I'm working on a BZ history project and one thing that was bothering me was how scant few references there are to Arctic Island outside of maps, hardly even references in the history books about the zoo. Thank you so much for the information; it sounds like a really interesting complex - do you know when it was removed?This post brought back tons of memories about my many trips to BZ growing up. I wanted to add some additional information about Arctic Mountain. I was always intrigued by it, but there's very little out there about it (information- and photo-wise). It was Kodiak Island years ago and then it was renamed Arctic Island at some point. Aside from the Dall Sheep on the main portion of the exhibit, there was also a small bear cage (yes, it was a cage) that was built into the backside of the exhibit. I don't recall what type of bear was housed in it, but I'll check my old photos in case I have snapped a pic on a field trip. There was also a reindeer paddock on the backside that was about 5' below ground level and had a few concrete structures in it that looked like big, rough tables that seemed to serve as protection from the sun (I think they were supposed to look like rockwork and they looked similar to the ones that were found on Ibex Mountain).
Also is there any chance you know when the Small Mammal House closed to the public? That's a major date I can't pin down for the life of me. I have sources indicating it was open as late as 1991 but then basically nothing until the Hamill Family Play Zoo opened.
Would love to see any of your retro photographs. I imagine we have a few buried somewhere here but I don't think there'd be much of zoochat interest.
Thank you so much for all of your knowledge.
This is the first time I've been able to actually visualize what the old Aquatic Bird House was like, thank you again. Really wish I'd checked it out as a kid.You are correct. It was a smaller exhibit inside of the Aquatic Birds House and located on the south side of the large open area (to the left if you were looking at the large free-flight area and opposite side of where the penguin exhibit was). It was a short walkthrough exhibit and I do recall the round windows, too.