I went to the Bronx Zoo today, and of course CGF which is great, but that, my opinion of the zoo in general, along with various discussions on here got me thinking how we should factor in the fact that some exhibits are only visible 6-9 months a year, while the animals are generally in mediocre to poor enclosures during that time.
For example, lets say we have three exhibits of the same animal:
Exhibit X: 8/10 rating, open year round.
Exhibit Y: 9/10, animals indoors and off-exhibit for 5 months.
Exhibit Z: Outdoor 8.5, Indoor(open to public) 5.
Should example Y be considered the best and X the worst? For visitor purposes, Y would be a zero for 5 months, and would lets say a 3 for the animals during that time. Should that be taken into account?
To me, it seems like exhibit Z typically gets punished on here because people see the average indoor enclosure and knock it. However they(with a few notable exceptions) typically give Y a pass for the off-exhibit area likely because all they see and analyze is the outdoor part.
This can also be taken past the individual exhibit rating and to the whole zoos rating.
One zoo is an 8.5/10 year round, while another is a 9 for 7-8 months, but a 5 during the colder months. Do you combine those numbers in anyway, or do you just give it a 9? Which zoo would you rather be your hometown zoo?
I like to rank exhibits and zoos, but I'm really not sure how to deal with this issue.