Zooboy28 in America

Its definitely a problem when you can't find all the exhibits, I guess going with a local would help. But it does add to the list of reasons to return! :cool:

I know the feeling; I spent two days at each of the Berlin collections and I'm still pretty sure there are nooks and corners I missed :p
 
Oh, I didn't see any aviaries behind the arctic zone. Where exactly were they? Its definitely a problem when you can't find all the exhibits, I guess going with a local would help. But it does add to the list of reasons to return! :cool:

Here is the aviary by the bus queue:

http://www.zoochat.com/39/entrance-area-bus-tour-queue-aviary-390681/

Here is the row of aviaries by the polar bears (with a list of species):

http://www.zoochat.com/39/northern-frontier-bird-exhibits-371382/
 
Oh, I think I see them now, by using Google Maps satellite view. Are they down a side road just to the left of the Arctic complex? If I did see that road I doubt I would have realised it led to exhibits, or was even publicly accessible. Sigh.
 
Oh, I think I see them now, by using Google Maps satellite view. Are they down a side road just to the left of the Arctic complex? If I did see that road I doubt I would have realised it led to exhibits, or was even publicly accessible. Sigh.

That is exactly where they are. Looking at the current map, it is interesting to note just how much of the zoo has been altered since 2009. Elephant Odyssey eliminated most of Horn & Hoof Mesa, Outback was an update of the Australian zone, and Africa Rocks opens in a couple of years and will replace many of the outdated "canyon" exhibits. With Panda Trek having opened, plus renovations done to Northern Frontier (visitor graphics, etc.), the entire right-hand side of the zoo looks much different than it did just a few short years ago. San Diego has such a wealth of money at its disposal, and so many willing donors, that the zoo is consistently under some kind of construction.

Here is the current map:

Map | San Diego Zoo
 
Oh, I think I see them now, by using Google Maps satellite view. Are they down a side road just to the left of the Arctic complex? If I did see that road I doubt I would have realised it led to exhibits, or was even publicly accessible. Sigh.

Yes that is correct. I saw the aviaries while in the Arctic exhibit area and went out to look for them on the off chance. My initial reaction was that perhaps they were off limits, and while there was indeed a stack temporary fencing etc nearby the actual barrier was a few metres further down. The aviaries were right on the road boundary and I can quite understand why you would miss them.

You missed maybe three or four new species, but then how many species of fruit dove does one need to view in a lifetime? :o

I think the aviaries were older exhibits that were just ourside the area that was demolished for the Arctic exhibit and are basically "on display" off limits holding aviaries.
 
Yes that is correct. I saw the aviaries while in the Arctic exhibit area and went out to look for them on the off chance. My initial reaction was that perhaps they were off limits, and while there was indeed a stack temporary fencing etc nearby the actual barrier was a few metres further down. The aviaries were right on the road boundary and I can quite understand why you would miss them.

You missed maybe three or four new species, but then how many species of fruit dove does one need to view in a lifetime? :o

I think the aviaries were older exhibits that were just ourside the area that was demolished for the Arctic exhibit and are basically "on display" off limits holding aviaries.

Yeah, four new species (at least based on geomorph's 2013 list), the Polynesian Scrubfowl would have been especially great to see, as would another couple of fruit doves, although I did see three new Ptilinopis species at San Diego Zoo. :cool:

Hopefully these aviaries will still be there, and accessible next time I visit.
 
Day Nineteen

After the epic-ness that was San Diego Zoo, I was very excited to visit the sister facility, the San Diego Zoo Safari Park. This was opened in 1972 and is located around 40 minutes drive north of the Zoo itself. Unfortunately, there is no useful public transport to the zoo, which is an extremely frustrating situation, and one that the Park should put some effort in to rectifying. As such, we rented a car for 24 hours the previous evening, meaning we were able to leave early in the morning and arrive before the Park opened at 9am. The drive was uneventful, although I was again frustrated when we discovered there was a $12 parking charge on entry. Given the lack of viable alternatives to driving, charging for parking is a bit rich. Anyway, we arrived and breezed through entry bang on opening.

The Safari Park is split into thirteen zones, the first being Safari Base Camp, which features the entrance, a range of shops and food outlets (morning coffee overlooking an exhibit under construction for incoming coatis), a Meerkat exhibit, and the Wings of the World walkthrough aviary. This aviary was tall and lush, and included a diverse range of species, many of whom were very confident and happy to share the path with us. Outside the aviary was a pool for Chilean Flamingos, the first of a series of waterfowl exhibits set around the “Congo River Fishing Village” that covered half of the next zone, Nairobi Village. This was dominated by an impressive and elaborate wooden viewing platform over a waterfall, with lagoons either side featuring a range of mostly African birds, including Shoebills on one of several islands. Adjacent to the main lagoon were a couple of aviaries and a series of paddocks for small ungulates – Cavendish’s Dik-dik, Warthog, Red River Hog, and a nursery with a range of young antelope. A nursery is a rather odd exhibit in my opinion, and one rarely seen (apart from for domestic species). Here it was just a yard, featuring young (some only a few days old) animals, pulled from their parents for completely unclear reasons. What happens to these animals? Is a hand-raised Springbok likely to be accepted back into the herd? Not something I was impressed by anyway.

The final exhibits in this zone were a decent exhibit for Rodrigues’ Fruit Bat and a few more aviaries, and a walkthrough “Lorikeet Landing”, featuring the bird-equivalent of the meerkat, the ubiquitous Rainbow Lorikeet. The third zone is a mixed bag, called Gorilla Forest, which includes several large exhibits. The first of these was a rather unattractive walkthrough for Ring-tailed Lemurs, which seemed somewhat rundown and very average. Nearby was Hidden Jungle, another walkthrough aviary, although this was sadly closed, except for a series of rather too small reptile exhibits in a mock rock wall entry room. We passed a Red Kangaroo being walked around the Park, before reaching an attractive, yet fairly standard, Gorilla enclosure, which was similar to that at the Zoo, but rather more open. Finally, a small aviary of African birds rounded out this first area of the Park. So far, the birds are definitely the stand-out of the Park.

The first part of the Safari Park existed on a relatively flat hill different level to the next area of the zoo, which was on an open plain below that we were able to view by venturing out onto a large wooden platform. And the views were awesome; this is genuinely the best view I have ever had in a zoo. Spectacular! From this platform, we travelled down an elevator to Lion Camp, which featured a large and very impressive enclosure for a family of African Lions, which were able to watch over the nearby African Plains exhibit.

A path then led down, worryingly past some banks with signs saying watch for rattlesnakes, to the African Tram boarding station, which gives views over a lush exhibit for Nyala. This is obviously the main part of the zoo, a bus tour around a number of exhibits for a range of hoofstock (roughly twenty species) and birds, although not through any of the enclosures. Despite this, it was still extremely impressive, with a very knowledgeable driver who slowed and stopped at certain points for photos of especially interesting species. Unfortunately, there is no signage, so I had to rely on the driver for identification of most species, which I tried to jot down on the map, while taking photos of them, and taking in the experience. The start of the journey took us past lagoons with flamingos, pelicans, and various other waterfowl, many of them wild. Separate exhibits for Black Rhino (and a cheeky Mule Deer), Blue Crane and Rueppel’s Vulture, Sommering’s Gazelle, and finally Somali Wild Ass were located to the right of the tram. On the left were the large mixed exhibits that we circled, which featured a dizzying array of hoofstock, many of which were exciting new species. Obviously the most exciting species was the Northern White Rhino, which we were lucky enough to see the last two of in America. Surprisingly, these were not only very visible, but the driver gushed about them just as much as any ZooChatter would, and stopped near both animals. The other hoofstock, that weren’t rhinos, were principally grazing in small herds of conspecifics, and it was stunning to see such a variety: gazelles, oryx, impala, waterbuck, eland, buffalo, wildebeest, kudu, kob and giraffe. We eventually circled back to the station, viewing the Lions as we passed.

From the tram, we continued to the next zone, African Outpost, where we stopped briefly to buy another free-refill sipper cup (this one featuring tigers). This is largely a wooden boardwalk around a large lagoon, a lushly planted wetland with a few islands and other exhibits, some parts of which were seen from the Tram. The species were predominantly waterfowl, of which Flamingos were the most visible, but there were many native species around too, including Red-winged Blackbirds and Great-tailed Grackles, both very interesting and attractive birds. The mammal enclosure was a large, grassy yard for Cheetah, followed by a Colobus island and a surprisingly good Warthog and Bat-eared Fox exhibit, although the latter wasn’t visible. The path then moved up the hill back towards the main level, with elevated views over another grassy enclosure, this one with Sitatunga, Southern Steenbok and more birds.

The vegetation thickened as we entered African Woods, where the first two open yards held more birds: Ground Hornbills, White Storks, Kori Bustards and Secretary Birds. Up ahead, the wooden boardwalk passed by shady enclosures for Okapi, Gerenuk, Yellow-backed & Red-flanked Duikers, and Cranes. The next exhibit was on a narrow rise adjacent to the path, and featured Egyptian & Hooded Vultures and South African Shelduck. This was large, but it would have been much nicer to see a big aviary for these birds instead, and the same for the vultures in the Tram exhibit. Up ahead were the final two exhibits, large yards for antelope, the first holding Giant Eland and Red-fronted Gazelle, and the second Bontebok. Both were excellent for the inhabitants, but viewing wasn’t great unfortunately. Overall though, African Outpost and Woods were definitely the best two zones in the Park, wonderful to explore. Couple of aviaries wouldn’t have gone amiss is all.

We then had lunch, overlooking the Giant Eland enclosure, before heading to The Grove, which provided further views over the main African Plains exhibits. Nearby was Elephant Valley, a large complex housing (unsurprisingly) South African Elephants. These were a group rescued by SDZ from culling in Swaziland, so a rather interesting history, and one that AR groups can find little fault with. The large herd featured a number of calves, and looked to be a happy social unit, and had a spacious and varied enclosure. There were also volunteers stationed here who were very friendly, and also a small display area for presentations. This was easily the best African Elephant exhibit I have seen, and would be interested to know if anyone who has seen this one has seen a better one?

We then returned to the Nairobi Village zone, where we explored one of the more hands-on exhibits, which featured a row of glass fronted exhibits. Most were far too small for their inhabitants, although it appears the outreach animals within are only present for short amounts of time, and are also regularly bought out for presentations. Most were “pet” species: African Grey Parrot, Sugar Glider, Lesser Hedgehog Tenrec and various reptiles and amphibians, although the final two exhibits were larger and I think permanent, and housed Savannah Monitor and Fennec Fox. Overall, these were probably the worst exhibits in the Zoo (and some were fine, and none was any worse than found in any other zoo).

We then headed to the other end of the zoo, which contains three zones, one of which we didn’t have time to explore – World Gardens, which I’m sure would have been brilliant, but it was getting to be a very hot afternoon and we were running out of time. So instead we headed into the newest zone – Tiger Trail. This is a heavily themed area, housing three enclosures for Sumatran Tigers. Interestingly, some ZooChatters have raved about this exhibit, I think even calling it the best tiger exhibit ever, but I wasn’t that impressed. The enclosures themselves are fine, not huge, but probably big enough, lush and well furnished. But they are mostly viewed through hugely obtrusive mesh, and the visitor’s areas are awkward – narrow, uneven and cramped. While viewing across a dry moat or similar would have been more in keeping with the “open” feel of the Park, this really wasn’t an option here, so I get why they built these exhibits. Also here is a lookout over the Park’s essentially off-display Asian Savanna, although the distance is so great that while a few animals could be seen, they couldn’t be identified beyond deer or goat, except the cattle, which I’m fairly sure were Banteng. Hopefully the plan is to connect this area, which would be a great expansion for the Park.

The final zone, Condor Ridge, houses local native species, which obviously fits in beautifully with the natural landscapes. This is very well done, and starts with a series of aviaries, which are a good size and very well furnished. Species featured include Bald Eagles, Harris Hawks and Burrowing Owls, as well as Thick-billed Parrots and Ocelot. the path then moves out along the hillside, past impressive cacti gardens, to the showpiece enclosure – a massive California Condor aviary, which gives views out over the Park and is very impressive. Adjacent is a large rocky yard for Desert Bighorn, which nicely rounded out this small, but basically faultless, zone.

So that was San Diego Zoo Safari Park, an impressive collection of large mammals, with a great range of birds (especially waterfowl), that nicely complements the Zoo itself. Overall, African Woods and Outpost were the standout zones, but there were very few low points, and these were largely confined to the mish-mash that was Nairobi Village. I preferred the Park to the Zoo, and every other American zoo I visited, and almost every other zoo I’ve ever been to. The collection and display are inspiring, and I can’t wait to see how it continues to develop in the future. Definitely a priority for a return visit.

New Species:
Black Milk Snake, Molluccan Radjah Shelduck, Orinoco Goose, White-headed Lapwing, San Clemente Loggerhead Shrike, Lesser Hedgehog Tenrec, Southern Warthog, Transcaspian Urial, Cavendish’s Dik-dik, Western Red-flanked Duiker, East African Sitatunga, Patterson’s Eland, Eastern White-bearded Wildebeest, Southern Steenbok, Eastern Giant Eland, Sudan Red-fronted Gazelle, Northern White Rhino.
 
Very comprehensive review of a park I would love to visit, when did you visit?, I thought one of the northern white rhino had died only leaving one animal at the park?
 
Very comprehensive review of a park I would love to visit, when did you visit?, I thought one of the northern white rhino had died only leaving one animal at the park?

Thanks Kiang! Unfortunately this review has been a while coming, but I hope to finish off this trip report in the next couple of weeks. I visited North America in May/June last year, and the Safari Park specifically on 5 June 2014 (so before the male NWR died).
 
Great review, as always! It seems as if the Safari Park is a contender for your all-time favourite zoo and I thoroughly agree that the African Outpost and African Woods zones are both outstanding. I've got a few odds n' ends for you:

- you asked about the quality of the African elephant exhibit and in the U.S. there are several even better enclosures for that species. In my opinion North Carolina's 7 acres takes some beating; Nashville Zoo has several acres of superbly landscaped ground; Dallas Zoo's Giants of the Savanna is amazing; Birmingham Zoo just opened Trails of Africa in the past couple of years; and Disney's Animal Kingdom (where you see the elephants for less than 2 minutes) has an incredible habitat for the animals. That makes a top 5 off the top of my head.

- does the San Diego Zoo Safari Park still have something like 300+ flamingos in a huge lagoon near the colobus monkeys? I remember a massive flock from my last visit in 2011.

- very intriguing comments about the trio of brand-new tiger exhibits, as many ZooChatters have indeed been raving about them. It is nice to read a new perspective.

- was the driving tour around 30 minutes in length? It used to be a full hour many years ago but less than a decade ago the narrated tour was essentially cut in half.

- it is kind of cool that it is possible to see a mule deer in with black rhinos. :)
 
Great review, as always! It seems as if the Safari Park is a contender for your all-time favourite zoo and I thoroughly agree that the African Outpost and African Woods zones are both outstanding. I've got a few odds n' ends for you:

- you asked about the quality of the African elephant exhibit and in the U.S. there are several even better enclosures for that species. In my opinion North Carolina's 7 acres takes some beating; Nashville Zoo has several acres of superbly landscaped ground; Dallas Zoo's Giants of the Savanna is amazing; Birmingham Zoo just opened Trails of Africa in the past couple of years; and Disney's Animal Kingdom (where you see the elephants for less than 2 minutes) has an incredible habitat for the animals. That makes a top 5 off the top of my head.

- does the San Diego Zoo Safari Park still have something like 300+ flamingos in a huge lagoon near the colobus monkeys? I remember a massive flock from my last visit in 2011.

- very intriguing comments about the trio of brand-new tiger exhibits, as many ZooChatters have indeed been raving about them. It is nice to read a new perspective.

- was the driving tour around 30 minutes in length? It used to be a full hour many years ago but less than a decade ago the narrated tour was essentially cut in half.

- it is kind of cool that it is possible to see a mule deer in with black rhinos. :)

Thanks Snowleopard.

Its great to hear that there are at least 5 African Elephant exhibits in the US that surpass the Safari Park's, although also interesting that they are all in the south-east US, which certainly has the better climate for elephants (compared with the northern US).

There were a lot of flamingos, and I think more than one flock in the lagoon/s near the Colobus (also visible from Tram). But I didn't count them all :D

Checking the timestamps on my photos, the tram tour was indeed exactly 30 minutes long, although it didn't feel too short or rushed (not that longer wouyldn't have been better). I presume they cut some exhibits out of the tour when they reduced its length?

The Mule Deer was surprising, it was eating from the Rhino's trough (photo below), and although I didn't know what it was at first, the driver later clarified that it was a wild deer. Makes you wonder how secure the Park's enclosures are to a certain degree, although I can't imagine there is any harm in them being in with the Rhino. Its certainly a much larger intruder than the typical wild squirrels and rabbits seen in zoo enclosures though!
 

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Day Nineteen – Part Two

After returning to San Diego from the Safari Park, we dropped off the car, and headed downtown on foot. San Diego is an interesting city; with the adjacent harbour very much part of the city, which is definitely a good thing. Public transport, at least around the centre, is great too, and it was friendlier than San Fran and Seattle. We were staying in Little Italy, which was very walkable, and provided easy access to the harbour. The harbour is very impressive, with a tonne of boats, including two maritime museums. The first of these is just one boat, but it’s the USS Midway, which is an amazingly massive aircraft carrier, now decommissioned and on display, as well as a range of aircraft on board. Nearby is the Maritime Museum of San Diego, also entirely floating, and with a range of boats, from submarines to America’s Cup racing yachts. We couldn’t visit both, so decided on just the Maritime Museum, but will definitely check out the Midway next time we’re in town.

Interestingly, the Maritime Museum doesn’t have nothing to do with zoos. The centrepiece, the Star of India, is the world’s oldest still-sailing ship, and used to transport immigrants to New Zealand in the 1860s, before eventually finding its way into the hands of the Zoological Society of San Diego in 1926. They had planned to use it as an exhibit at a museum and aquarium they were going to build, although the Great Depression scuppered that idea. The ship was eventually restored and became part of the Maritime Museum, and a very impressive ship she is too. The Star, and most other boats at the Museum, including the two submarines, can be entered and explored, which was pretty cool. Overall, I’d highly recommend this as something to visit in San Diego. It also allows sea bird viewing!

This was our last full day in San Diego, so we continued exploring the waterfront, until we rendezvoused back with our hosts, and had a brilliant dinner out in Little Italy. I was surprised by San Diego; I hadn’t really expected that much from the city, but it was much nicer than I’d expected, and became my favourite American city I visited, and the only one I felt I could really live in (although maybe Portland too). I wish we could have spent a bit longer there, done a few of the museums in Balboa Park and been back to the zoos, but that will have to wait!
 
Day Twenty

Our last day in San Diego, and we spent it rounding out the city’s zoological trifecta – SeaWorld San Diego. This is the original SeaWorld, opened in 1964, thus our visit coincided with the park’s 50th birthday celebrations (and lots of great history signs around the park). SeaWorld is easily reached via public transport (light rail and then bus) and we arrived before the opening at 10am. As we had our combo tickets, which also covered the Zoo and Safari Park, we got straight in, although first had our fingerprints taken to ensure our tickets were legit. Although we were “in”, we were technically in a holding area, with just a few exhibits, as it was not yet quite 10am. This brand new entrance plaza, Explorer’s Reef, featured a large touch pool exhibit, which was quite impressive, although heavily themed (and thankfully heavily staffed). As we wanted to do all the exhibits and a few rides, we headed right, where we waited for opening near a small, extremely artificial lagoon for Caribbean Flamingos.

SeaWorld has many old traditions that are considered outdated and inappropriate by many people. Performing dolphins and orcas chief among them. However, the first such tradition that I experienced was not really animal-related, although I’m sure I could find someone who thought it would constitute noise pollution, if not outright animal cruelty. Anyway, before the park proper opened at 10am, the American national anthem was blared at us, and most people (well, the Americans) stood hand on heart for a couple of minutes (gosh it was serious!), while I gaped, giggled, and tried to focus on the Flamingos. And good thing too, as I spotted a wild rabbit, I think a Desert Cottontail, in there with them.

As well as the animal exhibits, there are many rides at SeaWorld, most of which are very “family-friendly”, but some are still worth going on, and that’s what we spent most of the morning doing. Journey to Atlantis was the first ride, standard log-flume thing, with a large tank for a variety of sea life, notably Cownose Rays. On the other side of SeaWorld was Manta, a relatively new roller coaster that also featured a large tank, this one with Bat Rays as the draw card species. This was a decent ride, but nothing too extreme, and with nice views over another Caribbean Flamingo exhibit, this one much larger. The final ride we did was Shipwreck Rapid, which was a floating raft-type ride, in which riders get quite wet. Good fun! Part of the ride set-up was a small pool for Green, Hawksbill & Loggerhead Sea Turtles.

Spread around SeaWorld are a few aquariums, one of which, Aquaria, I somehow missed. The Freshwater Aquarium was quite good, nice range of fishes, frogs and turtles, although it was small and very busy. The final aquarium included Turtle Reef and Shark Encounter, both of which featured large tanks with a great range of species, although the heavy theming wasn’t particularly appealing. Heavy theming was abundant throughout the Park, and in a few places it worked well, by highlighting the animals and their environment, but in most it was like SeaLife on steroids.

Birds form a surprisingly large part of SeaWorld’s collection. Apart from the two flamingo lagoons, there are also a number of small aviaries dotted around the park, quite old looking cages really, and often too small, but definitely well-vegetated. I think I missed a few of these, but generally they held fairly common tropical species, although one new species was Black Vulture, held in tiny cages quite far from the public paths. As well as these aviaries. there was also the Penguin House, which was my favourite exhibit at SeaWorld, and I suspect holds the most diverse penguin collection on the planet – six species, of which three were new. Five species (Emperor, King, Gentoo, Adelie, Macaroni) were held in an indoor, chilled exhibit, which was very long and impressive. Adjacent to this was an Alcid exhibit, much smaller but still a good size, featuring Common Murre, Tufted and Atlantic Puffins. Outside was a spacious enclosure for the Magellanic Penguin colony, which was a very good exhibit. For some reason I hadn’t realised Magellanic Penguins were a different species to Humboldt’s, so this was actually the first time I really saw them!

Obviously marine mammals are the stars of SeaWorld. Next to the Penguin House is another indoor exhibit, Wild Arctic, which featured a motion simulator ride at entry. The building housed three enclosures, only one of which was really big enough for its inhabitants, Pacific Walrus. The other two held Beluga and Polar Bears (although the latter were away on breeding loan). These two exhibits were way too small, and need urgent replacement. I’d like to see the bears leave and the Beluga space greatly increased. Nearby is another mammal house, Animal Connections, which holds a variety of small mammals, including Two-toed Sloth, Six-banded Armadillo, African Porcupine and American Beaver, all of which are in fairly small, glass-fronted enclosures. Surprisingly, they were all super active and showy, which are certainly not traits these species are known for.

There were then three outdoor marine mammal exhibit complexes, the first being Pacific Point. Half of this was under renovation, while the other half had a large group of California Sea Lions and a number of wild Egrets. This was a decent exhibit, but could have been somewhat larger. The second was Dolphin Point, a similarly themed complex, with lots of mock rock and several lagoons for a pod of Bottlenose Dolphins, including some young animals. There were some low underwater viewing windows, perhaps a metre high, which gave the impression that the whole complex was very shallow, but I don’t know how accurate that was. Adjacent was Otter Outlook, a small exhibit for Sea Otters that was quite similar to that at Vancouver Aquarium. We also saw Bottlenose Dolphins perform in the Blue Horizons show in the Dolphin Stadium, which was a ridiculous show, but the animals were impressive. As well as the dolphins there were also three Short-finned Pilot Whales, which were the most exciting mammal seen that day. It would have been great to see them up close though.

The final exhibit was for SeaWorld’s superstars, the Orcas. I had never seen captive Orcas before, but had seen them in the wild. But they were amazing to see underwater, so big and fast and intelligent looking. The display tank was very functional compared with the other marine mammal exhibits, no mock rock, and it was big, but I’d love to see how it looks once redeveloped to be much larger. The show itself, One Ocean, takes place in Shamu Stadium, and is superficial “conservation” drivel, but the Orcas are just awe-inspiring. Massive and powerful. Definitely worth seeing. Even if we did have to endure the anthem again, and clap for the veterans. I don’t have a problem with cetaceans in captivity (with many caveats), and SeaWorld didn’t change my stance. I think shows are important and really do benefit the animals as well as the public. That said, a slightly more intelligent show would have been better.

So that was SeaWorld. And here’s my wrap up. It’s a big park, with a lot of under used space, but a great collection of aquatic life. The exhibits are generally too small and often tacky, with little effort put into naturalistic theming (Magellanic Penguins being the best exception). The number of people there was extreme, and I was not a fan of how busy it got. I also realised that I dislike exhibits that you can walk all the way around the outside of. Overall, I liked SeaWorld, but it needs a lot of work in order to satisfy animal welfare concerns. Given the cash they have, this shouldn’t be a problem, and I look forward to visiting in the future to see what improvements have been made.

New Species:
Texas Map Turtle, Black Vulture, Emperor Penguin, Adelie Penguin, Magellanic Penguin, Pacific Short-finned Pilot Whale.
 

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