Lake Hartwell Wildlife Safari species list (10/26/24)

biggest_dreamer

Well-Known Member
This is a relatively new (2021) safari park in Hartwell, Georgia, about 20 minutes from the South Carolina state line. It’s not a place I would’ve gone out of my way for, but I found myself somewhat nearby and had a few hours to kill, and it was a perfectly serviceable way to do so.

The facility consists of a fairly small safari loop (it probably took me 45 minutes to circle around, without stopping to feed) split into two sections, and a small walkabout section mostly consisting of too-small wood and wire enclosures. Unsurprisingly, there are no rarities to be found here - it you’re reading this, you’ve certainly seen everything they have many times over, and the safari loop is bloated with the usual suspects of domestics, ratites, and fallow deer. It's definitely not a place to go out of your way for, but if you’re in the area with an hour or two to kill, there's certainly worse ways to do it. I enjoyed it for what it was.

Admission was surprisingly cheap at $10 as a single adult, but since they charge by head instead of by car, that could easily compound if you're coming with a larger group. Feed cost $5 a bag and the budgie walkthrough was an additional $2 a head (I did neither). The restroom on site was a slight step up from a porta-potty - roughly the same size and no AC, but it did contain a proper toilet and sink with plumbing, so props to them for that.

Safari species are listed in the order in which I saw them.

Walkabout Section
  1. Gray-crowned crane
  2. Walkthrough aviary: Budgerigar, unsigned pigeon sp.
  3. African spurred tortoise, greater rhea
  4. African spurred tortoise
  5. Raccoon
  6. Black-and-white ruffed lemur, Geoffroy's spider monkey
  7. White-nosed coati
  8. White-nosed coati
  9. Petting pen: Nilgai, dromedary, yak, goat, sheep, pig, miniature donkey, miniature zebu, greater rhea, crested guineafowl
  10. Fennec fox
  11. Ring-tailed lemur
  12. Ring-tailed lemur, black-and-white ruffed lemur (juveniles)
  13. Tufted capuchin
  14. Salmon-crested cockatoo
  15. Laughing kookaburra, African gray parrot
  16. White cockatoo
  17. Red-crested turaco
  18. Blue-and-gold macaw, green-winged macaw
  19. Scarlet macaw
  20. Scarlet macaw
Safari, pt. 1
  1. Common ostrich
  2. Emu
  3. Plains zebra
  4. Horse
  5. Scimitar-horned oryx
  6. Cattle - taurine, zebu, and Watusi
  7. Common fallow deer
  8. Llama
  9. Aoudad
  10. Enclosure: Capybara
  11. Enclosure: Capybara, Patagonian mara, white-tailed deer
  12. Elk (wapiti)
  13. Alpaca
  14. Blackbuck
  15. Common eland
  16. Blue wildebeest
  17. Enclosure: Dromedary, horse, blue wildebeest, nilgai
  18. Enclosure: Red-necked wallaby, red kangaroo
  19. Nilgai
Safari, pt. 2
  1. Plains bison
  2. Water buffalo
  3. Indian peafowl
  4. Common fallow deer
  5. Yak
  6. Greylag goose
  7. Muscovy duck
 
Thanks for the review. Raccoon, Coati, Ring-tailed Lemur, Llama, Fallow Deer, Capybara, Mara, Ostrich, Emu, Rhea, etc. As you pointed out, they've got all the regulars! ;) Nilgai, Blue Wildebeest and Aoudad are a mild surprise, but that's about it.
 
Correction: I meant helmeted guineafowl, but typed crested for some reason. I know that now that I’ve got that massive blunder cleared up, you’re all going to start booking flights out to this place asap.
 
Correction: I meant helmeted guineafowl, but typed crested for some reason. I know that now that I’ve got that massive blunder cleared up, you’re all going to start booking flights out to this place asap.
I’ve already got a flight due to the raccoon! In all seriousness, I have never seen a raccoon in captivity.
 
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