DAY 15: Monday, July 16th, 2012
Road Trip Review # 13: Franklin Park Zoo
Franklin Park Zoo’s website:
Zoo New England
Zoo Map:
http://www.zoonewengland.org/document.doc?id=262
Franklin Park Zoo is an AZA-accredited facility in Boston, Massachusetts, that was founded in 1912 and thus is celebrating its centennial this year. It is operated by Zoo New England, which also runs the nearby Stone Zoo. Franklin Park has over 1,000 animals of 220 species on 72 acres and the annual attendance is around 350,000. That total is almost triple the 130,000 visitors the zoo received in the era of 1996-97, and there has been a steady increase since that bleak time period. Still, the nearby New England Aquarium has a staggering one million more visitors than the zoo, an unusual fact for such a famous city that won’t change any time soon as there is definitely a gulf in quality between the two establishments.
Today we spent 2 hours at New England Aquarium directly on Boston’s impressive waterfront, and then spent 30 minutes battling traffic, food vendors, suicidal pedestrians and foolish texting drivers through the heart of the city to arrive at Franklin Park Zoo. Then we spent about 3 hours at the zoo to cap off an exciting but tiring day and this review is essentially Part II of our Boston experience.
The zoo has one major pathway that equally divides the establishment into a north and south section, with exhibit trails branching off and circling back onto the main road. The north side is geared almost exclusively towards children: a kiddie zoo, farmyard/barn area, carousel ride, walk-through butterfly aviary, huge playground, walk-through kangaroo exhibit, budgie feeding and a series of smaller fairground rides. Other than the bird section at one end the entire zone is devoted to children’s activities. The south half of the zoo has nothing for kids but the more traditional zoo exhibits such as Serengeti Crossing, Kalahari Kingdom and Tropical Forest. To be honest the zoo is great for kids but the layout was also a pain because whenever we passed a ride, or the carousel, or the vast playground my daughter Kylie would plead for us to let her go off and have some fun. Of course we did many things on the north side of the zoo, but we also took a couple of long routes so that we avoided specific rides. There is some validity to the idea of a zoo having a sectioned-off children’s section that does not encroach upon the entire facility.
THE BEST:
Family-Friendly Activities – As previously mentioned there are certainly a lot of options for kids at the zoo, although several of them appear to be a bit dated. The carousel ride is small and kind of junky in comparison to the behemoths that we’ve seen at other zoos; the walk-through butterfly area is a dirty white tent; and the children’s zone is intriguing but badly in need of a paint job in many areas. However, the sheer number of rides and the size of the playground meant that far more children were riding on swings or shooting down animal-themed slides than actually staring at live creatures.
THE AVERAGE:
Kalahari Kingdom/Tiger Trails – This pathway has a very large wattled crane aviary at the start of the trail, followed by a lush tiger exhibit with two Amur tigers (including a white one) in an average-sized yard. A male lion was roaming what appears to be a revamped grotto (opened in late 1990’s), and there was the obligatory safari jeep parked just outside the massive viewing windows and lots of vantage points for visitors. A chain-link bongo enclosure, a southern ground hornbill exhibit and a Bactrian camel yard finished off the trail.
Tropical Forest – This building was completed in 1989 and is widely regarded as the zoo’s pride and joy but also its white elephant. It was originally conceived back in the early 1970’s but due to budget issues it did not get built until much later and then not with strictly African species as first planned. Also, it was famous for costing over $20 million and taking many years to be completed due to a variety of funding issues. Entering from the south side the first exhibit encountered is for mandrills and while it looks spectacular from afar unfortunately up close it is yet another mock-rock, textured, fake jungle landscape that would be better suited for smaller inhabitants. A couple of white-crested hornbills were cool to see as I rarely come across them in American zoos, and the massive fake tree trunks in their habitat must have taken a long time to design with tiny clumps of fake moss. Dwarf crocodiles, Ruwenzori long-haired fruit bats, red-eyed tree frogs and Madagascar tree boas are all in terrariums, while a larger enclosure houses a couple of Baird’s tapirs. Giant anteaters and saddle-billed storks are side-by-side, and a couple of smaller exhibits house cotton-top tamarins and an African pygmy falcon. Rhinoceros rat snake, tentacled snake and green anaconda are in terrariums near a bizarre mixed-species exhibit of Ruppell’s griffon vulture and pygmy hippo (with a small theater for underwater viewing through a fish tank). Capybaras, ocelots and ring-tailed lemurs are found towards the exit to the building, and the ocelot exhibit has some high rocky ledges for the two cats to gain elevation for resting.
The real stars of the show are the troop of gorillas, and it won’t come as a surprise to anyone that I believe the great apes should have an outdoor exhibit to go along with their all-indoor one. None of the animals in Tropical Forest have access to an outdoor area, and the gorillas really should have that opportunity available to them. While their habitat was actually better than I had anticipated (mock-rock walls, fake trees, a thin layer of hay sprinkled on the cement floor in most areas) it is still one of the very few gorilla exhibits left in America that does not have an outdoor section. The Tropical Forest building as a whole never did live up to expectations and it cannot compete with the mega-complexes found in Omaha, Bronx, Cleveland or Sedgwick County, but for a small zoo it is decent and it wouldn’t take much for the zoo to expand some of the indoor enclosures or create a few passageways into outdoor areas. There is a sign next to a pair of half-finished exhibits directly next to Tropical Forest that announce the arrival of “Red crowned and Siberian cranes”, but plenty of zoos have primate chutes that allow those creatures to gain access to outdoor exhibits and instead of cranes the zoo should have focused on either their gorillas or mandrills instead.
Serengeti Crossing – This is essentially one extremely large paddock for at least 4 white-bearded wildebeest, 3 Grant’s zebras and 4 ostrich, and it features a grassy meadow and numerous mature trees. While there are a couple of small observation decks for the most part it is a long walk for visitors alongside an aesthetically unappealing wire fence. When so many zoos have panoramic vistas of an African savanna it seems as if any local farmer could have hammered together some chicken wire onto poles and created his or her own Serengeti Crossing. Obviously the animals don’t care either way, but one could point out that zoos (especially American zoos) are designed more for the visitor and so to have a simple wire fence is definitely not the most artful choice of containment.
Bird Zone – Aside from a very nice wattled crane aviary all of the birds in the zoo are located in one section. Bird’s World opened in 1912 (the same year as the zoo) and it was renovated in the 1970’s and seems to be hidden away off the main trail with many large trees in the neighbourhood. Indeed, on my visit there was no one in the building at all and only two other people in the general vicinity and to top it off there is even a large sign on the front entrance that states “Bird’s World is Open”. Around the building are exhibits for keas and kookaburras, along with arguably America’s ugliest and dirtiest Chilean flamingo pool. An absolutely massive Flight Cage (very similar to the grandiose and iconic aviary found at Saint Louis Zoo) is overgrown with ivy and its possibilities as a truly great aviary are unbelievably wasted. Instead of having a plethora of free-flying birds, visitors spend the entire time surrounded by thick black metal as they are the ones caged and what appears to be a single Andean condor has the entire structure to itself. What a colossal waste of space, although I suppose that if you are a fan of condors then it is perhaps the world’s largest aviary for that species.
Upon entering the historic structure of Bird’s World there is first a row of dusty, dirty, half-dilapidated terrariums that have these 6 species: Chilean rose hair tarantula, Brazilian cockroach, tailless whip scorpion, hissing cockroach, darkling beetle and vinegaroon. The building is then divided into 4 sections, with the first being the Swamp environment. This one is the best in terms of design, with probably a dozen trees sticking out of a muddy floor that even had a couple of turtles in the low water. A 3-foot glass wall is in place and the rest of the area is open-topped. Next up is the Rainforest zone and it is scarcely worth mentioning other than to say it is very tiny, has a crashing waterfall and is under maintenance. A couple of terrariums have walking sticks and blue-tongued lizards as one enters the decent Scrubland area, again with a 3-foot glass wall and an open-topped diorama. A small tawny frogmouth enclosure and the Riverbank zone complete the tour, with the Swamp/Scrubland combination standing out as the better sections.
Outback – A walk-through red kangaroo/emu yard, cockatoos and kookaburras in small aviaries, Matschie’s tree kangaroos in an average-sized exhibit, the ubiquitous walk-through bird-feeding zone all add up to a popular but not extremely noteworthy part of the zoo. This is another in a long line of exhibits that opened in the late 1990’s, but there have been few notable additions to the zoo since then.
Children’s Zoo & Franklin Farm – Every American zoo simply must have a farmyard/barn area and this one is no different as there are chickens, goats, sheep, pigs, horses, barn owls and donkeys in stalls and small enclosures. The children’s zoo is interesting as it contains a black-tailed prairie dog enclosure, a surprisingly nice red panda/Reeves’ muntjac exhibit, a coendou exhibit and even an Amur leopard enclosure. “Little Critters” is a rundown, stinky building that is terribly outdated, and here is the species list in the 17 terrariums: emperor newt, red-tailed boa constrictor, prehensile-tailed skink (two exhibits), grey tree frog, spotted turtle, green-and-black poison dart frog, yellow-banded poison frog, Borneo eared frog, mossy frog, African clawed frog, Madagascar hissing cockroach, Standing’s day gecko, red-footed tortoise, eastern box turtle, coastal rosy boa and Argentine tortoise.
Odds n’ Sods – A late 1990’s exhibit has Masai giraffes sharing space with some Grevy’s zebras in a grassy paddock that does not offer up many great viewing opportunities as the one large observation deck is currently closed. Also, African wild dogs have a spacious, grassy yard near Tropical Forest.
THE WORST:
There is nothing truly deserving of a place here, but several areas are suspiciously close to falling into this category in the future.
THE FUTURE:
Asian cranes (red-crowned and Siberian) will make their debut in the next couple of months, but for its 100th anniversary the zoo really should have made a push to open an exciting new exhibit as right now a temporary animatronic dinosaur zone is the only thing new.
OVERALL:
Franklin Park Zoo has seen its attendance edge upwards after a string of new exhibits opened in the late 1990’s. The problem is that there has been nothing notable added to the zoo for going on 13 years and there are many signs of decay throughout the establishment. The children’s zoo badly needs updating due to peeling paint, antiquated signage and simple things like dirty, crumpled garbage cans or pads on doors so that they don’t slam and make an awful racket. The hoofstock exhibits at the zoo are simple wire fences, the bird section seems to have been completely forgotten about, and Tropical Forest is decent but also has its share of problems. On my visit the Snowleopard family had a great time as almost 50% of the zoo is geared towards kids and the playground is fantastic, but for the historic, famous city of Boston to have such a weak zoo is difficult to comprehend. None of the exhibits at the zoo are even close to making my “best” category, and to be honest many of them are extremely close to being in the “worst” category. The population base is obviously there as New England Aquarium is nearby and it gets 1.3 million annual visitors, but Franklin Park Zoo desperately needs some type of mega-exhibit added or else an overhaul of the existing animal areas to create better word-of-mouth references from folks like myself.