biggest_dreamer
Well-Known Member
I visited Metro Richmond Zoo on a dreary gray Wednesday on my way home from a short trip to Washington, DC. I had heard a fair amount about the place going in: its status as perhaps one of the larger/more notable non-AZA traditional zoos in the country, its compelling collection of oddball rarities, and its reputation for poor exhibits. I went in with no expectation of how long I might get to stay, as it seemed like a storm could break at any moment (this was right in the wake of Hurricane Helene).
I didn't initially intend to write much about it on here, hence only grabbing a species list that is incomplete in the following ways: the zoo has several species in multiple enclosures and I only logged each species once and didn't make note of cohabitation; I didn't notate signed but unseen species; and due to being on a race against the weather I wound up skipping the reptile house, safari train, and the stretch of the zoo between the giraffe enclosure and the two small great ape islands (which I believe should have featured lions, white rhinoceros, cheetahs, and plains zebras/addaxes). I know this will make my species list less appealing to some, but I figured I may as well post what I've got with those caveats laid out. I'll make mention of the mixed exhibits and signed/unseen species I do recall, but those will not be exhaustive lists. I'm basically reconstructing this whole thing from my rudimentary list I made for life list update purposed.
Before getting started, I should note that the zoo itself was clean and easy to walk - no unpaved paths, which is always a gamble with non-AZA places. There were also a handful of rides, none of which I would have cared to ride in general (aside from the safari train) but particularly since they all seemed very cheap/kiddie, but I suppose it's worth noting for anyone considering going with children. I didn't eat at the zoo but there were a few food stalls near the entrance and halfway point of the main path that seemed to offer generic attraction food stand items like hot dogs, pizza, etc.
The zoo starts off with a serviceable-looking flamingo pond and a relatively small walk-in aviary consisting of a short loop. The aviary was very muddy so I ended up turning around before completing the loop, but I was able to see the whole thing. I took a picture of the sign so I do have the supposed full species list here, but if accurate there were quite a few no-shows (in italics). An even muddier prairie dog enclosure (the inhabitants sure didn't seem to mind, at least) and a siamang island complete this section of entryway exhibits.
Behind some of the cages and visible through them was a large enclosure containing some large antelope and cranes. Rounding out this stretch were some giraffes which had a distressingly small exhibit, and a glimpse at the zebras and addax that I wouldn't get a chance to see up close. Aside from the giraffes, all of the hoofstock so far had very comfortable looking exhibits, making the giraffes look even sadder by comparison. Notably, there were two signs for klipspringer here - one didn't seem to be connected to a current exhibit, and the other was in front of a suitable enough yet empty exhibit, but I'll list them regardless.
I'll be back in Virginia for a week next summer and intend to fill it with as many zoos as I can, so naturally the thought of a return trip here has been on my mind as a possibility. And you know, I'm certainly not opposed to it, depending on how the week fills out. And I think that's the best closing note I can leave on.
Tagging in @SusScrofa and @Smaggledagle since they both previously inquired about a review or species list.
I didn't initially intend to write much about it on here, hence only grabbing a species list that is incomplete in the following ways: the zoo has several species in multiple enclosures and I only logged each species once and didn't make note of cohabitation; I didn't notate signed but unseen species; and due to being on a race against the weather I wound up skipping the reptile house, safari train, and the stretch of the zoo between the giraffe enclosure and the two small great ape islands (which I believe should have featured lions, white rhinoceros, cheetahs, and plains zebras/addaxes). I know this will make my species list less appealing to some, but I figured I may as well post what I've got with those caveats laid out. I'll make mention of the mixed exhibits and signed/unseen species I do recall, but those will not be exhaustive lists. I'm basically reconstructing this whole thing from my rudimentary list I made for life list update purposed.
Before getting started, I should note that the zoo itself was clean and easy to walk - no unpaved paths, which is always a gamble with non-AZA places. There were also a handful of rides, none of which I would have cared to ride in general (aside from the safari train) but particularly since they all seemed very cheap/kiddie, but I suppose it's worth noting for anyone considering going with children. I didn't eat at the zoo but there were a few food stalls near the entrance and halfway point of the main path that seemed to offer generic attraction food stand items like hot dogs, pizza, etc.
The zoo starts off with a serviceable-looking flamingo pond and a relatively small walk-in aviary consisting of a short loop. The aviary was very muddy so I ended up turning around before completing the loop, but I was able to see the whole thing. I took a picture of the sign so I do have the supposed full species list here, but if accurate there were quite a few no-shows (in italics). An even muddier prairie dog enclosure (the inhabitants sure didn't seem to mind, at least) and a siamang island complete this section of entryway exhibits.
- Chilean flamingo
- Walk-in aviary: Crested guineafowl, sacred ibis, demoiselle crane, rosy-billed pochard, golden pheasant, Reeve's pheasant, green-winged teal, wood duck, black-bellied whistling duck, Mandarin duck
- Black-tailed prairie dog
- Siamang, mallard, Egyptian goose
- Fennec fox
- Meerkat
- Komodo dragon (technically part of the reptile house but visible from outside)
- Nursery: striped skunk
- Coppery titi
- Linnaeus's two-toed sloth (signed as just "two-toed sloth" but scientific name was listed as didactylus)
- Lar gibbon
- Siamang
- Red kangaroo, common wallaroo, emu
Behind some of the cages and visible through them was a large enclosure containing some large antelope and cranes. Rounding out this stretch were some giraffes which had a distressingly small exhibit, and a glimpse at the zebras and addax that I wouldn't get a chance to see up close. Aside from the giraffes, all of the hoofstock so far had very comfortable looking exhibits, making the giraffes look even sadder by comparison. Notably, there were two signs for klipspringer here - one didn't seem to be connected to a current exhibit, and the other was in front of a suitable enough yet empty exhibit, but I'll list them regardless.
- Blue-and-gold macaw
- Cheetah, domestic dog
- Bat-eared fox
- Klipspringer
- Caracal
- Diana monkey
- Eastern black-and-white colobus (I don't recall the exact common name they used but the kikuyensis subspecies stood out to me)
- Southern ground hornbill
- Lesser spot-nosed guenon
- Black-crested mangabey
- De Brazza's monkey
- Sulawesi crested macaque
- Allen's swamp monkey
- Bongo, greater kudu, black crowned crane, demoiselle crane
- Giraffe
- Klipspringer
- Plains zebra, addax
- Common warthog
- Budgerigar
- Domestic chicken (I don't recall which enclosure these were in, surely not by themselves)
- Dromedary
- Bactrian camel
- Blackbuck, domestic goat, domestic sheep, miniature zebu
- Indian peafowl (I think these were free-roaming?)
- Bison
- American alligator
- Steller's sea eagle
- Eurasian eagle owl (unsigned)
- Gray wolf
- Elk (wapiti)
- Armenian mouflon (signed as "Armenian mouflon (Ovis vignei)")
- European fallow deer
- Common ostrich
- Ring-tailed lemur
- Black-and-white ruffed lemur
- empty, unsigned new exhibit identical to the black-and-white ruffed lemurs
- Red ruffed lemur
- Baird's tapir
- (handful of inhabited monkey cages)
- Safari train path: Gemsbok, Thomson's gazelle
- Baird's tapir, sarus crane
- Yellow-backed duiker
- Himalayan tahr, blackbuck
- American white pelican
- African penguin
- Rock hyrax
- Swinhoe's pheasant
- Red-rumped agouti, southern screamer, Lady Amherst's pheasant, salmon-crested cockatoo
- Black howler
- Black-handed spider monkey
- Brazilian tapir, capybara, greater rhea
- Marabou, white stork, blue crane, Ruppell's griffon vulture
- White-throated capuchin (Cebus capucinus)
- White-lipped tamarin (unsigned)
- Spectacled owl
- Toco toucan
- Red-footed tortoise
- Bornean crested fireback
- King vulture, klipspringer
- White-faced saki
- Colombian spider monkey
- Common squirrel monkey
- Nocturnal room: Indian flying fox, straw-colored fruit bat
- Nocturnal room: two-toed sloth sp. (unsigned, I assume didactylus as with the previous one)
- Moluccan eclectus (signed as "Eclectus parrot")
- Serval
- Laughing kookaburra
- Pygmy hippopotamus
- African clawless otter
- Raccoon
- Binturong
- Lar gibbon
- Snow leopard
- Asiatic black bear
- Tiger
- Bornean orangutan
- Chimpanzee
I'll be back in Virginia for a week next summer and intend to fill it with as many zoos as I can, so naturally the thought of a return trip here has been on my mind as a possibility. And you know, I'm certainly not opposed to it, depending on how the week fills out. And I think that's the best closing note I can leave on.
Tagging in @SusScrofa and @Smaggledagle since they both previously inquired about a review or species list.