Oceanworld Manly Oceanworld Manly visit - February 2012

CGSwans

Well-Known Member
15+ year member
This small, aging aquarium is a lovely thirty minute ferry ride from the Sydney CBD. Oceanworld really is quite tiny for a standalone attraction. It consists of three levels and you enter on the middle level. It has no disabled access to the top or bottom level, which would almost certainly not be acceptable in a public aquarium being built today. The middle level consists of a large-ish circular 'fish bowl' style aquarium (capacity - perhaps in the low thousands of litres) which houses a variety of moray eels. There are no more active fishes in this tank, which meant that until I spotted my first eel, for a good twenty seconds or so I thought it was empty.

Surrounding this tank there are about six window-style tanks, perhaps all around the 1-2000 litre mark, no more. These had a variety of mostly NSW area marine fauna, including sea horses, wobbegongs and an octopus. They were reasonably well presented (the sea horse and pipe fish exhibit was a nice representation of how the shark net on the Manly beach directly outside is used as habitat by sea horses) but nothing spectacular. There was also a juvenile saltwater crocodile on display. This level had a touch pool and five small to very-small tanks for species including stonefish and blue-ringed octopus.

Upstairs there is an area that once held seal shows and later a series of reptile pits. Now it is a lagoon-style tropical marine fish exhibit. The stars of this exhibit are leopard sharks (three, including one very large adult), a sea turtle that is missing a flipper but apparently will one day be re-released, a couple of brown-banded bamboo sharks and maybe 100-150 tropical bony fish. For the most part you look down on the fish from above - there are three small portholes on the stairs up to the top level that form the only side-on viewing of the tank. The mermaid show referenced by (I think) Chlidonias on a thread here takes place in this area, but thankfully for my sake it was not on.

Downstairs from the entry level is an oceanarium exhbit. I didn't ask how big it is but my partner (who did a shark dive, hence the trip to Sydney and specifically Oceanworld) thinks one of the staff said it was 1.2m litres. It has seven grey nurse sharks (they are breeding here), three very large wobbegongs, a lot of Port Jackson sharks, some cownose rays, two massive southern smooth stingrays and I think three sea turtles. There are also typical eastern Australian temperate bony fish like bream, kingfish, snapper, leatherjackets, porcupine fish and so on.

And that's it. Someone who is not a dedicated aquarium enthusiast like me could be in and out of the place in thirty minutes. I was there for four hours, but would have struggled to be there for more than ninety had my partner not being doing a shark dive. It is those dives - which I am told I should thoroughly recommend - and a couple of child-oriented attractions such as the mermaid show and snorkeling (available only to children, not adults) in the tropical lagoon, that form the business model of this place. They can do up to 12 shark dives a day and I suspect they are often sold out on weekends and public holidays.

In summary - Oceanworld Manly would be a perfectly acceptable aquarium exhibit within a larger zoo complex. As a standalone aquarium, it'd probably do alright in a regional coastal town. But in Sydney, with the Sydney Aquarium (both owned by Merlin Entertainment) essentially competing in a different weight division, it still survives purely as a vehicle for the shark dives. Visit only if you want to get in the water, or if you buy a combined ticket with Sydney Aquarium and Wildlife Sydney, and want an excuse to enjoy the Manly ferry ride. I didn't see anybody snorkeling (it's weekends and school holidays only) but if you have kids that's probably decent value too.
 
Yep, you have summed it up very well, CGSwans. Sydney Aquarium in at Darling Harbour is much better to visit.

As a Melbournian, did you get a chance to visit Taronga? I'd appreciate your impressions.
 
Yep, you have summed it up very well, CGSwans. Sydney Aquarium in at Darling Harbour is much better to visit.

As a Melbournian, did you get a chance to visit Taronga? I'd appreciate your impressions.

I did. I did it in two halves - most of the exotic area on Thursday afternoon and then the native section of the zoo, along with a few bits and pieces, on Saturday. This was to allow for the quasi-tropical summer you guys are having and to get around the sudden torrential downpours that seemed to arrive each afternoon we were there. :)

I have visited Taronga on about five different occasions now over the past 14 years. Before this trip, I was there in April 2009. Not a great deal had changed - primarily the chimp renovation and what I'm sure must be a revamped nocturnal house.

I will post at greater length later or tomorrow - for now, I have almost a week's worth of washing to do.
 
@CGSwans: thanks for taking the time to type up this review, and as someone who has posted about 100 different zoo/aquarium reviews from various road trips over the years I can truly appreciate the effort. Would you happen to know the annual attendance of Oceanworld Manly? It has been in existence since 1965 but seems to survive in the presence of Taronga Zoo and Sydney Aquarium (both with at least 1.2 million annual attendance) primarily because of its location in a tourist hotspot of a major city.
 
@CGSwans: thanks for taking the time to type up this review, and as someone who has posted about 100 different zoo/aquarium reviews from various road trips over the years I can truly appreciate the effort. Would you happen to know the annual attendance of Oceanworld Manly? It has been in existence since 1965 but seems to survive in the presence of Taronga Zoo and Sydney Aquarium (both with at least 1.2 million annual attendance) primarily because of its location in a tourist hotspot of a major city.

No idea. I probably saw between 50 and 100 people there on a weekday, but I was there for four hours through the middle of a nice day to be at or around the beach. I don't think it really matters though - the place clearly is open for the sake of the shark dives first and foremost. I did see a fair few parents with small children - perhaps the relatively small size makes it good for this market. Also I suppose they probably get some incidental tourist traffic from being so close to the Manly ferry terminal (the Manly ferry is the most popular one for tourists to go on, as it takes half an hour and goes past many of the most picturesque parts of Sydney Harbour). But it's mostly about "Shark Dive Extreme".

Also - I was apparently wrong when I said they could do 'up to twelve dives a day'. I'm reliably informed that sometimes they have five groups of four. So on a busy day they may have 20 people going through, at around $250 a dive for most customers.
 
Good to see you got up to Sydney, just a pity it wasn't till after the long-beaked echidna was taken off display again!!! (;)).

How much does the Oceanworld even cost to get into? I tend to get in free everywhere so don't notice the entry fees, but this really is a tiny place. I reckon most tourists wouldn't spend anywhere near even 30 minutes here. I really liked the place but even I was only there for two hours I think (mostly taking photos and talking to some staff). I have to say though that pretty much the whole middle section was closed off for renovations so I didn't see the complete aquarium.

And yes it was me referencing the mermaids, and I am a bit sick of your constant disrespect of these fine ladies of the sea. Just because they have tails doesn't mean you should be prejudiced against them!! I wish I had seen the mermaid show (but then I am a deviant).

My 2010 trip with description of the Oceanworld for comparison: http://www.zoochat.com/24/sydney-trip-23-25-november-191369/
 
I have also been to manly, and I had to agree that it was small. But, for all what it lacks, the large tank makes up for that! It contains 4 million liters! It is build to house white sharks, and it has displayed a great white for a week or so. Sydney aquarium can't beat that.

The so-called 'fish-bowl' contained more fish when I was there, but perhaps there have been some changes.
 
When I was there just before Christmas the fishbowl was empty while they did some maintenance. They've obviously finished and probably started stocking it with the eels.

:p

Hix
 
as pointed out by CGSwans on the Melbourne Aquarium thread (http://www.zoochat.com/24/merlin-takes-over-melbourne-aquarium-underwater-275601/), Manly Oceanworld has been recently renamed Manly SEA LIFE Sanctuary (because it is now owned by Merlin), so I went to their website to have a look and they are opening a Penguin Cove for little blue penguins: Penguin Cove | Animals | Manly SEA LIFE Sanctuary
From June 28, 2012, you'll be able to see our own colony of Manly's iconic Little Penguins and learn about their importance to the shores of Manly.


Manly is lucky enough to be a breeding habitat for Little Penguins, and is one of the last colonies on the mainland of Australia! The local population of Little Penguins is around 60 breeding pairs, and they come ashore to nest every night between July and February. Manly's Little Penguin colony has been listed as an endangered population, and the local area has been declared a critical habitat for the population.

Every breeding season, people come to Manly to see the Little Penguins, and a Volunteer Penguin Warden Scheme was created. The aim of the Volunteer Penguin Wardens is to ensure that the penguins can breed in safety, and away from human and dog interference. The volunteers also educate and inform the public about the penguins, as well as making sure Council and NPWS regulations regarding dogs, boating, fishing and other interference with the penguins are followed.

Here at Manly SEA LIFE Sanctuary, Penguin Cove will be an area where visitors can see and learn about Little Penguins all year round. The Manly SEA LIFE Sanctuary penguin colony is made up of captive bred and surplus animals from other institutions in line with the Australian species management plan for the Little Penguins.
 
sigh..."happy feet", will it never end?

Anyway, photos of the penguins on the link: Putting happy feet forward in new home | News.com.au
It's a big, scary thing for a little penguin.

Leaving the safety of quarantine, these cute critters discovered their new home at Manly SEA LIFE Sanctuary in Sydney.

The suburb's iconic Little Penguins will be housed in the attraction's new display, Penguin Cove - its first penguin exhibit.

The exhibit replicates the creature's native environment, with sand, native grass and plants from the area and a sandstone-like shelter emulating the shoreline.

Manly is one of the last mainland breeding colonies of Little Penguins in Australia.

While they can usually only be seen in the wild when they are nesting, the new exhibit will allow visitors to see them all year round.

Manly SEA LIFE - formerly known as Oceanworld Manly - has relaunches as a facility for the breeding, protecting, rescue and rehabilitation of Australian marine life.


Loads of photos on this one too: Little Penguin Exhibit Opens - Photos - The Manly Daily
 
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