That brings us to the end of the Canadian Wilderness and shifts us into the final section of the zoo the new Mayan Ruins. This area would take over part of Tundra trek, the Americas pavilion, the current Mayan temple and all space around it, the picnic area that’s never used, and the breeding centre. A pair of huge trees with a pair of brilliantly coloured macaws holding a Mayan Ruins sign would welcome visitors to the area. Last chance for a photo op.
Due to the fact that many of my outdoor exhibits will likely be empty most of the winter the first thing in the area would be the Amazon pavilion so guest don’t have to walk through the cold and see nothing for awhile to get to the pavilion. First thing I would do is bring the pavilion onto the surface. I’m thinking something big with tons of glass like the African rainforest but still bigger.
Inside the pavilion I would want it to look like you just walked into the Amazon. I have some cool thoughts on this pavilion to make it look as authentic as possible. First up I would want it to look like the Amazon River flows through the pavilion. Guests would have to walk over bridges in a number of places. Under the bridges could be dividers preventing animals from getting into other exhibits and glass can chop it up in other places. It would only need to be deep in a couple of places for certain animals.
Another really cool feature I’d like to include throughout the pavilion is rain. Now I would avoid rain on visitor paths because frankly I wouldn’t want to get soaked myself any other time of the year but summer and I could destroy cameras and cell phones. So in the animals exhibits I would have the ability to turn on a misty little rain shower or a steady down pour. It might provide much needed stimulation to animals who in their native environment get wet all the time. It might also help to simulate natural seasonal conditions.
At the center of the pavilion would be an enormous tree reaching to the ceiling. Its purpose would be to help support the roof but also to be a really cool lookout post. Guests can enter the trunk of the tree and climb the spiral stairs to the top where they can exit through a hole in the trunk and walk around a lookout. This would enable people to view the entire pavilion from above. Hopefully it would offer some unique perspectives. Also going up inside the trunk would be little windows disguised as hollows in the tree. And to take into account disabled individuals an elevator would run in the core so wheel chairs and scooters can go up. I would provide parking at the bottom for strollers and parents would be encouraged to walk up but if they take the elevator I wont stop them.
I would like as much mixing and matching amongst species as possible but single exhibits might have to do.
I think near what would likely be the main entrance to the pavilion I would like to impress right off with a massive aviary. It would be full of colour and plant life. Since it is unlikely I can grow the big thick trees that would be in the rainforest my exhibit builders would build false trees to look like perfect copies.
Now considering the large number of big birds I’ve chosen for the bird wing I have no idea how they would inter mix and how safe they would be for guests especially during breeding season. Based on my keepers’ suggestions I would divide the birds up into as few compatible groups as possible. Ideally they would all be together. For guest safety with such big birds I would have a mesh tunnel guests travel through. This would enable them to see everything and give the birds a chance to fly over head. However if they need to be divided up into a bunch of small pens because they cannot get along guest will be on an open path and the birds kept behind mesh. I’d prefer the big free flight aviary. I’d leave the specifics to the exhibit designers and keepers.
Species I want to see include Hyacinth Macaws, Blue and gold macaws, great green macaws, green winged macaws, scarlet macaws, sun parakeets, golden parakeets, rose ringed parakeets, blue bellied parrots, yellow headed amazons, plate billed mountain toucans, channel billed toucans, keel billed toucans, toco toucans, black curassows, white winged guans, sunbittern, trumpeters (I don’t care what kind), purple gallinule, scarlet ibis and roseate spoonbill.
I’d also like some ducks in there but also scattered throughout the pavilion in exhibits where they will do well with the other inhabitants. With no idea what the AZA is keeping I would I defer to my keepers. Some that might be cool would be yellow billed teal, cinnamon teal, puna teal, coscoroba swans, black necked swans, ring necked duck, and knob billed duck. Again I’d listen to keepers.
There would also be a really big summer aviary for the birds or several of them as needed. During the winter unfortunately the exhibits will likely be empty.
Heading out of the aviary I would like to see a really big water exhibit dedicated to the giant otter. It’s the pavilions featured exhibit. They are incompatible with any other species so they would live by themselves. The family group would have a big pool that looked like it was being fed by the river. I think it would be a nice feature to have a waterfall. The waterfall would provide hidden housing for the otters while offering a beautiful feature to the exhibit. Underwater viewing would be available in a space that would also house Amazonian fish species. The key species there would be the red bellied piranha. Fish experts can do the rest.
Alongside the otters would be a tank for caiman. It would have a little bit of underwater viewing but it would also be alongside the stairs as you return to the main exhibit spaces. I’d like to keep a couple of them. If they can be kept with some species of turtle and possibly fish that would offer a much more enriching example of Amazonian River life. I don’t want anything to get eaten though.
The rest of the exhibits in the pavilion would depend on what species I can mix and match with each other safely. If they must all be separate so be it. I would have two toed sloths, tamanduas, pygmy marmosets, geoffery’s marmoset, emperor tamarins, golden lion tarmarins, cotton top tamarins, Goeldi’s Monkeys, owl monkeys, capuchins, squirrel monkeys, and Brazilian Agouti. I would like the capuchins and squirrel monkeys to have access to the river. I can see them goofing off in the water or near it.
I would work with groups in South America that rescue orphaned animals to hopefully acquire new breeding stock from unreleasable animals. Of particular interest to me would be getting different species of sloth. I would be happy to take in orphans or injured sloths which couldn’t be returned to the wild and provide them with a home. For species not kept in AZA zoos I would see if a deal could be arranged to ship any babies back for release if possible. If not then I would prevent breeding in all species except AZA stock.
For my small carnivores I would have Coati, kinkajous, ringtails and some species of opossum. I don’t care what species of opossum we kept I just think its important to have the only marsupial outside of Australia.
The coati would live in large enclosures with indoor and outdoor access, with several females and a lone male to start. The male will be kept either off exhibit or in the opposite exhibit to the females while young are in the picture. Ideally all offspring will go to other zoos but if new homes cannot be found the males will be neutered and allowed to live with their father while the females live together with their mothers.
The ringtails, kinkajous and opossums will be kept as a pairs with offspring when necessary so they will have smaller indoor enclosures. An outdoor exhibit will be built for them to rotate in. One species will rotate the outdoor coati space too.
I also want a nocturnal animal wing. It will be called the caves. It would probably be a space under the main level of the pavilion. In it I would have prehensile tailed porcupine, giant armadillos, hairy armadillos and long tailed chinchillas all of which will also be trained for educational purposes. Keepers can then take one or two out of their exhibits for special keeper talks where kids can pet them. I think in particular the chinchillas will delight kids when they have their dust baths.
Also here would be a bat zone with Common Vampire bats, pallas’ long tongued bats, bulldog bats and Greater Spear nosed Bats. Between the four species I would have blood eaters, insectivores, frugivores and nectarivores. They wouldn’t live in the same habitat for obvious reasons.
At the side of the pavilion where the river would finish on that side there would be a big pool. This would be the winter home for my flock of Caribbean Flamingos and whatever waterfowl will live nicely with them. Outside they would have a summer pool.
Mixed in amongst the other exhibits I would like to have exhibits for frogs, snakes, turtles and lizards. I would let my reptile and amphibian expert pick for me but some kind iguana would be nice, maybe an anaconda (safety of the staff would be paramount in this decision), and as many kinds of poison dart frogs as possible because they are so colourful.
Outside I would like to build my exhibits around barns that are decorated to look like mayan ruins much like they currently are.
First up I would have my flight pens. In here there would be Harpy Eagles, white and black hawks (I don’t know if they are part of the AZA but they look amazing), Ornate Eagle Hawk and Spectacled Owls. Each would get a decent sized pen and inside their temple they would have smaller viewing rooms for winter. If they can be rotated they will be. If not thats fine.
And I would have to replicate the waterfall. It’s a must. I love listening to the rushing water and feel the mist. And who doesn’t like walking behind it. My only change would be to make it even bigger. Not so much by height but by width.
The waterfalls would send water cascading down into my Brazilian tapir, rhea, capybara, giant anteater, waterfowl exhibit. There would be the big pool for the capybara and tapir to swim in and lots of land for the rhea and anteaters to walk around. The land would loop around part of the water so people weren’t too far from the rheas and anteaters. They wouldn’t have winter viewing as their barn will be built under the waterfall. Lots of room will be provided for winter though.
On the other side of the waterfall would be a monkey temple. There would be exhibits for the larger monkeys both inside and out. Howler monkeys, white faced saki, spider monkeys would be at home here. I considered adding bald uakari but they are pretty rare and on phase out, plus they are pretty scary looking for a monkey. I would like a fourth monkey out here but I don’t know what. Maybe just an alternative exhibit for everyone or to solve squabbles. Maybe the sloths could summer out there. Indoor exhibits will be available inside the temple with lots of space provided... perhaps equal to their outdoor space.
I would also like mara, pudu and chacoans Peccary. Hopefully in the same exhibit but if they need to be broken up thats fine too. No indoor viewing for them though.
After that would come a common exhibit for Llamas, alpacas, vicunas and guanacos. I’d like the exhibit to be a little hilly to simulate their natural environment. Their barn would be hidden under their hilly exhibit and there wouldn’t be winter viewing for them unless it was warm enough for them to be outside.
The next section would house my predators, Jaguars, Andrean Bears, ocelots, Jaguarondi, maned wolf, bush dog. I think I would divide them between two temples. The jaguars, bears and mane wolves would be grouped in one complex, while the ocelots, jaguarondi and bush dogs lived in another one. All would have two exhibit spaces available, one indoor and the other outdoor. Males and females would rotate as necessary.
I think given the distance from my first splash pad this would be another good spot for one. It would be south American themed with caiman, river dolphins, giant fresh water sting rays, ect as features. Parrots could dump water buckets. I think it would also be cool if there was seating for the parents that were long anaconda benches.
And that would bring us to the end of my physical changes to the zoo.