A Quest of Elephantine Proportions: WhistlingKite24 does Melbourne

Which is why I fear the only ones outside Australia - which I got to see again (but not photograph) at the San Diego Safari Park last week - won't get replaced once they pass :(

I didn't know much about Ballarat until your review, besides that it was inexplicably home to many exotic reptiles rare in the country. It looks like a very nice zoo! How easy is it to do as a trip from Melbourne?
Ballarat is only 1hour and a half from Melbourne CBD. Easily a day trip, or a good weekender!
 
Which is why I fear the only ones outside Australia - which I got to see again (but not photograph) at the San Diego Safari Park last week - won't get replaced once they pass :(

I didn't know much about Ballarat until your review, besides that it was inexplicably home to many exotic reptiles rare in the country. It looks like a very nice zoo! How easy is it to do as a trip from Melbourne?

Ballarat is only 1hour and a half from Melbourne CBD. Easily a day trip, or a good weekender!
It's a similar distance to Healesville Sanctuary from the city, and is very do-able in a single day, especially when you consider the size of the park. It's a relatively easy drive from the city too.
 
Melbourne Part [Part 5 – GORILLA RAINFOREST AND FOREST OF WONDER] - 12th April 2025:

From the traditional zoo’s entrance there is an airlock that leads into a walkthrough enclosure for their bachelor group of Ring-tailed Lemurs. Lemur walkthrough exhibits haven’t really taken off regionally with only a handful of lemur walkthroughs in place so there is still a novel aspect in being in the same space as the lemurs. In fact, for Australia, I can only think of Australia Zoo on their large island and Monarto (though at the latter facility it is a separate paid experience) as the only places with visitor walkthroughs for lemurs. For New Zealand none currently either as far as I aware besides Willowbank now building a walkthrough for lemurs. The one problem was that I didn’t see any and while there were two keepers rostered on monitoring the exhibit, there wasn’t a single lemur in sight. It is a really nice space when in use with a wide range of complex landscaping with an arid theme, leading along a pathway that raises to a viewing platform. Hopefully the integration of the new Monarto males enlivens this display; they certainly have the space for a troop of dozen or more lemurs. Exiting the walkthrough is a side open-topped enclosure for a female pair of Black-and-white Ruffed Lemurs. Viewing is done from well above, and as I have mentioned before, I really dislike looking down at animals especially from high above. Their exhibit does have a decent feature tree with interconnecting ropes and hammocks.

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Ring-tailed Lemur walkthrough enclosure

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Ruffed Lemur enclosure

It goes without saying that Melbourne Zoo’s enclosure for Western Lowland Gorillas is a complex and beautiful ode to these creatures, blurring the line between clear enclosure barriers and the greater environment. There are viewing areas dotted throughout the trail providing varying angles. To see gorillas traverse in and out of shaded foliage is magnificent, allowing visitors the rare opportunity to actually have to search for captive great apes. The enclosure is currently not meeting its full potential however with only two gorillas remaining at the zoo – a father-daughter pair following the recent shock death of their adult female. A trio of gorillas with a single adult female was a less-than-ideal social situation but to be left with a related pair should hopefully kick things into gear for some much-needed transfers. The two gorillas were on opposite sides of the enclosure. There were keepers and a zoo volunteer actively observing both gorillas throughout the day with male Otana remaining near the off-display area, coming in and out of view. With the loss of the elephants at Melbourne it would be advantageous to start rebuilding gorillas to create a larger troop in such a lovely display. There was a little bamboo trail that led to a small building with viewing out to the gorilla enclosure and three reptile enclosures with Black-headed Python, Boyd’s Forest-Dragon and a mix of Southern Pilbara Rock Monitor and Eastern Spiny-tailed Skink. With the arid species especially, there was no real logical link to gorillas however African reptiles are very poorly represented in Australia, so perhaps a global angle to rainforests could have been applied here, expanding upon the forest-dragon.

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Gorilla enclosure – entrance view

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Gorilla ranger building

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Southern Pilbara Rock-Monitor

Then there was a complex of two enclosures nearby with underwater viewing area that meets in the middle for Asian Small-clawed Otters and a single Pygmy Hippopotamus is a pleasant but cramped display. Adelaide’s exhibit still feels larger but at least it wasn’t as small as the space for Taronga’s hippos. There was also an empty enclosure sitting vacant that was home to mandrills once upon time, then cassowary and now it remains vacant. Disappointing. There is then a wooden ramp that leads up to a complex for the majority of the primate collection which are all housed in a similar fashion with meshed enclosures that reached to the forest floor with wooden-fronted viewing areas with large windows into the enclosures. The first enclosure which had a pair of Cottontop Tamarins would have the best exhibit in relation to the species. This was once the home of Melbourne’s old wild-caught gibbon Tieu who I don’t think I will ever forget hearing his duet in the early morning. Across from them were Black-handed Spider-Monkeys across two exhibits. It felt tight even with two exhibits open for them accessed through a shute. There were also Black-and-white Colobus Monkeys with two new monkeys having been transferred from Adelaide to join their lone female. It was tight as well for such large-bodied monkeys. They also have two enclosures though. Then there was a pair of Emperor Tamarins in a perfectly acceptable enclosure and finally a pair of Northern White-cheeked Gibbons. There is a final enclosure that has been empty for half a decade. It used to have a delightful pair of Crimson-bellied Conures. Treetop Monkeys and Apes is looking tired. The viewing experience here is poor with lots of thick black screening now up against the glass for the colobus and gibbons especially; an important welfare decision no doubt for especially the territorial colobus and gibbons who dislike direct eye contact but one has to wonder the sustainability of such a decision. Large-bodied primates aren’t the best candidates for these enclosures; it’s cramped and viewing windows are obtrusive for the primates. Down the ramp were additional angles provided for their superb gorilla enclosure as I exited into the vaguely-named “Forest of Wonder” formerly Trail of the Elephants.

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Pygmy hippo/otter viewing

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Treetop Apes and Monkeys

The next trail starts with an enclosure for their Asian Small-clawed Otters. It’s an ageing enclosure but it a nice little replica of a rocky stream in a shady portion of the zoo. It hard to compare any otter enclosure after seeing Auckland Zoo’s magnificent streamside otter enclosure late last year. There is a small glass-fronted aviary for a Sacred Kingfisher and a trio of Pied Stilts. The stocking is underwhelming but at least a kingfisher is a nice pop of colour but an active pair of Plum-headed Parakeets or some of those White-rumped Shamas Taronga are churning out now would do wonders for this aviary.

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Entrance to Forest of Wonders

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Otter enclosure

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Stilt aviary

Melbourne’s older enclosure for their male Sumatran Tiger is opposite this first aviary and begins with a glass-fronted section and eventually opens up to a pleasant view with a water body and a lush backdrop with mature foliage. I am not very familiar with this particular tiger Hutan but it was interesting to watch him use his exhibit for a while, using the foliage to his advantage for shelter and privacy. He was pacing frequently and vocalizing regularly. There is a vacant island opposite the tiger; hope there is something planned for this space. There was a nearby glass-fronted aviary with two ground birds being a Noisy Pitta and Luzon Bleeding-heart Doves. It’s missing a lory or something similar to fill the top half.

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Male Sumatran Tiger

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Pitta/dove aviary

The next component of the trail was largely for elephants and has remained structurally as it was but with invertebrate statues everywhere, replacing the elephant theming. It does look rather temporary but there is now a more permanent garden that aims to attract wild invertebrates. One undeniable highlight to celebrate inverts is the butterfly house which is a large greenhouse situated along the trail. It was very congested during my two visits through the area as it was so popular with the public. Along with a trio of Rose-crowned Fruit-Doves that leave the butterflies alone as frugivores, there is a wide range of Australian butterflies housed here along with two Hercules Moths which are currently pupating. The bulk of colour came from Australian Lurchers and Cruisers; two showy north Queensland species that are very eye-striking and regularly sit with wings open in a sunny spot. There was a decent population of Red Lacewings as well with some pairs mating. I didn’t seen any Cairns Birdwings.
Large Grass-Yellow, Lemon Migrant, Caper White, Orchard Swallowtail, Monarch, Blue Tiger, Red Lacewing, Orange Lacewing, Blue-banded Eggfly, Common Eggfly, Chocolate Argus, Cruiser, Lurcher
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Rose-crowned Fruit-Dove

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Australian Lurchers

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Blue-banded Eggfly

Exiting the butterfly house was the empty pool enclosure for the former elephants with some pathways blocked-off, creating a dead end. I had to back track to find the next two set of exhibits; one was a dark aviary-style enclosure for Bolivian Squirrel Monkeys and opposite them was a building that has recently been converted into a bug house of some sorts. It started with walled tanks for Australian Leaf Insects and Rainforest Tree Katydid mixed together, followed by Giant Burrowing Cockroaches and two tanks with new labels for one of Australia’s largest huntsman – the Golden Huntsman - and a tank with Egyptian Beetles. Then there was a vertical tank with Bundaberg Banded Snails mixed with rainforest millipedes. In the same tank there was a very large orbweaver mixed with them but I didn’t realise it was there until I looked back through. It looked like a Giant Golden Orbweaver. Opposite them was a tank with a water body but it contained Rock Orbweaver and next to them, a mix of unseen Fiddler Beetles and my favourite invert at the zoo being Red-spotted Rose Chafers. Big showy bugs; they tick a lot of boxes. I really liked the variety of species housed here beyond the usual stick insect tank most zoos have. Finally, the pathway opened up to a netted outdoor enclosure with plenty of climbing opportunities for a pair of Siamang which led to a indoor space with a glass-fronted day room where there was a hybrid Orangutan engaging in a training session while their male Sumatran Orangutan was outdoors. He was using all the vertical climbing opportunities well. Overall, I still really like this orangutan/siamang area; it is one of the zoo’s current strengths.

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Red-spotted Rose-Chafer

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Invert building

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Orangutan outdoor enclosure

Part 6 will discuss Australian Bush and the remainder of the main trail.
 
Melbourne Part [Part 5 – GORILLA RAINFOREST AND FOREST OF WONDER] - 12th April 2025:

From the traditional zoo’s entrance there is an airlock that leads into a walkthrough enclosure for their bachelor group of Ring-tailed Lemurs. Lemur walkthrough exhibits haven’t really taken off regionally with only a handful of lemur walkthroughs in place so there is still a novel aspect in being in the same space as the lemurs. In fact, for Australia, I can only think of Australia Zoo on their large island and Monarto (though at the latter facility it is a separate paid experience) as the only places with visitor walkthroughs for lemurs. For New Zealand none currently either as far as I aware besides Willowbank now building a walkthrough for lemurs. The one problem was that I didn’t see any and while there were two keepers rostered on monitoring the exhibit, there wasn’t a single lemur in sight. It is a really nice space when in use with a wide range of complex landscaping with an arid theme, leading along a pathway that raises to a viewing platform. Hopefully the integration of the new Monarto males enlivens this display; they certainly have the space for a troop of dozen or more lemurs. Exiting the walkthrough is a side open-topped enclosure for a female pair of Black-and-white Ruffed Lemurs. Viewing is done from well above, and as I have mentioned before, I really dislike looking down at animals especially from high above. Their exhibit does have a decent feature tree with interconnecting ropes and hammocks.

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Ring-tailed Lemur walkthrough enclosure

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Ruffed Lemur enclosure

It goes without saying that Melbourne Zoo’s enclosure for Western Lowland Gorillas is a complex and beautiful ode to these creatures, blurring the line between clear enclosure barriers and the greater environment. There are viewing areas dotted throughout the trail providing varying angles. To see gorillas traverse in and out of shaded foliage is magnificent, allowing visitors the rare opportunity to actually have to search for captive great apes. The enclosure is currently not meeting its full potential however with only two gorillas remaining at the zoo – a father-daughter pair following the recent shock death of their adult female. A trio of gorillas with a single adult female was a less-than-ideal social situation but to be left with a related pair should hopefully kick things into gear for some much-needed transfers. The two gorillas were on opposite sides of the enclosure. There were keepers and a zoo volunteer actively observing both gorillas throughout the day with male Otana remaining near the off-display area, coming in and out of view. With the loss of the elephants at Melbourne it would be advantageous to start rebuilding gorillas to create a larger troop in such a lovely display. There was a little bamboo trail that led to a small building with viewing out to the gorilla enclosure and three reptile enclosures with Black-headed Python, Boyd’s Forest-Dragon and a mix of Southern Pilbara Rock Monitor and Eastern Spiny-tailed Skink. With the arid species especially, there was no real logical link to gorillas however African reptiles are very poorly represented in Australia, so perhaps a global angle to rainforests could have been applied here, expanding upon the forest-dragon.

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Gorilla enclosure – entrance view

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Gorilla ranger building

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Southern Pilbara Rock-Monitor

Then there was a complex of two enclosures nearby with underwater viewing area that meets in the middle for Asian Small-clawed Otters and a single Pygmy Hippopotamus is a pleasant but cramped display. Adelaide’s exhibit still feels larger but at least it wasn’t as small as the space for Taronga’s hippos. There was also an empty enclosure sitting vacant that was home to mandrills once upon time, then cassowary and now it remains vacant. Disappointing. There is then a wooden ramp that leads up to a complex for the majority of the primate collection which are all housed in a similar fashion with meshed enclosures that reached to the forest floor with wooden-fronted viewing areas with large windows into the enclosures. The first enclosure which had a pair of Cottontop Tamarins would have the best exhibit in relation to the species. This was once the home of Melbourne’s old wild-caught gibbon Tieu who I don’t think I will ever forget hearing his duet in the early morning. Across from them were Black-handed Spider-Monkeys across two exhibits. It felt tight even with two exhibits open for them accessed through a shute. There were also Black-and-white Colobus Monkeys with two new monkeys having been transferred from Adelaide to join their lone female. It was tight as well for such large-bodied monkeys. They also have two enclosures though. Then there was a pair of Emperor Tamarins in a perfectly acceptable enclosure and finally a pair of Northern White-cheeked Gibbons. There is a final enclosure that has been empty for half a decade. It used to have a delightful pair of Crimson-bellied Conures. Treetop Monkeys and Apes is looking tired. The viewing experience here is poor with lots of thick black screening now up against the glass for the colobus and gibbons especially; an important welfare decision no doubt for especially the territorial colobus and gibbons who dislike direct eye contact but one has to wonder the sustainability of such a decision. Large-bodied primates aren’t the best candidates for these enclosures; it’s cramped and viewing windows are obtrusive for the primates. Down the ramp were additional angles provided for their superb gorilla enclosure as I exited into the vaguely-named “Forest of Wonder” formerly Trail of the Elephants.

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Pygmy hippo/otter viewing

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Treetop Apes and Monkeys

The next trail starts with an enclosure for their Asian Small-clawed Otters. It’s an ageing enclosure but it a nice little replica of a rocky stream in a shady portion of the zoo. It hard to compare any otter enclosure after seeing Auckland Zoo’s magnificent streamside otter enclosure late last year. There is a small glass-fronted aviary for a Sacred Kingfisher and a trio of Pied Stilts. The stocking is underwhelming but at least a kingfisher is a nice pop of colour but an active pair of Plum-headed Parakeets or some of those White-rumped Shamas Taronga are churning out now would do wonders for this aviary.

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Entrance to Forest of Wonders

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Otter enclosure

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Stilt aviary

Melbourne’s older enclosure for their male Sumatran Tiger is opposite this first aviary and begins with a glass-fronted section and eventually opens up to a pleasant view with a water body and a lush backdrop with mature foliage. I am not very familiar with this particular tiger Hutan but it was interesting to watch him use his exhibit for a while, using the foliage to his advantage for shelter and privacy. He was pacing frequently and vocalizing regularly. There is a vacant island opposite the tiger; hope there is something planned for this space. There was a nearby glass-fronted aviary with two ground birds being a Noisy Pitta and Luzon Bleeding-heart Doves. It’s missing a lory or something similar to fill the top half.

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Male Sumatran Tiger

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Pitta/dove aviary

The next component of the trail was largely for elephants and has remained structurally as it was but with invertebrate statues everywhere, replacing the elephant theming. It does look rather temporary but there is now a more permanent garden that aims to attract wild invertebrates. One undeniable highlight to celebrate inverts is the butterfly house which is a large greenhouse situated along the trail. It was very congested during my two visits through the area as it was so popular with the public. Along with a trio of Rose-crowned Fruit-Doves that leave the butterflies alone as frugivores, there is a wide range of Australian butterflies housed here along with two Hercules Moths which are currently pupating. The bulk of colour came from Australian Lurchers and Cruisers; two showy north Queensland species that are very eye-striking and regularly sit with wings open in a sunny spot. There was a decent population of Red Lacewings as well with some pairs mating. I didn’t seen any Cairns Birdwings.
Large Grass-Yellow, Lemon Migrant, Caper White, Orchard Swallowtail, Monarch, Blue Tiger, Red Lacewing, Orange Lacewing, Blue-banded Eggfly, Common Eggfly, Chocolate Argus, Cruiser, Lurcher
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Rose-crowned Fruit-Dove

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Australian Lurchers

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Blue-banded Eggfly

Exiting the butterfly house was the empty pool enclosure for the former elephants with some pathways blocked-off, creating a dead end. I had to back track to find the next two set of exhibits; one was a dark aviary-style enclosure for Bolivian Squirrel Monkeys and opposite them was a building that has recently been converted into a bug house of some sorts. It started with walled tanks for Australian Leaf Insects and Rainforest Tree Katydid mixed together, followed by Giant Burrowing Cockroaches and two tanks with new labels for one of Australia’s largest huntsman – the Golden Huntsman - and a tank with Egyptian Beetles. Then there was a vertical tank with Bundaberg Banded Snails mixed with rainforest millipedes. In the same tank there was a very large orbweaver mixed with them but I didn’t realise it was there until I looked back through. It looked like a Giant Golden Orbweaver. Opposite them was a tank with a water body but it contained Rock Orbweaver and next to them, a mix of unseen Fiddler Beetles and my favourite invert at the zoo being Red-spotted Rose Chafers. Big showy bugs; they tick a lot of boxes. I really liked the variety of species housed here beyond the usual stick insect tank most zoos have. Finally, the pathway opened up to a netted outdoor enclosure with plenty of climbing opportunities for a pair of Siamang which led to a indoor space with a glass-fronted day room where there was a hybrid Orangutan engaging in a training session while their male Sumatran Orangutan was outdoors. He was using all the vertical climbing opportunities well. Overall, I still really like this orangutan/siamang area; it is one of the zoo’s current strengths.

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Red-spotted Rose-Chafer

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Invert building

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Orangutan outdoor enclosure

Part 6 will discuss Australian Bush and the remainder of the main trail.

Another great post in this exciting review. I agree with everything you’ve said.

The death of female Western lowland gorilla Kimya has indeed brought the social structure of this troop to a critical level, with this surely proving the catalyst to finally bring in some new females.

Treetops is arguably the most dated part of Melbourne Zoo. It’s my hope the vacant island you refer to will feature in the expansion of the ape facilities which will enable a shuffle around of Melbourne’s Siamang and Northern white-cheeked gibbon. A full redevelopment of the Treetops precinct is needed; with the Xenarthra IRA hopefully providing the opportunity to rejuvenate it with more suitable species than the gibbons, colobus and spider monkeys, which the Treetops is unsuitable for housing in the current state.
 
Melbourne Zoo [Part 6 – AUSTRALIAN BUSH AND WILD SEA] - 12th April 2025:

The bulk of Melbourne zoo’s natives are housed in a dedicated Australian trail that commenced with a pleasant boardwalk enclosure for a male Southern Koala mixed with Quokka which was situated just below the ramp around the enclosure, meaning it was missed by many. In saying this, I do appreciate any koala mixed displays I come across to add some interest and quokka are certainly a charismatic species as they often rest out in the open with head tucked between their legs. This enclosure is used for visitor encounters and members of the public were helping keepers feed the koala so he was very active and walked across his branches. Whilst not distinct subspecies, I have to say the southern type is a far nicer koala than our northern ones. The Great Flight Aviary is a stately long walkthrough aviary that has remained a feature piece of the zoo for several decades now with a beautiful arched design. It has a large mix of vegetation here with large, tall mature trees perfect for roosting waterbirds and a separate rainforest section that is now fenced off for their Southern Cassowary. The entire viewing experience is completed from a raised platform that travels through the long aviary. As I entered into the space, I soon realised their male Black-necked Stork can do short flights across the aviary and it flew towards the interior of the aviary among the ducks. It was pretty impressive to see. It was getting relatively hot so I missed a few species that were in the aviary. There were a few pigeons resting in shaded areas in the trees including Nicobar Pigeons which was the only non-native species housed here. They were rested with Torresian Imperial Pigeons as well. There were Eastern Cattle Egrets, Glossy Ibis, Royal Spoonbills and Little Pied Cormorants which make up the aviary’s bulk of birds nearby along with Bush Stone-Curlews resting on the aviary floor. The standout species is a single Black-faced Cormorant which seems to be the only one of its kind in a zoo currently. While I have seen this species in the wild it was interesting to compare how much bigger they are compared to the little pieds. Pied Herons were a nice pop of colour among the white waterbirds and Pied Stilts added sound. As the vegetation around the water thickened, this was there most of the ducks congregated with a good mix of Blue-billed Ducks, Radjah Shelducks and Freckled Ducks. The Blue-billed Ducks are such a good open water bird as they rarely leave water so add lots of aquatic movement in the barer parts of the aviary. Towards the rear of the aviary was a single Buff-banded Rail foraging near the portion of the aviary that is sectioned off for the cassowary which is again viewed from the boardwalk. Overall, a very heavy focus on waterbirds which was fine but a big flock of something shrill or raucous like active lorikeets, Princess parrots or Australian King-Parrots travelling through the canopy of the aviary among the resting waterbirds would have added more energy. I recall Red-collared Lorikeets on my last visit; they were fun.

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Koala enclosure

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Great Flight Aviary

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Black-faced Cormorant

Then there was a former Tasmanian devil enclosure if I recall which has now been converted into a mixed, densely-vegetated enclosure for Long-nosed Potoroo and Short-beaked Echidna. I’ve noticed that potoroos can do well and be visible outdoors during the day and was pleased to see one potoroo foraging in the leaf litter while visitors were attempting to figure out what it was. The echidna was not seen. This enclosure has a side shaded viewing area with signage around these species being ecosystem engineers to tie the mix thematically. All in all, I really liked this space. There was also a nearby netted enclosure for Lace Monitors, a glass-fronted aviary for Regent Honeyeaters and a burrow complex with eventual outdoor enclosures for Southern Hairy-nosed Wombats.

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Potoroo/echidna enclosure

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Regent honeyeater aviary

There was then a side pond for Black Swans, before the macropod yard is entered via fenced in area which is then followed by the grassy yard for a breeding mob of Kangaroo Island Kangaroos, Emus and Swamp Wallabies. Tammar Wallabies were not seen here. It was a large space but a bit it was an awkward way to view these macropods with there being a reasonable distance between the macropods and the viewing fence. Exiting this area were four aviaries; two smaller ones for Tawny Frogmouth and Rainbow Lorikeet. Poor species choices in my opinion especially the lorikeet. Then there was a final pathway with a large aviary for Koalas which is a very strange way to house this species fully enclosed. Opposite them was a mix of unsigned new Forest Red-tailed Black Cockatoos mixed with White-browed Woodswallows. The black cockatoos were wonderfully active, contrasting the inactivity I was met with from most of the other enclosures from the hot midday sun, as they ripped up bark. This section has improved in mammal species diversity since 2018; it’s admittedly hard to find appropriate small Australian mammals to house outdoors without a well-established nocturnal house but quokkas, potoroos and echidnas are all suitable additions to amplify the range of species. It was a pleasant snapshot of what I imagine Healesville can offer which should be this trail’s main function.

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Kangaroo Island Kangaroo with joey

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Forest Red-tailed Black Cockatoo

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Aviaries - Rainbow Lorikeet/Tawny Frogmouth

There were four enclosures around here that I don’t really have anything of substance to add; they were all functional for their inhabitants including a standard paddock for three Giraffe with more space following the departure of the zebra; an open-topped enclosure for a large troop of Hamadryas Baboons with some ugly palms; and two old paddocks situated next to each other back near the entrance I came in through for Australiasia’s last three Collared Peccaries which are still kicking somehow and another paddock for female Nyala as filler species since the loss of the last tapir. It’s a shame sitatunga aren’t in the region anymore as there is a large pool in the nyala paddock. I feel the nyala would better be suited mixed with the giraffe but this group didn’t seem to be well-accustomed to city life yet, spending most of their time off-show besides for a fleeting glimpse of a single female that bolted to her night quarters after a quick photo.

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Collared Peccary

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Nyala

Finally, Wild Sea is Melbourne Zoo’s last trail to cover focusses on the aquatic life and is one of the more recent trails built at the zoo but is also among the smallest. It started with an empty enclosure that once housed pelican but unfortunately not replaced with anything animal-related but it has a random eel trap plonked in the middle. There was a lot of thick coastal vegetation around here attracting a wealth of wild birds including White-plumed Honeyeaters and Little Wattlebirds feeding on coastal banksias. The first actual exhibit makes for a poor viewing experience with strong glare for a shallow pool for an assortment of temperate marine fishes including Port Jackson Shark, Australian Mado, Moonlighter, Sea Mullet, Oldwife and two species of fiddler rays. There were definitely other species mixed in this tank but viewing was difficult due to the crowds and glares. Nearby is the beginning of the indoor building which contains viewing windows to the left for their seals; both Australian Fur-Seal and Long-nosed Fur Seal and underwater viewing for their Little Penguins as well. The whole indoor space uses a real lurid lighting design that detracts from the large viewing windows and their occupants, in my opinion.

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Interior building

There is a small row of tanks that were initially all for temperate species for local fish species but now it has been changed to a mash-up of random tanks, both freshwater and marine. It now starts with a tropical reef tank for Ocellaris Clownfish, Blue-Green Chromis, Banggai Cardinalfish, Flame Angelfish, Pacific Blue Tang, Yellow Tang and Magnficent Foxface among fluorescent corals. Next-door was a new tank for Moon Jellyfish which is a very recent development for the zoo. The zoo did keep one of the tanks as it for Pot-bellied Seahorse. The final two tanks are both freshwater exhibits now with a tropical freshwater tank for Boesmann’s Rainbowfish, Banded Rainbowfish, Neon Rainbowfish and unseen Hyrtl's Catfish and finished with a temperate river tank for Southern Purple-spotted Gudgeon, Murray River Rainbowfish, Olive Perchlet and Chinese Algae-eater. Exiting the area were the outdoor areas for the seals and penguins which were alright. The wave machine with the seals was excellent and the seals clearly make the most of them when they are in the water. With a weakening of coastal theming with the loss of the pelicans, no Fiordland Penguins (as glad as I am of Taronga's breeding success with them now) and the freshwater tanks, Zoos Victoria’s opportunity to connect the public with the local marine ecosystems of southern Australia has been diluted somewhat.

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Coral tank

Only missing the Japanese Gardens with the siamang island accidentally, I was able to explore Melbourne Zoo for the full day and I enjoyed seeing lots of unique displays throughout the area. There are some glaring gaps and empty exhibit spaces at Melbourne that will need to be filled with care. A bright spot is Melbourne Zoo’s ectotherm collection, which is diverse and well-represented, with cold-blooded critters scattered across every nook and cranny of the zoo—a growing emphasis on invertebrates in the former elephant trail being a welcome addition. Of course, an actual replacement is still required for the empty megafauna paddocks. A few weak spots are ageing, like Treetop Apes and Monkeys especially. Overall, I seem to always visit these city zoos when they are going through a lot of changes, and Melbourne Zoo was no exception, with certainly some big decisions to make in the coming years towards renewal and redevelopment.

The next part of this thread will move onto Werribee Open Range Zoo (Part 1 – Safari and Rhinos Off-show).
 
Melbourne Zoo [Part 6 – AUSTRALIAN BUSH AND WILD SEA] - 12th April 2025:

The bulk of Melbourne zoo’s natives are housed in a dedicated Australian trail that commenced with a pleasant boardwalk enclosure for a male Southern Koala mixed with Quokka which was situated just below the ramp around the enclosure, meaning it was missed by many. In saying this, I do appreciate any koala mixed displays I come across to add some interest and quokka are certainly a charismatic species as they often rest out in the open with head tucked between their legs. This enclosure is used for visitor encounters and members of the public were helping keepers feed the koala so he was very active and walked across his branches. Whilst not distinct subspecies, I have to say the southern type is a far nicer koala than our northern ones. The Great Flight Aviary is a stately long walkthrough aviary that has remained a feature piece of the zoo for several decades now with a beautiful arched design. It has a large mix of vegetation here with large, tall mature trees perfect for roosting waterbirds and a separate rainforest section that is now fenced off for their Southern Cassowary. The entire viewing experience is completed from a raised platform that travels through the long aviary. As I entered into the space, I soon realised their male Black-necked Stork can do short flights across the aviary and it flew towards the interior of the aviary among the ducks. It was pretty impressive to see. It was getting relatively hot so I missed a few species that were in the aviary. There were a few pigeons resting in shaded areas in the trees including Nicobar Pigeons which was the only non-native species housed here. They were rested with Torresian Imperial Pigeons as well. There were Eastern Cattle Egrets, Glossy Ibis, Royal Spoonbills and Little Pied Cormorants which make up the aviary’s bulk of birds nearby along with Bush Stone-Curlews resting on the aviary floor. The standout species is a single Black-faced Cormorant which seems to be the only one of its kind in a zoo currently. While I have seen this species in the wild it was interesting to compare how much bigger they are compared to the little pieds. Pied Herons were a nice pop of colour among the white waterbirds and Pied Stilts added sound. As the vegetation around the water thickened, this was there most of the ducks congregated with a good mix of Blue-billed Ducks, Radjah Shelducks and Freckled Ducks. The Blue-billed Ducks are such a good open water bird as they rarely leave water so add lots of aquatic movement in the barer parts of the aviary. Towards the rear of the aviary was a single Buff-banded Rail foraging near the portion of the aviary that is sectioned off for the cassowary which is again viewed from the boardwalk. Overall, a very heavy focus on waterbirds which was fine but a big flock of something shrill or raucous like active lorikeets, Princess parrots or Australian King-Parrots travelling through the canopy of the aviary among the resting waterbirds would have added more energy. I recall Red-collared Lorikeets on my last visit; they were fun.

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Koala enclosure

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Great Flight Aviary

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Black-faced Cormorant

Then there was a former Tasmanian devil enclosure if I recall which has now been converted into a mixed, densely-vegetated enclosure for Long-nosed Potoroo and Short-beaked Echidna. I’ve noticed that potoroos can do well and be visible outdoors during the day and was pleased to see one potoroo foraging in the leaf litter while visitors were attempting to figure out what it was. The echidna was not seen. This enclosure has a side shaded viewing area with signage around these species being ecosystem engineers to tie the mix thematically. All in all, I really liked this space. There was also a nearby netted enclosure for Lace Monitors, a glass-fronted aviary for Regent Honeyeaters and a burrow complex with eventual outdoor enclosures for Southern Hairy-nosed Wombats.

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Potoroo/echidna enclosure

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Regent honeyeater aviary

There was then a side pond for Black Swans, before the macropod yard is entered via fenced in area which is then followed by the grassy yard for a breeding mob of Kangaroo Island Kangaroos, Emus and Swamp Wallabies. Tammar Wallabies were not seen here. It was a large space but a bit it was an awkward way to view these macropods with there being a reasonable distance between the macropods and the viewing fence. Exiting this area were four aviaries; two smaller ones for Tawny Frogmouth and Rainbow Lorikeet. Poor species choices in my opinion especially the lorikeet. Then there was a final pathway with a large aviary for Koalas which is a very strange way to house this species fully enclosed. Opposite them was a mix of unsigned new Forest Red-tailed Black Cockatoos mixed with White-browed Woodswallows. The black cockatoos were wonderfully active, contrasting the inactivity I was met with from most of the other enclosures from the hot midday sun, as they ripped up bark. This section has improved in mammal species diversity since 2018; it’s admittedly hard to find appropriate small Australian mammals to house outdoors without a well-established nocturnal house but quokkas, potoroos and echidnas are all suitable additions to amplify the range of species. It was a pleasant snapshot of what I imagine Healesville can offer which should be this trail’s main function.

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Kangaroo Island Kangaroo with joey

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Forest Red-tailed Black Cockatoo

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Aviaries - Rainbow Lorikeet/Tawny Frogmouth

There were four enclosures around here that I don’t really have anything of substance to add; they were all functional for their inhabitants including a standard paddock for three Giraffe with more space following the departure of the zebra; an open-topped enclosure for a large troop of Hamadryas Baboons with some ugly palms; and two old paddocks situated next to each other back near the entrance I came in through for Australiasia’s last three Collared Peccaries which are still kicking somehow and another paddock for female Nyala as filler species since the loss of the last tapir. It’s a shame sitatunga aren’t in the region anymore as there is a large pool in the nyala paddock. I feel the nyala would better be suited mixed with the giraffe but this group didn’t seem to be well-accustomed to city life yet, spending most of their time off-show besides for a fleeting glimpse of a single female that bolted to her night quarters after a quick photo.

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Collared Peccary

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Nyala

Finally, Wild Sea is Melbourne Zoo’s last trail to cover focusses on the aquatic life and is one of the more recent trails built at the zoo but is also among the smallest. It started with an empty enclosure that once housed pelican but unfortunately not replaced with anything animal-related but it has a random eel trap plonked in the middle. There was a lot of thick coastal vegetation around here attracting a wealth of wild birds including White-plumed Honeyeaters and Little Wattlebirds feeding on coastal banksias. The first actual exhibit makes for a poor viewing experience with strong glare for a shallow pool for an assortment of temperate marine fishes including Port Jackson Shark, Australian Mado, Moonlighter, Sea Mullet, Oldwife and two species of fiddler rays. There were definitely other species mixed in this tank but viewing was difficult due to the crowds and glares. Nearby is the beginning of the indoor building which contains viewing windows to the left for their seals; both Australian Fur-Seal and Long-nosed Fur Seal and underwater viewing for their Little Penguins as well. The whole indoor space uses a real lurid lighting design that detracts from the large viewing windows and their occupants, in my opinion.

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Interior building

There is a small row of tanks that were initially all for temperate species for local fish species but now it has been changed to a mash-up of random tanks, both freshwater and marine. It now starts with a tropical reef tank for Ocellaris Clownfish, Blue-Green Chromis, Banggai Cardinalfish, Flame Angelfish, Pacific Blue Tang, Yellow Tang and Magnficent Foxface among fluorescent corals. Next-door was a new tank for Moon Jellyfish which is a very recent development for the zoo. The zoo did keep one of the tanks as it for Pot-bellied Seahorse. The final two tanks are both freshwater exhibits now with a tropical freshwater tank for Boesmann’s Rainbowfish, Banded Rainbowfish, Neon Rainbowfish and unseen Hyrtl's Catfish and finished with a temperate river tank for Southern Purple-spotted Gudgeon, Murray River Rainbowfish, Olive Perchlet and Chinese Algae-eater. Exiting the area were the outdoor areas for the seals and penguins which were alright. The wave machine with the seals was excellent and the seals clearly make the most of them when they are in the water. With a weakening of coastal theming with the loss of the pelicans, no Fiordland Penguins (as glad as I am of Taronga's breeding success with them now) and the freshwater tanks, Zoos Victoria’s opportunity to connect the public with the local marine ecosystems of southern Australia has been diluted somewhat.

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Coral tank

Only missing the Japanese Gardens with the siamang island accidentally, I was able to explore Melbourne Zoo for the full day and I enjoyed seeing lots of unique displays throughout the area. There are some glaring gaps and empty exhibit spaces at Melbourne that will need to be filled with care. A bright spot is Melbourne Zoo’s ectotherm collection, which is diverse and well-represented, with cold-blooded critters scattered across every nook and cranny of the zoo—a growing emphasis on invertebrates in the former elephant trail being a welcome addition. Of course, an actual replacement is still required for the empty megafauna paddocks. A few weak spots are ageing, like Treetop Apes and Monkeys especially. Overall, I seem to always visit these city zoos when they are going through a lot of changes, and Melbourne Zoo was no exception, with certainly some big decisions to make in the coming years towards renewal and redevelopment.

The next part of this thread will move onto Werribee Open Range Zoo (Part 1 – Safari and Rhinos Off-show).

So concludes an excellent review of Melbourne Zoo.

I agree with you re. the lighting in the underwater viewing for wild sea. It’s an impressive building on its own, with its sheer size reminiscent of what you’d see for underwater viewing of cetaceans at a US aquarium. It’s truly stunning, with the viewing window providing all the light needed. The wave machine is an excellent addition.

I would consider Melbourne’s Wild Sea an improved version of Auckland Zoo’s Sea Lion and Penguin shores; and Melbourne’s orangutan exhibit an improved version of Auckland Zoo’s Orangutan Park. Zoos certainly take inspiration from each other in the design of new exhibits and I doubt the parallels between the exhibits/complexes are coincidental.
 
Thanks for such a thorough and intriguing review of Melbourne Zoo in which you've echoed many thoughts I also share and opened my eyes to aspects of the zoo I hadnt reflected on before.

On the topic of the Australia Bush section however, it was my recolection from past visits that the macropod section like many Australian zoo's was a walk through experience. To the point were it seems it still have the infrastructure remaining. Has this always been the case or is this a rather new development?
 
On the topic of the Australia Bush section however, it was my recolection from past visits that the macropod section like many Australian zoo's was a walk through experience. To the point were it seems it still have the infrastructure remaining. Has this always been the case or is this a rather new development?
It was redeveloped a few years ago, removing the walk through section and just creating a side on viewing area. This was due to a few incidents the zoo had with guests and their Emu I believe, so they've just decided to keep the two separate for the foreseeable future.
 
Werribee Open Range Zoo [Part 1 – SAFARI AND RHINOS OFF-SHOW] – 13th April 2025:

Before arriving at Werribee Open Range Zoo, I explored two birding sites briefly to the west of Melbourne city. At the crack of dawn, I toured Newport Lakes, which reminded me a lot of some of the local wetland sites we have in Brisbane, with a good blend of open woodland and wetland habitat. New Holland Honeyeaters were delightfully abundant here and around these coastal sites especially. They were the dominant species and regularly chased the other bush birds in and out of their territories. There were lots of White-plumed Honeyeaters as well, which don’t occur in Brisbane, along with the familiar Grey Fantails, Superb Fairywrens, and Spotted Pardalotes. Towards the water, I was able to observe some Hoary-headed Grebes up close, while I suddenly caught sight of small dark figures tucked in the reeds, which turned out to be Spotless Crakes. They were joined by a second crake, and the pair were chasing each other from grassy clump to grassy clump. I travelled to a second site called Truganina Park seeking Flame Robin, but was again unsuccessful with the robin and saw a lot of the same species, with lots of fairywrens, fantails, and honeyeaters around. There was a nice view out to the coast, though.

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New Holland Honeyeater

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Spotless Crake – one of two seen.


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Werribee Open Range Zoo sits to the west of Melbourne and is Zoo’s Victoria open-range zoo covering a large footprint along the Werribee River. The entrance is heavy on the theming with a vivid coloured bus serving as the ticket office, with lots of large statues around that children enjoyed jumping around on while the line grew leading up to opening time. There is a large electronic board at the entrance showing visitors what experiences were available, and I saw the rhino encounter was available, so I decided to book the off-show tour along with the general admission. Upon entering, the plan of attack was safari bus, elephants (to be covered in the next post), rhino tour, and then the walking trail. The entrance garden trails around the entrance are well-manicured and themed with African plants that complement the experience, contrasting the rougher tracks of the mallee at Monarto, which blend a wild Australian feel. Both approaches to landscaping the parks work, however contrasting they may be. I made my way to the bus station and waited half an hour for the initial vehicles to be loaded. Unlike Monarto, these safari buses provide an open view of the paddocks with no glass obstructions. It made for a very pleasant experience, and there was plenty of space to view all the animals despite the busy crowds.

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Entrance

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Boarding the safari bus

The first sets of paddocks we drove through comprised an arid display featuring their female herd of Scimitar Oryx with a few old Dromedaries. Werribee has been building numbers of oryx, and they did look spectacular together as they fed in the early morning. There were a few wild rabbits hopping around as well, as they darted into the bushes. On the other side of the bus was a bachelor herd of Plains Zebra, which the guide said would be added to soon, with all the foals being born at Werribee. This section can be viewed along the elephant trail now as well, providing closer views on foot.

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Scimitar Oryx

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Plains Zebra

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Arid Paddock


Continuing on, we passed a body of water where hippos can be viewed from the bus, but there were none in view. We then entered another large space with a big dam that was home to two species of antelope: a large herd of Nyala with a few young bulls growing their horns, along with a non-breeding herd of Blackbuck, which are set to join the elephants soon. This space used to have waterbuck, but they were instead wandering about just outside this enclosure, traversing through some low fences. They were a flighty herd, and the guide exclaimed it was a treat to see them all out together. It’s a shame they are so inbred, even with a recent transfer of a young female from Monarto; they really are spectacular, “make-you-stop-in-your-tracks” antelopes with a horse-like quality about them. Nearby were large paddocks that had longhorn cattle (good riddance) and surplus zebra, if I remember correctly from when I last visited almost a decade ago, but now house the female herd of American Bison and Mongolian Wild Horses. The guide mentioned that a castrated male would soon join the female bison, and this has since occurred.

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Nyala – young bull

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Waterbuck


The safari bus reached a hill with an expansive view over the main savannah. Wild Black Kites and Whistling Kites are a staple here, regularly flying over and surveying the grounds. The savannah is home to a decent mix of the bachelor herd of Scimitar Oryx, male Ostrich, their breeding herd of Plains Zebra, the majority of their Southern White Rhinos, and a herd of Giraffe that are all castrated males not required for the regional programme. The herd of Eland were seen on the hard standing but hadn’t been released into the main savannah yet.

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Main savannah

Afterwards, I made my way over to the experience pickup waiting area, which was close to the elephants. Our tour was picked up by an experienced keeper and taken on a smaller vehicle that allowed us to get a closer view of all of the aforementioned animals on our way to the rhino off-show area. Photos were permitted for all parts of the tour, so I will post a few photos here. The off-show area can be broken up into (1) an enclosure for their male rhino Umgana, (2) the main rhino area, and (3) adjacent giraffe barns. Their male rhino Umgana is retired off-show with a large yard with lots of mud and dirt. This particular male was exported from Kruger National Park, with his crate still standing next to his off-show yard. After a discussion about the surprising beauty of rhino ticks and watching Umgana coat himself in mud, we continued onwards.

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Off-show rhino yard

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Male Umgana

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Umgana’s crate that transported him from Kruger National Park

We were then taken to the rhino complex, which is a complex of smaller paddocks that can be sectioned off easily. We were able to also explore the birthing den in which the recent calf Jabulani was born. The keeper discussed in detail how devastated they all were about the previous calf being injured by female Kipenzi, attributed to the fact that Kipenzi herself was hand-reared and inexperienced. This time around, they were relieved to see this calf was doing well. The keeper discussed the various training regimes that they were working on, with a particular emphasis on desensitising the rhinos to new sounds and sights.

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White rhino birthing area

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Giraffe barns

Finally, we were taken to the main savannah area again and got a closer view of the rhinos, which tend to hang out in two distinct groups: the three older females Make, Sisi, and Letaba were resting their joints on a bed of sand, and the breeding pair of male Kifaru with female Kipenzi and calf Jabulani were among the zebras. Overall, a neat experience to get further insights into the management and inner workings of rhino husbandry.

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Jabulani – recent white rhino calf

Part 2 will cover the elephants.
 
Great review thus far. Looking forward to reading the rest. Also nice to see you popped into some of my local birding spots too!
Nearby were large paddocks that had longhorn cattle (good riddance) and surplus zebra, if I remember correctly from when I last visited almost a decade ago, but now house the female herd of American Bison and Mongolian Wild Horses. The guide mentioned that a castrated male would soon join the female bison, and this has since occurred.
The female Longhorn Cattle were indeed there. They're now off display behind the Waterhole drive through exhibit. The other paddock held an array of species over the years. I recall Zebra being there (but that was more than a decade ago). Bachelor groups of Ostrich, Scimitar Horned Oryx, and Blackbuck also had their stints there.
 
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