Day 16 – Monday, August 11th
Today I met up with a zookeeper from Bramble Park Zoo in South Dakota (Jen) and a keeper from Omaha’s Henry Doorly Zoo (Kevin) and we toured the Lee G. Simmons Conservation Park & Wildlife Safari as well as the Ak-Sar-Ben Aquarium together. They were both great to spend the morning with and Jen is one of 5 keepers at her zoo and by comparison Kevin works exclusively in the Lied Jungle and he is one of 84 keepers in Omaha.
Mini-Reviews:
Lee G. Simmons Conservation Park & Wildlife Safari – This facility is mainly a drive-through park with two sections to get out and walk (Wolf Canyon and the Visitor Center) and we finished seeing everything in about an hour and 15 minutes. My 500 word review highlights several large areas, such as the 50-acre Elk Prairie, 10-acre Deer Woods, half-an-acre Bald Eagle aviary, 12-acre Crane Meadows and 40-acre Bison Plains. There is certainly room for native wildlife at this facility and smaller animals plus American Black Bears and Grey Wolves can be seen in two different walking areas.
Ak-Sar-Ben Aquarium - This place is a free, non-AZA-accredited facility located in Gretna, Nebraska, and it opened in 1990. The establishment is 12,000 sq. ft. but that includes a classroom, auditorium, display area and office space. There are 12 tanks on display, with the largest being 1,450 gallons in size. The other 11 tanks hold either 480 or 580 gallons and all of the species within the exhibits are native to Nebraska or have at one time been introduced to the state. There is a nice turtle display near the front counter and several smaller terrariums in a side room and overall around 55 different species are on display. It takes perhaps 20 minutes to tour this facility.
Lincoln Children’s Zoo – This facility is definitely geared towards little kids and other than an Amur Leopard the entire establishment seems as if it is full of tiny, popular, charismatic animals. The crocodilians are West African Dwarf Crocodiles; the primates are all tamarins, marmosets, Squirrel Monkeys and 2 species of lemur; there are otters, penguins, a butterfly walk-through and “The Hive” which is half Reptile House and half Insect House with 32 species on show. The zoo is only 10 acres in size and it was absolutely crammed on my visit as I had to park in an empty lot a block away. The first zoo of the day I’m always the first one in the door; the last zoo of the day I’m usually the only person in the joint; but the middle zoo is the one that I often end up battling the crowds and lots of big families were present during my visit.
Check out all the small, popular animals in the “Animal Kingdom” building:
Animal Kingdom (27 species) – This is a large building that contains a random assortment of small and popular creatures from all over the globe. Outdoors are 3 exhibits (a pair for Bobcats and a Red Panda enclosure that allows the animals to climb on wire above visitor heads) and inside is a small loop with a variety of adequate yet fairly generic exhibits. The interesting species list includes: Pygmy Marmoset, Golden Lion Tamarin, Naked Mole Rat, Meerkat, Prevost’s Squirrel, Acouchi, Common Tree Shrew, Three-Banded Armadillo, Black-Tailed Prairie Dog, Fennec Fox, Two-Toed Sloth, Matschie’s Tree Kangaroo, Rodrigues Flying Fox, Ruwenzori Long-Haired Fruit Bat, Seba’s Short-Tailed Bat, American Kestrel, Panther Chameleon, Side-Necked Turtle, Spiny Softshell Turtle, Gila Monster, Frilled Lizard, Dumeril’s Monitor, Honduran Milk Snake, Green Tree Python, Boa Constrictor, Brazilian Rainbow Boa and Greenbottle Blue Tarantula.
Clay Center Zoo – This is the worst zoo I’ve seen out of 250. Almost every single cage is all chain-link fencing with a small cement floor. Most distressing of all was seeing an American Black Bear in a cement/metal hellhole about 20 feet long and perhaps 12 feet wide. Ugh. I’m surprised that this zoo is still in existence and my daily black panther fix was complete and there was even a Grey Wolf in one of the ghastly cages. Clay Center is an awful little zoo that is about an acre in size and at extreme odds with the scenic, green park that it is adjacent to. The deer and Emu yards are reasonable but every other cage should meet the end of a bulldozer. The species list includes: American Black Bear, African Leopard (black), Japanese Macaque, Fallow Deer, Japanese Sika Deer, Grey Wolf, Red Fox, Arctic Fox, Bobcat, Raccoon, Coati, Red Squirrel, Prairie Dog, Emu, Barred Owl, Great Horned Owl, Common Raven, Lady Amherst’s Pheasant, Silver Pheasant, Reeve’s Pheasant, Red Golden Pheasant, Yellow Golden Pheasant, Bobwhite Quail, Gambel’s Quail, Scaled Quail, Homing Pigeon, Wood Duck, Mandarin Duck, Marbled Teal and various other species of waterfowl.
Kansas Fishes Aquarium – This place is a non AZA-accredited facility located in Salina, Kansas, and it is a single 15,000 gallon tank in an establishment called Central Mall. Brochures around the state proclaim it to be Kansas’s largest free-standing aquarium and it acts as an incentive to get visitors into the shopping complex. The tank is 25 feet long, 12 feet wide and 6.5 feet deep and focuses on Kansas native fish with an authentic-looking mud-bank backdrop and large viewing windows. The species list includes: Striped Bass, White Bass, Largemouth Bass, Walleye, Channel Catfish, Blue Gill, Saugeye and Gizzard Shad.