh roof, but years ago none of the enclosures were covered and there was even a margay and a jaguarundi instead of the fox and porcupine.

Desert Aviary – There are more than 40 bird species (and over 100 in total) in a large walk-through aviary. It is one of the better aviaries that I've seen on this trip and there were some benches that were well situated for rest-stops. There is a somewhat randomly placed desert tortoise exhibit directly outside of the aviary.

Earth Sciences Center: Cave – This is a lengthy tunnel that goes partly underground as visitors are immersed into an extremely life-like cavern. Inside the main cave are bats, crayfish, stalactites and stalagmites...and there is even an offshoot tunnel from the main pathway that I managed to squeeze through. This 75-foot tunnel is only for skinny folks, as I had to inch my way along it in semi-darkness and I'm exactly 6 feet tall and banged my head twice as I hunched along. It is a great experience for both adults and children, and the lack of light and rocky floor makes for an intriguing detour from the main path.

Earth Sciences Center: Mineral Gallery & Ancient Arizona – There is a glass case with many minerals and gemstones; an evolutionary exhibit that showcases how Planet Earth has evolved over billions of years; and Ancient Arizona features a mock fossil of a Sonorasaurus as well as an archaeological dig site for kids.

Entrance Exhibit –By the entrance to the park there is a large lizard habitat with these 11 species: greater earless lizard, lesser earless lizard, zebra-tailed lizard, desert iguana, regal horned lizard, Clark spiny lizard, side-blotched lizard, desert spiny lizard, lined tree lizard, western whiptail and Sonoran spotted whiptail.

Butterflies, moths, bats and bees - Instead of paying a dollar or two at zoos that make you walk inside a huge tent here the butterfly garden was free and so were the butterflies! I strolled around some pollinating flowers, and there were hundreds of butterflies coming and going without any barriers whatsoever. Another section had a small group of moths, there were some bee homes that were completely open to the public and the bats are free to fly around at will when they emerge at night.

THE AVERAGE:

Life Underground – This is another dark, underground tunnel in a different section of the park, complete with tiny exhibits for kit foxes, kangaroo rats, scorpions, spiders, snakes, etc. This 60-foot long area is looking a little dated and the animal exhibits are incredibly tiny. There are larger exits for the captive specimens to enter when night falls, but they must still spend a great part of their day in minute enclosures. Species list (in order): kit fox, western tarantula, Merriam’s kangaroo rat, Sonoran lyre snake, white-throated wood-rat, western banded gecko, ringtail, night snake, glossy snake and desert millipede.

Fish Tanks - The main entrance building has a series of 3 average sized tanks for fish and none of them are remarkable except that they are located directly next to the excellent gift shop and mini-bookstore.

Reptiles & Invertebrates – This is part of the main entrance building and it has two large rooms of assorted terrariums of varying sizes. There are 22 exhibits with snakes and lizards and 20 with invertebrates. There are a handful of excellent reptile habitats but for the most part the terrariums are of average quality. The invertebrate exhibits are almost all excellent. Partial species list: Isla San Esteban chuckwalla, spiny-tailed iguana, western diamondback rattlesnake (a hypomelanistic specimen), red diamond rattlesnake, Sonoran desert sidewinder, western hog-nosed snake, green rat snake, Mexican beaded lizard, gopher snake, desert tarantula, funnel-web spider, black widow spider, fringe-toed lizard and gila monster.

THE WORST:

Opening Times – I hate to have a “worst” section for ASDM, but…the opening time of 7:00 a.m. is perfect for those who wish to beat the scorching heat of Tucson in the summer, but what is a MAJOR pet peeve of mine is when some facilities within a park do not open when the park opens. For example occasionally my wife and I visit a zoo’s gift shop first in order to peruse the shelves while the place is devoid of customers. Later in the day all gift shops are usually packed to the rafters, but the desert museum’s shop does not open at 7:00 but at least half an hour later and by then I was off on one of the trails.

Also, the gallery and restaurant (which is excellent) don’t open until at least 10:00. What a joke! The great food, air-conditioned environment and opportunity to lounge around without being burnt to a crisp is shut for the first few hours of the day. There was a crowd of people with me outside all wanting to order lunch but we all ended up leaving, and the same thing happened to my wife and I in 2008 but we waited around and were the first people inside the cool café. This time around I already had plans to visit the International Wildlife Museum (surprisingly very good, and more on that in another posting) and so I left earlier than expected. The Ocotillo Café, Ironwood Terraces Restaurant, The Cottonwood Snack Shack and Mountain House Gift Shop should all open much earlier as they ALL do not open at the same time as the zoo, and the same goes for the gallery and all visitor amenities. I can rattle off many situations when the same thing has happened, whether it is the new restaurant at Cheyenne Mountain Zoo, the Family Barn at Happy Hollow Zoo or even the children’s zoo at San Diego Zoo. People rush off to see an exciting attraction only to come face-to-face with a sign that details how that area of the zoo doesn’t open until later in the day.

OVERALL:

Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum is a brilliant zoo, museum and botanical garden isolated in what appears to be the middle of nowhere. One can drive for miles and see nothing but cacti and heat shimmering off of the surface of the road and then there appears an oasis that turns out to be a fabulous zoological park. It's difficult and perhaps pointless to attempt to rank this zoo in comparison to other North American collections as it is so specific and thus it possibly cannot compete with the major American zoos that have mega-fauna around every corner. I’ve visited the Alice Springs Desert Park in central Australia and it is almost a carbon copy of the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum and both collections do wonders in creating brilliant exhibits for animals.
 
ARIZONA SONORA DESERT MUSEUM

Cat Canyon - So they now have a porcupine? That is something brand new because I was there a month ago and they had a raccoon instead. They even had just modified the exhibit to add a small pool for the raccoon. I wonder what happened? Of course, being a cat guy, I wish they would put margay back in there and instead of the gray fox put jaguarundi back in there.

Earth Sciences Cave - Did you actually see live bats and crayfish, or was it just signage saying those are the kinds of animals that live in caves? I have not been in there in over a decade, mainly because there are no live animal exhibits. I certainly do NOT remember a bat exhibit - am I wrong about this?

Cafe - Does anyone really want to eat lunch before 10am?
 
For your visit tomorrow to Reid Park Zoo, you will be happy to know that our cafe and gift shop do open when the zoo opens at 8am. :)

(Or at least I think so. Since our docent meetings are from 8:30-9am, I am never actually at the zoo at 8am, but I know by 9am everything is open and I am pretty sure they open at 8am).

One of my pet peeves about zoo gift shops is that most of them have generic animal cards that are mass produced and do not feature the actual animals at that particular zoo. Even the otherwise outstanding Arizona Sonora Desert Museum shop is that way. I am happy to report that when I went into the Reid Park Zoo gift shop last week there was a brand new rack of postcards of our actual animals.
 
A BONUS REVIEW:

After visiting the outstanding Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum early in the morning (the park opened at 7:00 a.m. and I was there about 15 minutes later) I spent about 2 hours and 45 minutes touring the grounds. Then I drove 10 minutes back towards Tucson and stopped in at another attraction: International Wildlife Museum. The entrance fee was only $8 and I wasn’t expecting much, but the quantity of taxidermy specimens was mind-boggling. I ended up spending an hour and a half wandering the air-conditioned galleries, and I’ll provide a review of the establishment. The hoofstock collection has to be seen to be believed! Skip ahead to the McElroy Hall section if you are interested in the partial list of species.

The International Wildlife Museum

The outside entranceway contains large statues of a lion, cheetah and elk, and directly inside is a scene of a white rhino, common duiker and crested francolin. Further inside is the first room, Insects of the World, and there is a fabulous display of butterflies, moths, gigantic beetles of all sizes, stick insects and live displays of a giant desert hairy scorpion, Sonoran centipede and Madagascar hissing cockroaches.

Introductory Hall – There is an adult wild boar that can be touched, a pair of African leopards perched in a tree, a Family Tree of Mammals chart, an introduction to the art of taxidermy, and then a wide range of mounted animal heads such as an American bison, pronghorn antelope, walrus, zebra, moose, caribou, lynx, bobcat, peccary, North American porcupine, African crested porcupine, warthog, an orca skull, etc.

Birds – A large ostrich is in the first diorama, followed by glass cases with bird eggs, Coniferous Forest birds, Tropical Dry Deciduous Forest birds, Tropical Rain Forest birds and a Curiosity Cabinet & Victorian Style cabinet. Everything from a large Birds of Paradise display, owls, a brown kiwi, a Guianan cock-of-the-rock, a flamingo to a kakapo is represented here.

Predators and Prey – Turkey vultures grace the entry to this gallery, which is a small room with a few dioramas. A spotted hyena snatching an ostrich’s egg, coyotes looking for mice, a puma chasing a pronghorn, a bobcat swatting a California quail, a gray wolf and an Eastern gray squirrel eyeing each other, gray wolves eating a caribou and a leopard attacking a chacma baboon round out the gallery.

Wildlife For All (rotating exhibit) – A black bear, bighorn sheep and giant panda are the highlights of a room devoted to conservation efforts around the globe. A bison diorama with a prehistoric bison skull is also impressive.

Africa’s Deadliest (rotating exhibit) – A lion, hyena, a hippo skull, a Cape buffalo and a Nile crocodile highlight this room.

Conservation – Heads mounted on the wall include a black rhino, white rhino and Indian rhino, along with a Sumatran rhino skull. A white rhino/secretary bird/bush pig diorama is very well done.

McElroy Hall – Here are the star attractions for hoofstock fans, although there are many other species on display in a massive, high-ceilinged central room. Golden takins lead the way into the main collection, and then the sight is breathtaking. It is also quite sad to realize that hundreds of mammals had to die to fill the collection, but it is amazing to see what is on display. In the center are the cats, and there is a tiger, lion, two jaguars, leopard, puma, snow leopard, cheetah and lynx. There is also a Nile crocodile here as well.

On a single huge wall I counted over 110 different species of African hoofstock, and I wonder if some of the taxonomic names are still the same as names have probably changed since the mounted heads were erected. There are at least 7 species of bushbuck, 7-8 duikers, 5 wildebeest, innumerable gazelles, and the museum must have over 90% of all of the African antelopes in existence, as well as a few other treasures on that side of the room such as a black-backed jackal and a saiga antelope.

Some hoofstock include: zebra duiker, Angolan bush duiker, black duiker, Weyn’s duiker, red duiker, East African bush duiker, western bush duiker and at least a couple of other duikers. There must be 5 different species of springboks, harnessed bushbuck, cape bushbuck, Limpopo bushbuck, Masai bushbuck, Nile bushbuck and maybe a couple more bushbucks. There must be at least 20 species of various goats and sheep, a few different lechwe and everything else that you could imagine.

There are dioramas all around the big cats in the center of the room, and species either on the wall as mounted heads or as full specimens in side dioramas include: two polar bears, grizzly bear, Eurasian brown bear, Kodiak bear, American black bear, American black bear with glacial color form and sloth bear.

There are probably at least 120 antelope species in total, several rhinos, at least 5 species of buffalo, muskox, wolves, all sorts of deer (an entire long wall), a giraffe, zebras, and both species of hippo, elephants and at least 5-6 moose heads.

Sheep & Goats – As if there weren’t enough of these mammals in the preceding room there is a 32-foot high mountain with almost 20 species of goats and sheep in the central part of the gallery. There are surrounding dioramas that include but are not limited to: a red fox, sea otter, Arctic fox, Arctic hare, 4 species of penguins, Spanish ibex, chamois, European mouflon, nyala, steenbok, caracal, European wild boar, muskox, Damara dik-dik, African civet, red deer, cape buffalo, roan antelope, greater kudu, helmeted guineafowl, wild turkey, lion, springhare, aardvark, Cape grysbok, springbok, wolverine, Kodiak bears, etc.

Arizona by Night – Every kind of mammal that you could imagine that lives in the state of Arizona, all in semi-darkness in this “nocturnal” gallery.

Bringing Back Wildlife – This gallery features species threatened by extinction that have been brought back from the dead.

Prehistoric Mammals – This is the smallest but features the two largest animals: a woolly mammoth and a giant deer.

Overall the International Wildlife Museum is a wonder to behold in terms of the sheer numbers on display. It is located so close to the brilliant Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum that upon entering there is actually a little sign that says: “This is not the Desert Museum”. Two of the galleries (Africa’s Deadliest & Wildlife for All) are in rotating rooms and the little map that I was given says that every 6 months the museum has an entirely new gallery created. There is a Wildlife Theater, a dining establishment and a gift shop, and I must say that the facility was far better than I had anticipated. If one is already in the area to visit ASDM then I would highly recommend stopping by the International Wildlife Museum for a visit.
 
What my esteemed fellow ZooChatter failed to mention is this is the worldwide headquarters of Safari Club International, which owns and runs the museum and has their offices there. This is, I believe, the world's largest (and preeminent) trophy hunting organization. Their sole purpose is to support hunting for sport.

When I first moved to Tucson 18 years ago, I walked in not knowing anything about it. I did not go in the musuem, but looked at the gift shop. I found their club magazine which was filled with ads for guided hunts to shoot leopards and other rare creatures. I was so disgusted that I walked out and have never stepped foot in the establishment again. Unless you think killing animals for the sheer pleasure of it is a worthwhile endeavor, I cannot imagine why anyone on this forum would support such a place. (I mean no offence to my Canadian colleague - maybe being from out of country he did not know any better).
 
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What my esteemed fellow ZooChatter failed to mention is this is the worldwide headquarters of Safari Club International, which owns and runs the museum and has their offices there. This is, I believe, the world's largest (and preeminent) trophy hunting organization. Their sole purpose is to support hunting for sport.

When I first moved to Tucson 18 years ago, I walked in not knowing anything about it. I did not go in the musuem, but looked at the gift shop. I found their club magazine which was filled with ads for guided hunts to shoot leopards and other rare creatures. I was so disgusted that I walked out and have never stepped foot in the establishment again. Unless you think killing animals for the sheer pleasure of it is a worthwhile endeavor, I cannot imagine why anyone on this forum would support such a place. (I mean no offence to my Canadian colleague - maybe being from out of country he did not know any better).

I had no idea! There are hundreds of plaques all about conservation and biology in the various galleries and I spent an hour and a half touring the museum and I did not see anything about big game hunting or shooting for pleasure as that would disgust me. I saw a couple of signs at the front (SCI - Safari Club International) but I figured that the days of killing exotic animals just for the thrill of the "sport" were over and now the museum was concentrating on a more positive image. I guessed that all of the mounted head "trophies" had been gathered via big game hunters, but I wonder if that is still the purpose? If so, they hide it extremely well within the walls of the establishment as I saw signs detailing how it was one of the most complete natural history museums in the world. Interesting...
 
What my esteemed fellow ZooChatter failed to mention is this is the worldwide headquarters of Safari Club International, which owns and runs the museum and has their offices there. This is, I believe, the world's largest (and preeminent) trophy hunting organization. Their sole purpose is to support hunting for sport.
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As l read snowleopards review of this establishment, it did seem a bit odd for him to be enjoying seeing all these dead animals, killed l am assuming in the prime of their life.

Obviously an honest mistake, am l the only one who thinks this is a little funny :p
 
Surprisingly, as a devoted conservationist, I have absolutely no problem with an organization like SCI. In reality, they are probably doing more good for conservation than most (or all?) zoos are. It is a sad fact, but probably true. These big game hunters have loads of money and are willing to put it towards their hunting safaris. All the money they spend goes directly into local economies and conservation programs. These hunters want more than anything to conserve the animals that they hunt in order to have their children hunt them in the future. Basically, put a dollar figure on something and it becomes more valuable to protect. No one is willing to conserve something that has no value on it.
 
Just out of interest, is the park accessible if you don't have your own car to get there?

Hey, DON'T be afraid to rent a car and drive it in the USA. The roads here are very easy to drive on and usually not overly busy. I've rented cars in almost every European nation (including your UK), so driving in another country is not as scary as many people think it is.
 
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