biggest_dreamer
Well-Known Member
From June 29 through July 5 of this year, I visited one or two different zoological facilities in the state of Texas (or Oklahoma!) every day - a total of 11 different facilities of wildly differing scale and quality. It was the first time I'd done a trip quite so in depth, so it felt like there was a lot that could've very easily gone very wrong and yet nothing major did.
Some quick establishing info: my wife attends an annual conference each July in a different part of the country, and this year placed us in San Antonio. The last time I accompanied her was to Denver in 2019, during which I only visited Denver Zoo. I really regret not renting a car that time and pushing to also visit Cheyenne Mountain, and Pueblo, and...! Anyway, I wanted to make the most of it this time, so I spent months coming up with a list of facilities to hit, rented a car with unlimited mileage, and set out to visit a different zoo or two each day before returning back to San Antonio to sleep. I realize that this isn't the most efficient way to tackle a trip like this, but it was nice being able to return to the same place and see my wife each night.
I'm calling this a mini-review because while I don't imagine I actually have much insightful to say, I also know I can be overly wordy and will probably wind up touching on more than I anticipate going in. I did take lists of every tetrapod species I saw (so no fish or invertebrates, and also no snakes because I'm horribly phobic, and also nothing that was signed/unseen), but they were mostly intended to be for my personal reference so I won't be posting them outright unless requested.
Anyway.
Friday, June 28
Woke up at home in South Carolina and proceeded to drive to Atlanta for our flight. Amusingly, the first animals of the trip came before the zoo leg even started - we found ourselves behind a trailer taking at least 3 zebras somewhere in the direction of Atlanta. I wonder where they were coming from, and where they were going? I rode alongside this trailer for quite some time because I was terribly amused by the zebras and thought they might be a sort of good luck omen (okay, not really. but maybe.)
After saying goodbye to the zebras as we reached Atlanta proper, the rest of getting into Texas was a fairly seamless affair. Flight, pick up the rental car from Enterprise at the airport. I was actually incredibly nervous about the rental car as it was my first time getting one (I've ubered everywhere in previous flight-based trips), but aside from the cost being a bit more than I would've liked every part of the rental car experience was refreshingly simple and stress free. Off to a good start.
Oh, and I should note, despite San Antonio being "home base" for the trip, we actually started off in Dallas. The original plan was to hit Dallas World Aquarium and maybe one of either Fort Worth or Dallas Zoo with my wife before her conference started in full, and perhaps spend a day exploring Austin as we made our way down to San Antonio, but those plans got shaken up as I started tacking more and more zoos onto the whole thing. But still, we had two nights in Dallas and I think we made the most of them.
My next post will start things off with day 1 of the trip proper, our first day in (and immediately out of) Dallas.
Some quick establishing info: my wife attends an annual conference each July in a different part of the country, and this year placed us in San Antonio. The last time I accompanied her was to Denver in 2019, during which I only visited Denver Zoo. I really regret not renting a car that time and pushing to also visit Cheyenne Mountain, and Pueblo, and...! Anyway, I wanted to make the most of it this time, so I spent months coming up with a list of facilities to hit, rented a car with unlimited mileage, and set out to visit a different zoo or two each day before returning back to San Antonio to sleep. I realize that this isn't the most efficient way to tackle a trip like this, but it was nice being able to return to the same place and see my wife each night.
I'm calling this a mini-review because while I don't imagine I actually have much insightful to say, I also know I can be overly wordy and will probably wind up touching on more than I anticipate going in. I did take lists of every tetrapod species I saw (so no fish or invertebrates, and also no snakes because I'm horribly phobic, and also nothing that was signed/unseen), but they were mostly intended to be for my personal reference so I won't be posting them outright unless requested.
Anyway.
Friday, June 28
Woke up at home in South Carolina and proceeded to drive to Atlanta for our flight. Amusingly, the first animals of the trip came before the zoo leg even started - we found ourselves behind a trailer taking at least 3 zebras somewhere in the direction of Atlanta. I wonder where they were coming from, and where they were going? I rode alongside this trailer for quite some time because I was terribly amused by the zebras and thought they might be a sort of good luck omen (okay, not really. but maybe.)
After saying goodbye to the zebras as we reached Atlanta proper, the rest of getting into Texas was a fairly seamless affair. Flight, pick up the rental car from Enterprise at the airport. I was actually incredibly nervous about the rental car as it was my first time getting one (I've ubered everywhere in previous flight-based trips), but aside from the cost being a bit more than I would've liked every part of the rental car experience was refreshingly simple and stress free. Off to a good start.
Oh, and I should note, despite San Antonio being "home base" for the trip, we actually started off in Dallas. The original plan was to hit Dallas World Aquarium and maybe one of either Fort Worth or Dallas Zoo with my wife before her conference started in full, and perhaps spend a day exploring Austin as we made our way down to San Antonio, but those plans got shaken up as I started tacking more and more zoos onto the whole thing. But still, we had two nights in Dallas and I think we made the most of them.
My next post will start things off with day 1 of the trip proper, our first day in (and immediately out of) Dallas.