To the right of the viewing window, you enter, through automatic doors into a building called ‘Leopards of the Black Water’. This building acts as the indoor housing for the Amur Leopard exhibit and is designed in the style of a Russian log cabin. There is one on show view den plus another off show den. The on show den is decorated with fake rock, logs, branches and substrate flooring. Opposite the show den is an interactive information sign and to the right is a large glass viewing window looking down over an aviary for Woolly Necked Storks. This aviary is similar to the Eagle aviary in that it features natural rock and has a stream and pool. The wooden indoor house for the Storks is down past the indoor housing for the Sun Bears and Monkeys from earlier in the Zoo. Walking out through another set of automatic doors on your left is the third and final part of ‘Leopards of the Black Water’, the second and larger outside enclosure. This enclosure has a large glass window surrounding the front of the enclosure and features heavy planting, more fake rock, climbing structures, a stream and a rock cave. This enclosure is home to the female Amur Leopard and like the male enclosure is also covered in netting. Opposite the female Leopard enclosure is a wooden hut with two aviaries either side. Directly opposite the Leopards is the aviary home to Moluccan Cockatoo and on the far side of the wooden hut is a larger aviary for a pair of Rhinoceros Hornbill. The path starts to flatten out gently as you walk on past the Hornbills and come to a long row of glass panels, looking up into the hilly Asiatic Lion enclosure. The hill slopes upwards from the path and the glass panels give great views up into the exhibit called ‘Lion Country’. This enclosure is a typical big cat enclosure, and is surrounded by more of the natural trees that make up the wood on the side of the hill. The enclosure features a pond, a wooden resting area, a cave and enrichment. Due to the nature of the Zoo, the Lion house is up behind the Lion enclosure so is off show. Walking past the Lions, with the path continuing to slowly flatten out you come to one of the biggest exhibits in the Zoo, ‘Tiger Kingdom’. You first come to a wooden viewing hut, looking into the first of two large enclosures for Amur Tigers. The path continues around the enclosure, which features a large pond and fake rock, where you arrive at the inside housing building. From outside of the building, under a covered viewing area you look into a large show den that is very similar to the show den for the Amur Leopards. The path then curves around the larger Tiger enclosure, which again features fake rock, a pond but also a cave and a climbing ramp until it reaches the far end of the enclosure where there is another wooden viewing hut. Both viewing huts feature large glass viewing windows for unrestricted views off the Tigers. Like the Lion enclosure, both Tiger enclosures slope upwards away from the main path.