Day Two
To get to anywhere from our hotel, we had to take a bus or taxi to the nearest MRT station and then take a train. Singapore has ridiculously effective public transport, so it was all very easy and efficient, and relatively cheap. We took a train first to HarbourFront station, and then bought return tickets for the cable car, which took us first up Mount Faber, with views across the city and some secondary rainforest, before taking us across the water to Sentosa Island. This island is basically a massive tourist trap, with a large range of attractions. After an urgent coffee fix, we explored the Imbiah Lookout area, which includes a boardwalk through the rainforest, where we saw Plantain Squirrels and Pink-necked Green Pigeon, as well as a large number of Peafowl for some reason...
Nearby was the
Sentosa Butterfly Park and Insect Kingdom, which I had had to skip on my previous visit. This attraction is rather run down, and consists of two large adjacent aviaries holding butterflies and birds, a series of reptile and invertebrate enclosures, and finally an extensive museum type display of insects. The walkthrough aviaries were well-planted, but much of the infrastructure was in need of repair, or at least repainting. In addition to the many butterflies, the first aviary also contained a Crowned Pigeon, while the second contained a number of wing-clipped Scarlet and Blue & Yellow Macaws and a Toco Toucan, plus Green Iguanas and a side exhibit for a Water Monitor. I know little about invertebrates, so my description of the next section is limited. It was more or less a corridor, with a number of small tanks that held a small number of larger bugs, including beetles, tarantulas, scorpions, and millipedes. There was a tank at the end holding a small lizard that I haven’t been able to identify (
http://www.zoochat.com/656/id-please-unknown-lizard-dec-2015-a-435576/), followed by the extensive insect museum. The collection here was impressive, but I doubt many visitors spend any real time in here. The live exhibits need a major upgrade if the park is to remain attractive and viable, hopefully this occurs sooner rather than later.
We then took the cable car to the western end of Sentosa Island, where we walked along a new elevated walkway to Siloso Fort. More Peafowl here, as well as a number of fortifications from World War II. Quite an interesting place, although a little creepy feeling. Back near the cable car station is
Underwater World, Sentosa’s original aquarium. This also looked rather rundown and rather quiet, the competition from the newer SEA Aquarium clearly having quite an impact. While we didn’t go in to Underwater World, we did have a look at the outdoor exhibit that you can view without paying (not officially), which holds Sea Turtles. We then headed back to the centre of the Island, and walked through the Orchid Garden down to Palawan Beach, where we had lunch. Nearby is the Palawan Amphitheatre where animal shows are performed, but we only saw the bird cage with common parrot species, and a random pheasant.
We then took the Monorail back to the centre of the island, and walked down through Resorts World Sentosa to the newest animal attraction –
S.E.A. Aquarium. This is a dazzling new aquarium, which primarily focuses on marine species from South East Asia, with a few exceptions (for a comprehensive review see here:
http://www.zoochat.com/266/first-visit-s-e-aquarium-25-a-362709/). The entry price has come down a bit since the aquarium opened in late 2012 (from $38 to $32), but we bought a combined Insect Kingdom + S.E.A. Aquarium ticket for just $36, which was good value. Upon entry, you walk through a series of rather dull and very fake displays relating to maritime culture in the region, before descending to the lower ground floor and the aquarium itself. Bizarrely, this entrance area is dominated by a gigantic representation of Noah’s Ark, for totally unfathomable reasons.
In contrast to Sentosa’s other animal collections, the aquarium itself is slick, modern and generally fantastic. The biogeographic layout of the exhibits is one of my favourite aspects, and is done here better than any other aquarium I have visited. There is also limited theming of the visitor areas, and the tanks and glass are clean and nicely decorated. Although it was Christmas, so there were some annoying decorations in some tanks, and were photographed with Scuba Santa upon entry. Mostly the tanks are medium-sized, with a range of species, with a few smaller ones for individual species, and some large ones too. The massive Open Ocean tank is clearly the signature and standout exhibit, with the Reef Manta Ray being the main highlight for me. Other very commendable exhibits include the diverse Mangrove tank and the Scalloped Hammerhead was an impressive inhabitant of the very full Shark Seas. On the rather disappointing side was the dolphin exhibit, where we got just distant glimpses of a dolphin-like shape. I think a much larger viewing window and area looking into a deeper tank would be a great improvement. Overall though a stunning aquarium, behind only (on the best-aquariums-I-have-visited list) Valencia Oceanarium and Monterey Bay Aquarium, both of which had a greater diversity of exhibit types.
Photos below show cable cars traveling over Sentosa, Butterfly at the Sentosa Butterfly Park and Insect Kingdom, some of the many sharks at Shark Seas in S.E.A. Aquarium, and a Nautilus celebrating Christmas.