Persephone’s 2024 Road Trips

Minnesota Zoo

I was not expecting to like Mall of America. I was not expecting the South Dakota zoos to be particularly good. Stopping in the twin cities on the way back was the only thing that made this trip worth it.

There might be zoos with more and rarer species and more interesting architecture and more historical importance, but in terms of quality of exhibits for what they do have Minnesota has been unmatched in the conventional zoos I've been to. There are only two exhibits that I think are beneath industry standard for the species and a lot that are (among) the best in the nation for their inhabitants.
A bit late to the party here, but I always love hearing an outsider perspective on the Minnesota Zoo and it's current state, which, as many are already aware of, I have become quite disgruntled with over the past few years. The zoo used to have many more rarities, but the majority of them have been phased out over the past 3-4 years. Despite my generally jaded attitude towards the zoo nowadays, the exhibit quality is undeniably superb, with almost all of the exhibits in the outdoor portion of the zoo being some of the best of their kind.

Minnesota Zoo
was surprised by how well the entry building and Minnesota Trail work as an essentially one building zoo. Two decent aquariums, a nice indoor rainforest, and some pretty good native species exhibits. I got to see the racoons being fed through their stream, leading to a lot of fishing behaviors and a flurry of activity from three juveniles. The fisher seems to like resting in a hollow log right against the glass. The black bears, lynx, and beavers were no-shows. Tropics Trail is better than it has any right to be going on fifty years. Other than the gourami tank none of the exhibits felt beneath industry standards for their inhabitants. The great argus and rhinoceros hornbill were calling back and forth. The komodo dragon was active. Seeing the reef from above and the side is a neat experience. I know the collection's thinned a little in recent years but it's still a really good indoor rainforest complex.
Although I like the Minnesota Trail, it's probably one of the weaker parts of the zoo. The Otter exhibit is fine, but definitely a little lacking in space, and the cougar exhibit is much too small for my liking. Still a phenomenal section, just not to the level of some of the zoo's other exhibits. Did you happen to see the American Marten? probably one of the rarest species the zoo has at the moment. He rotates with the Fishers, although I have yet to see him out on exhibit.

I'm a little surprised at how much the tropics trail gets overlooked at on here. Having visited most of the major Tropical houses in the U.S (Lied Jungle, Jungleworld, Tropic World, and DWA), I'd rank the tropics trail somewhere in the middle. Despite what Omaha has claimed in the past, the Tropics Trail is actually the largest tropical house in the country, slightly edging out the Lied Jungle. Despite being over 45 years old, it still holds up remarkably well and has been able to adapt to modern husbandry standards quite effectively. despite this, there"s no denying the fact the building has lost a huge amount of diversity, with the loss of the Nocturnal Trail as well as many of it's most recognizable species, including very rare ones like Transcaspian Urail and Gaudy Red-Throated Barbet (the last in captivity). The former Asian Small-Clawed Otter exhibit has still yet to find a permanent replacement, with Tortoises, Armadillos, Common Shelduck, and Baers Pochard all taking up residency since the pandemic. Did you happen to see the Tree Kangaroo? There was a sign saying they were renovating the exhibit last time I was there (despite just renovating the same exhibit six months prior), so I'm interested to hear if the renovations are anything major.

With the loss of the boar and dhole the only rare animals on the trail are the moose and sea otter. The bactrian camels and reindeer are (mostly) domestics. Other than the coyotes (and summer guinea pigs) the only animals between the tigers and... the tigers are domestics and hoofstock. Don't get me wrong, I love hoofstock. It's nice to just sit down for a long time and watch them graze. I'm not sure how much the average zoo guest likes hoofstock and it's a fairly long walk to see them. It feels like they really need another species or complex out there, and they definitely have the space. The utter lack of changes to the dhole house at least gives me hope that they might somehow get more.
I can definitely agree that the Northern Trail/Russia's Grizzly Coast is feeling very empty at the moment. The loss of most of the rare and interesting species like Musk Oxen, Goitered Gazelles, Wild Boars, Woodland Caribou and Dholes from the trail since the pandemic has been really disappointing, and it leaves the entire outdoor portion of the zoo (minus the macaques) with just 10 wild species remaining. I really hope this can be reversed, as the Northern Trail has lost nearly half of its tonal species in the last 4 years, but the complete and utter lack of any progress to build any new exhibits leaves me disheartened. The zoo has so much land to work with yet completely lacks any ambition to actually build new exhibits or add new species.

I walked part of the treetop trail between the bison and nature center. It's cool, I guess, but it feels objectively worse than the main path since there's no signage. Doesn't even tell you what you're looking at. As for the nature center it... isn't. More of a small art gallery. Which is fine. Just don't know why they call it something it's not.
Yeah, the treetops trail is kind of a let down. Half of the walk is through nothing but uninterrupted forest, which can be occasionally relaxing, but overall is mostly just a waste of space. After all, people don't go to the zoo to walk in a forest, they can do that at a park (like the one directly north of the zoo), they come to see animals, which the treetops trail lacks, other that an elevated view of preexisting exhibits. Overall I have mixed feelings on it. It is quite unique and innovative, and is a great use of an abandoned structure, but it fails to live up to it's potential and ultimately feels incomplete without any additional exhibits, while taking funds away from projects that are probably more important.
The nature center is very disappointing, and could definitely be used a lot more efficiently. a couple terrariums for local herps or a small interpretive display would have done wonders to make it more engaging, but it feels more like an empty warehouse than anything. I like the art gallery, but it only takes up about 1/5 of the building, leave the rest completely empty.

This review has been oddly critical and I'm about to make it more so but I really, really do love this place. There are two below-standard-quality exhibits. The gourami exhibit could be fixed by just removing the poor gourami. It's fine for the other inhabitants. I'm not sure if the cow exhibit is meant to be subversive anti-farm propaganda or if a display of milking cow living conditions juxtaposed with the massive paddocks of the northern trail just makes it look like that. The cougar and leopard exhibits are of typical quality for their species but it's especially disappointing in Minnesota, a zoo with the best tiger exhibit in the country. They should really know how to give big cats the space they need to thrive.
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The Gourami tank actually extends further back than most realize, but it is still far too small for the species. Hopefully tey either find a better exhibit for them or phase them out after the last individuals die. The cougar exhibit is definitely too small and could stand to be bigger. I think it would make sense to swap the Wolverines and Cougars to give the cougars more space, while the cougar exhibit would still be adequate for the Wolverines. I don't really think the Amur Leopard exhibit is that bad to be honest. It's a little on the small side, but the exhibits are usually connected and give a good amount of climbing space for the cats. They could stand to get a little more space, but overall I find it to be a pretty decent.
The seal tank is more than enough for a geriatric pinniped. Bit concerning that they recently had dolphins in it. Zookeeper at the raccoon feeding said that there was going to be another species added soon to replace the dolphins in rotation, but she didn't know what it was or when it was coming. There go my hopes of a full renovation lol. It's still almost surreal seeing the last monk seal on the American mainland and knowing that the odds of seeing another one outside Hawaii in my lifetime are quite slim. What a gorgeous creature.
I'm very grateful to have seen Ola (the monk seal) as many times as I have. She is still quite active for her age, and has been a delight to watch over the past decade. The dolphins were supposed to be temporary as Brookfield updated their tank, but yeah, its probably for the best the Dolphins left when they did considering how many lives the discovery bay tank had taken. The zoo has been alluding to a replacement for awhile now, so hopefully they announce it soon! I really hope it isn't California Sea Lions, Harbor Seals, or Gray Seals, as all of these are already displayed at the nearby Como Zoo.

Anyway. I still adore this zoo. Probably my third favorite conventional zoo, behind Columbus and St. Louis. The flaws in the northern trail collection are still starting to show with the loss of the dhole and boar. I do hope they get a good fundraising campaign or a budget grant from the state for a new complex at some point this decade. Since what's there is almost universally good they're one of the only major zoos that can afford to put its money into pure expansion rather than replacing old, flawed complexes.
Unfortunately, I don't expect much progress in the future. Not only is the zoo still a state-run institution, which slows down the funding process significantly (although the zoo is trying to move further away from state control), but the current administration has shown not interest in building new exhibits st all, instead focusing solely on guest amenities like rock climbing, a ropes coarse, camping, and a hiking trail :rolleyes:. The only major project slated is a new ramp and renovated Japanese Macaque exhibit.
Minnesota Zoo reminded me first and foremost of North Carolina, but with a higher average exhibit quality and a substantially weaker collection. After the obvious comparison it reminded me more of Brookfield. Not precisely in form, Brookfield feels more like a campus of small museums than one building and a massive trail, but in vibes. They’re both still great. I can’t shake the feeling from either of them, though, that this was a titan of the 90s or 00s that has been resting on its laurels and slowly withering away. Both are also the larger outskirts facilities to good, compact inner city zoos. They have different problems, too. Brookfield needs to do a lot of renovations to adapt old exhibits to a new era and it looks like they might finally have the money to do it. Minnesota needs to do very little of that but may not be able to find even the money for that.
Having just visited Brookfield for the first time in nearly a decade last week, I definitely echo your comparison. It felt a lot like a mix of Minnesota and Bronx (which I also had the pleasure of visiting recently). Both zoo's have a large amount of undeveloped land and underutilized grounds. While both are still some of the best in the country, they have both fallen far from grace in many respects, with many parts of Brookfield are feeling quite empty and depressing nowadays, with the Hoofstock row, Tropic World (minus South America), and most og the east end feeling very empty. The one key difference is that Brookfield has shown a great initiative and desire to expand and build new exhibits/complexes since their new director took the helm a couple years back, with multiple new exhibits being built and many more to come, while Minnesota continues to fall behind the park and refuses to build any new exhibits. I'll try and write a review of Brookfield (as well as Shedd and Lincoln Park) to elaborate on my thoughts, but we'll see how much time I have in the coming weeks.

Great Plains Zoo

It was better than I was expecting! Granted, my expectations were low. There used to be a sizable museum on property but it's closed because the old specimens had asbestos / arsenic in them and they aren't sure they have the budget to retrofit them. Can't fault them. Best not to expose their employees unnecessarily. The only part of the museum that's open is the cafe, gift shop, and an exhibit for hornbills and dwarf meerkats. The meerkats had climbing structures that they were using, a layer of substrate to dig in, and an exercise wheel for zoomies. The exercise wheel was incredibly popular and the mongoose kept lining up in single-file lines to run in it. The wheel's an ingeniously simply way to exercise energetic animals that don't get big exhibits in zoos. Surprised the meerkats didn't have one.

The park is split into rough zoogeographic areas, although the borders kind of break down a little. The front of the park has an Asia section with macaques, Chinese alligators, komodo dragons in an enclosed area, Pallas cats, snow leopards, and amur tigers. The alligators and dragons were off display. The komodo dragon house could not be entered.

Both the big cats were sleeping on straw beds placed right against the glass. The tiger exhibit is fairly good for a small zoo. Water feature, different elevations, decent space. It's not the best I've seen but it serves its purpose. The snow leopard exhibit is one of the only ones in the zoo with a netted roof but it's really low and the elevation changes amount to a few small rock piles. It's still a little more space than I'm used to snow leopards getting but it's disappointing that there's no verticality for them. The Pallas cat exhibit felt too small for a cat that size. Or maybe Brookfield earlier in the month spoiled me with a large, highly vertical exhibit for their cat. The snow monkeys had some climbing structures and a water feature. I only saw two macaques and neither moved. I feel like I can't really judge it well.

The North America section has a genuinely excellent red fox exhibit with a fair bit of space and a burrow. The adjacent wolf exhibit is... fine. A little small. Especially since they seemed to have a pack of six. They were active and exhibiting pack behavior, including a howling session towards the end of the day. Just wish they had a little more room to run in. The exhibits for black and brown bears are among the best from a small zoo that didn't just fence off natural habitat. The black bear had a climbing structure. The brown bears had water features and patches of natural substrate to dig in. Exhibit size wasn't mind-blowing but it was decent, especially for the size of the zoo.

North America / The Americas also had exhibits for flamingoes and Galapagos tortoises as well as an ambassador animal yard. All were unoccupied. The flamingoes didn't seem to have that much water. There's also a small indoor area with tegu, bats, and snakes. The bat exhibit felt way too small for the species. About the size and quality of Milwaukee's vampire bat exhibit, but for Seba's. I won't call it the worst exhibit in the zoo because, trust me, that's bad, but it's up there. Next to the rainforest building as it's called (it's one hallway with five or so terrariums) is a set of aviaries for macaws and rainbow lorikeets, neither of which were out.

North America also has the zoo's best exhibit. It's basically just a large grassland with some trees that they fenced off and put bison and mule deer in. There's a small area separated by a concrete barrier that the mule deer can presumably get to but the bison probably won't. I did not see the deer. The bison were mostly at an angle where they were all but out of view. Kind of weird they get a privacy angle like that on such a large exhibit, but I won't complain.

The zoo is actually pretty good about animal privacy. Most species had the option to be off-show.

To the west of the entry / Komodo area there's a whole bunch of stuff that isn't zoogeographically themed. There's an expansive area consisting of a wooded island and banks, a fair amount of flat space, and a lot of water with a bridge over it home to... a pelican that was off exhibit and Canada geese. The zoo is on a river / stream. It's already overflowing with Canada geese. They did not have to bring their own. Next to it is a fairly standard caprid mountain with bighorn sheep. They were all on the ground. It was one of the nicer mountains I've seen, though, and the caprids had actual grass. Next to that is a large picnic area. Across the way is a primate house with decent indoor-outdoor holdings for squirrel monkeys, colobus monkeys, and ring-tailed lemurs. It's an older building but still seems to be satisfactory. Not big enough to have much signage, though.

Nearby is a penguin exhibit. Oh, cool, an iconic cold weather species. Good choice for a South Dakota zoo... No. The penguins were indoors. In March. In South Dakota. The pool was drained. I guess they can't heat it to keep it from freezing. Anyway, the penguins had an admittedly pretty okay indoor area they shared with inca tern. There was a chart outlining who the penguins were, how they were related, and what their personalities were. The bears and big cats had similar charts. I liked that a lot. More zoos should have those.

The flamingoes have indoor viewing and it's actually pretty decent for a concrete room. Lot of water. Pads and faux grass put on almost all the floor to keep them from walking on concrete. They might have even been flighted in the winter as there was a perch attached to the wall. None of the flamingoes were on it.

Finally, there's a barn and barn-adjacent area. There's a small building with a few herps, none exceptional, and pretty good habitats for a flightless hawk and bald eagle. The red pandas were being fed and actively eating their bamboo. Seemed to have a decent amount of space between two enclosures and a solid amount of verticality. It's not an award winning exhibit or anything but it's good for a small zoo. Next to the building was a large sloped habitat with a pop-up window in the middle. It was home to a leopard tortoise. That was probably off display for the winter. I do not understand.

The only farm animals were sheep, goats, pigs, and chickens. The chickens were confined to a coop that seemed too small for such large birds. The goats and sheep only had access to half of the potential yards. The pigs were fine. I dunno. Farm struck me as kind of weird.

The rest of the area to the left of the entry is an Australia zoogeographic area. Kind of? The walkthrough area was closed and bizarrely enough the macropods weren't allowed into it, either. They were confined to smaller side enclosures. They weren't actively cleaning it or doing landscaping or anything. Other than that the only Australian animals in the area are singing dogs. The rest of the area is made up of alpaca, which had little signage, and bactrian camels and sheep whose signage connected them to the feral populations in Australia. There was also an unoccupied aviary for Australian birds that looked pretty nice, actually.

And now we come to Africa. Because every zoo's largest section must be Africa. There's a lion exhibit under construction that actually looks pretty modern. Should be one of the best in a small American zoo. The rhinos have a 2010 exhibit with decent outdoor space and atrocious indoor holding, even if the room was fairly big. The only saving grace is that the animals apparently had the choice to be outdoors or indoors. The only toy the rhino had was a single barrel. Otherwise it was just an empty concrete room. I get that ungulates don't have the highest enrichment needs but it was kind of sad.

You know what isn't kind of sad, though? It's the giraffe winter holding. Now, look, I have more animal rights sympathies than most on this board. But I'd hope that we can all agree that a giraffe should not be confined for months in an area smaller than my one bedroom apartment. I have no idea how this is acceptable in the modern era or how the AZA hasn't mandated better holding for giraffes in northern zoos because it's starting to look like a chronic problem. The holding building also had meerkats so I guess it has some value in the summer.

As for the African savannah area, the outdoor giraffe exhibit looked okay. The African painted dogs had an exhibit that was bigger than many I've seen at much larger zoos. I was genuinely impressed. There's also a fairly large yard for a sulcatta tortoise who was off display.

And now I introduce you to the grand savannah, a massive piece of grass with a train route looping around it. About the size of the bison exhibit, if not bigger. Home to zebra and bongo... in a tiny corner of it, fenced off and across the stream from guest view. Most of the savannah isn't even an enclosure. It's just a lot of grass. It's genuinely in the top five most baffling things I've seen in a zoo.

I think I've given a pretty decent tour now. So here's where I do a new thing. The Great Plains Zoo put out a new master plan on Wednesday. I have not read it. While going through I kept an eye on how the exhibits actually looked, where trees were, how hard changes would be, how large empty spaces were, and tried to come up with my own master plan that would be realistic with the zoo's probable budget. There ended up being a few expensive projects but I'll try to present alternatives to them in case they proved to be too much. So, here it is. The master plan I would pitch to the Great Plains Zoo. And once this is done I will actually read the master plan, summarize it, and see how far off I was.

I would work to enhance the zoogeographic theming in the front half of the zoo. The Asia area would be expanded to include some of the unrelated exhibits such as the bighorn sheep and Canada goose pond. First change, I think the Pallas cat should be replaced with birds or squirrels. They fit the exhibit size better and the zoo is seriously lacking in birds (although that might just be the time of year I visited). Second, the snow leopard should get a higher ceiling and an actual climbing structure. The first big change, and one that I know probably won't happen, is that I would replace the komodo dragon area with an actual greenhouse. This would allow for year-round viewing and the new building could also provide updated holding space for the adjacent tropical animals in the winter. This would require some expansion into the pelican exhibit, but that was getting overhauled anyway.

I would split the pelican exhibit in two along the bridge. On one side would be small-clawed otters because there's a fair bit of water and land and how does this zoo not have otters. Every zoo should have otters. They're crowd-pleasers that don't take too much space. River otters could also work if they were ignoring the zoogeographic theme and wanted something that could be out year-round. Some trees would need hot-wired or removed so the otters couldn't climb out. On the other side I would put either tapirs, babirusa or mutnjacs and a few Asian waterfowl and turtles. Tapir might need too much holding space. Muntjacs or chevrotains wouldn't but are a bit small for the space. Babirusa are more likely to attack turtles or waterfowl. Take your pick. I think there's some adjacent space that could be used for tapir holding, but it might not be enough.

I would like to get rid of the caprid mountain and replace it with a red-crowned crane aviary for more birds and compliment the snow monkeys. But there's, like, a zero percent chance that happens so at least they could put in gorals instead of bighorn sheep. Lake Superior and New Zoo have gorals and they aren't very big. If they want to keep the bighorn sheep they could build a new caprid structure in the bison paddock so the goats could have a place to retreat from bison. Would also add another species to the exhibit.

The Chinese Alligators are kind of weird being right across from kangaroos but honestly I can't see the zoo getting freshies and there's nothing better for that exhibit so I say leave it be. I'd replace the alpaca yard with either a red fox exhibit (spoilers, they're getting booted from North America) or a lorikeet aviary and winter holding. Camels and singing dogs can stay. I'd replace the sheep exhibit in Australia with emu. For the primate building I'd give tree kangaroos the area now occupied by colobus monkeys and then, on the other side, have two other arboreal species to compare and contrast in signage and maybe a skeleton model lineup. The ring-tailed lemurs can stay. They're iconic and I couldn't fit them elsewhere. Island primates, close enough. I'd put a cockatoo in the squirrel monkey area. I think they could do well in a primate exhibit and some of them are Australian. If the foxes don't make it into the alpaca area there are two 0.1 acre plots beside the house that could be used for them and maybe kookaburra if they can't go in the main Australia aviary. Feels wrong to have an Australia section without kookaburras.

As for the picnic field, I'm of two minds. It could just be left alone. There isn't another picnic area in the zoo. But it feels like a lot of wasted space. It's 0.7 acres, which is more than enough for a modern sea lion exhibit. Now, California sea lions don't live in Australia. But it would be easy enough to tie Australia to ocean and make it work. Sea lions are also another iconic cold weather animal that I've seen northern zoos keep outdoors. Riverbank's sea lion complex and Ft. Wayne's Australia aquarium could both fit in that space for a small aquarium complex.

I would find a way to give the chickens more space and also give the goats one of those overhead paths between paddocks that zoos love so much nowadays. It's popular for a reason and it's because they're really cool. The hawk / eagle / red panda building makes it through with zero changes. The leopard tortoise exhibit should be slightly modified for prairie dogs. Another species I'm shocked they don't have and it works well with the bubble in the middle.

Back to North America for a bit. Easiest section by far. The bear exhibits are among the best in the zoo and are going untouched. Same for the bison. I would merge the wolf and fox exhibits to give the wolves more space. It would be cool to have actual American birds instead of the lorikeets. Monk parakeets, maybe, if they could swing it. Or just have screech owls or something. I would also merge the tortoise and flamingo yards and expand the water area. Flamingoes and tortoises have been mixed at other zoos and I think the tortoises would appreciate a shallow pool to wallow in during the summer.

And... Africa. I would replace the outdoor giraffe area with cheetahs. They're a little more cold tolerant. I would do leopards since they could have a climbing structure alongside the elevated viewing platform, but i don't think they would want to net over the entire area. And then a very obvious change: fence off the savannah. Put the zebra, bongos, and tortoises in there. Maybe giraffes if they can afford better winter housing, but at this point I'm deeply skeptical on small zoos keeping giraffes in cold weather. Toss in ostriches and wildebeest and, bam, instant savannah exhibit. New savannah would be seven acres. About twenty times the size of the current zebra / bongo exhibit. Old giraffe housing can be demolished if the zoo isn't keeping giraffes anymore. Could maybe put (Amur) leopards in the outside yards and repurpose the inside into a Congo building with an aviary, fish, and herps. They don't really need to keep the meerkats since they have dwarf mongoose but if they insist they could probably fence off a small portion of the Africa area somewhere. Or put them in the current leopard tortoise exhibit. Whichever works.

I have never been in the Delbridge museum and can't comment on it but it would be cool if they made it into a proper museum on the Great Plains with some smaller species like loggerhead shrikes, black-footed ferrets, and burrowing owls alongside the taxidermy and display pieces.

Okay. Time to read the actual master plan.

...

A few things I got right: wolf / fox areas merging. There is some expansion in the Africa area, with giraffe / bongo taking up a lot of currently unused space (and getting better holding) and zebras getting the wild dog exhibit and some of the unused space. Wild dogs moving into the old giraffe area. They are keeping the mountain but there's no indication of which species will be there.

Overall, they're a lot more ambitious than I was in some ways. Except the entrance. It seems like that's staying the same. I hope they at least get better waterfowl. The pallas cat exhibit is getting expanded and the snow leopards are moving, which is good. The red pandas are taking over the area around the very underwhelming tropical rainforest building. Even getting some raptors out by the bison. All good stuff. A little confused since the tigers are staying in the cat area and also taking over almost all of the Australia pens, save the kangaroo space. That's becoming a new primate complex. The old primate complex, Australian aviary, and the picnic space are getting bulldozed for a new kangaroo yard and maybe something else.

It seems like the barn's going away entirely in favor of an otter habitat and a nature play area. As for the museum? That's becoming a new aquarium and butterfly house. Apparently on a much grander scale than the current facility with a walkthrough tunnel with large sharks / sea turtles swimming around.

So. Seems my main problem was assuming they'd keep the zoogeographic theming lol. Are my plans better or worse than what we're getting? Well, I'm a little disappointed there isn't a massive savannah since they have the space, but I get that those are a bit overdone. The new areas for zebras and bongo / giraffe look pretty good-sized at least. New tiger habitat is going to be good for the species. Looks like a lot of the bigger species are getting habitat size increases.

It's such a small thing, but I honestly can't believe they're entirely scrapping the farm. Zoos have farms! That's, like, a rule! And no penguins! I get that they'd have to make major changes to the exhibit to keep them, and they might just be moving to the aquarium, but no penguins! How dare they! Oh well. If the master plan is realized it'll be a much stronger zoo than it is now. Here's hoping they move on the giraffe holding quickly.
Glad you enjoyed GPZ! I've always found it to be an enjoyable small zoo & It's been very exciting to see the zoo progress over the past few years! just a couple of notes
- I think you meant to saw Dwarf Mongooses, not Meerkats :p.
- pretty sure the ambassador yard has a Red-Footed Tortoise in the summer.
- The "Asian" zone isn't so much one coherent zone as it is a mix of a bunch of smaller zones that just so happen to have Asian animals.
- The Zebras should have access to the Giraffe Yard, although they were off exhibit when I was last their so I don't know for sure.
- Agreed on the Giraffe holding. I don't understand why almost all indoor Giraffe exhibits in the U.S. are so tiny. Bronx, Lincoln Park, Brookfield, Como Park, and Great Plains all have painfully small indoor giraffe accommodations, and all should probably update and expand their indoor exhibits as soon as possible. Thankfully, the Giraffes will be getting an updated holding building durring the Master plan.
- The draft implementation strategy lists the aquarium project as "Aquarium + Penguins, so I would assume this means they plan on adding penguins to the aquarium.
- Pretty sure the barn itself is staying, but I'm not sure the farm animals will. In any case, the Red Panda/Raptor Building seems to remain unchanged, so at least that will still be around. I do find it strange their ditching the farm so soon, as afaik it was only built in 2012.

I liked your version of the master plan, I likely would have done something similar. Definitely very excited to see this master plan play out!


I've enjoyed reading this thread, covering South Dakota zoos I'm not too familiar along with a pair of Minnesota facilities I've visited many times. I think your assessment of the Minnesota Zoo is spot on. Still an excellent zoo but not quite at the level it was a decade ago because the outdoor section (Russia Grizzly Coast and Northern Trail) is currently lacking in filler species, underutilizing its massive ungulate paddocks, and has an overreliance on domestics or repeat species.

On the filler side, there's really only the carp right now, with boar being gone and prairie dog off exhibit. There used to be waterfowl (deaccessioned), arctic fox (exhibit next to bridge over main lake now is abandoned) and meerkats (exhibit replaced by playground) as well. Ungulate paddocks used to hold additional rare species -- muskox, woodland caribou, and goitered gazelle have all departed in the last 5 years. Formerly there was usually at least one mixed species exhibit as well (bison/pronghorn, bison/elk, wild horse/camel, camel/gazelle, not to mention the temporary giraffe/antelope and kangaroo/wallaby mixes in the llama trek area). At one time there were no repeats either -- even one of the tiger exhibits once held lions. The zoo could bring in new species without having to actually incur any infrastructure costs, so I'm optimistic that at least some of this downgrading will eventually be reversed.
Ah, so that's what that fence by the bridge was for! I always wondered what that is/was utilized for, but I'm glad I finally know! disappointing they've left it abandoned for so long. Hope they can revitalize it at some point in the future, although I find that unlikely. I don't ever remember the Gazelles and Camels being mixed? I know the gazelles and Pronghorn rotated from 2016-2019, but I never remember them mixed with the camels? They had the perfect opportunity too add more filler exhibits with the opening of the treetops trail, but that chance was unfortunately squandered :(.
 
Although I like the Minnesota Trail, it's probably one of the weaker parts of the zoo. The Otter exhibit is fine, but definitely a little lacking in space, and the cougar exhibit is much too small for my liking. Still a phenomenal section, just not to the level of some of the zoo's other exhibits. Did you happen to see the American Marten? probably one of the rarest species the zoo has at the moment. He rotates with the Fishers, although I have yet to see him out on exhibit.

Minnesota Trail is the one area that could use a rework if they want to keep their current collection. If they want to ditch the cougars and replace the otters with mink it would be perfectly fine. Otherwise yeah at least swapping them with the wolverines would give a little more space / verticality. Alternatively there does seem to be some empty space after the wolves they could develop. A full renovation of the whole trail could probably add viewing for the beaver lodge, too. I would at least take a CCTV feed of it. They even have a television right there.

EDIT: I did not see the marten, just the fisher. I am never disappointed to see a fisher.

I'm a little surprised at how much the tropics trail gets overlooked at on here. Having visited most of the major Tropical houses in the U.S (Lied Jungle, Jungleworld, Tropic World, and DWA), I'd rank the tropics trail somewhere in the middle. Despite what Omaha has claimed in the past, the Tropics Trail is actually the largest tropical house in the country, slightly edging out the Lied Jungle. Despite being over 45 years old, it still holds up remarkably well and has been able to adapt to modern husbandry standards quite effectively. despite this, there"s no denying the fact the building has lost a huge amount of diversity, with the loss of the Nocturnal Trail as well as many of it's most recognizable species, including very rare ones like Transcaspian Urail and Gaudy Red-Throated Barbet (the last in captivity). The former Asian Small-Clawed Otter exhibit has still yet to find a permanent replacement, with Tortoises, Armadillos, Common Shelduck, and Baers Pochard all taking up residency since the pandemic. Did you happen to see the Tree Kangaroo? There was a sign saying they were renovating the exhibit last time I was there (despite just renovating the same exhibit six months prior), so I'm interested to hear if the renovations are anything major.

Tropic Trail is better than Brookfield’s and it’s not even close. Haven’t been to Omaha or the Bronx yet to judge theirs. There was an exhibit across from the cape porcupines that has an under renovation tag. I’m guessing that was the tree kangaroos? The nocturnal trail hallway almost made me laugh. Felt like a very jarring interruption on par with a commercial break between the two segments of the tropical house. I will say, though, that seeing a large snake exhibit with enough room to fully stretch out is cool. So is the effect of walking straight into the aviary with no gates or physical barriers.

I can definitely agree that the Northern Trail/Russia's Grizzly Coast is feeling very empty at the moment. The loss of most of the rare and interesting species like Musk Oxen, Goitered Gazelles, Wild Boars, Woodland Caribou and Dholes from the trail since the pandemic has been really disappointing, and it leaves the entire outdoor portion of the zoo (minus the macaques) with just 10 wild species remaining. I really hope this can be reversed, as the Northern Trail has lost nearly half of its tonal species in the last 4 years, but the complete and utter lack of any progress to build any new exhibits leaves me disheartened. The zoo has so much land to work with yet completely lacks any ambition to actually build new exhibits or add new species.

There seem to be entirely unused paddocks by the bison. I’m not sure it would cost them much money to add things. Even if it did the cost of another northern trail exhibit is pretty much just the cost of holding and the fence.

Yeah, the treetops trail is kind of a let down. Half of the walk is through nothing but uninterrupted forest, which can be occasionally relaxing, but overall is mostly just a waste of space. After all, people don't go to the zoo to walk in a forest, they can do that at a park (like the one directly north of the zoo), they come to see animals, which the treetops trail lacks, other that an elevated view of preexisting exhibits. Overall I have mixed feelings on it. It is quite unique and innovative, and is a great use of an abandoned structure, but it fails to live up to it's potential and ultimately feels incomplete without any additional exhibits, while taking funds away from projects that are probably more important.
The nature center is very disappointing, and could definitely be used a lot more efficiently. a couple terrariums for local herps or a small interpretive display would have done wonders to make it more engaging, but it feels more like an empty warehouse than anything. I like the art gallery, but it only takes up about 1/5 of the building, leave the rest completely empty.

Could always move the mussels into the nature center if it has unused space. Maybe the chinchillas, too, and use it to highlight the zoo’s work with smaller species around the globe.

The Gourami tank actually extends further back than most realize, but it is still far too small for the species. Hopefully tey either find a better exhibit for them or phase them out after the last individuals die. The cougar exhibit is definitely too small and could stand to be bigger. I think it would make sense to swap the Wolverines and Cougars to give the cougars more space, while the cougar exhibit would still be adequate for the Wolverines. I don't really think the Amur Leopard exhibit is that bad to be honest. It's a little on the small side, but the exhibits are usually connected and give a good amount of climbing space for the cats. They could stand to get a little more space, but overall I find it to be a pretty decent.

If the leopard habitats are connected it isn’t that bad. I was assuming that was three separate leopard habitats. I would have suggested moving the gourami into the pond around the gibbons but I’m not sure it’s properly set up to maintain livable water quality.

I'm very grateful to have seen Ola (the monk seal) as many times as I have. She is still quite active for her age, and has been a delight to watch over the past decade. The dolphins were supposed to be temporary as Brookfield updated their tank, but yeah, it’s probably for the best the Dolphins left when they did considering how many lives the discovery bay tank had taken. The zoo has been alluding to a replacement for awhile now, so hopefully they announce it soon! I really hope it isn't California Sea Lions, Harbor Seals, or Gray Seals, as all of these are already displayed at the nearby Como Zoo.

Unless they renovate it I’m not sure what else could go there. They already have a sea otter exhibit. I’m assuming they’re not doing pinnipeds again. Large sharks are just down the path and would waste the stadium element. I’m assuming cetaceans are out. Maybe they can work out a deal with SeaWorld or the Alaska SeaLife Center for an Arctic seal but I’m sorry to say it’s probably going to be sea lions. Even though Como Park’s exhibit is way better for the species.

Unfortunately, I don't expect much progress in the future. Not only is the zoo still a state-run institution, which slows down the funding process significantly (although the zoo is trying to move further away from state control), but the current administration has shown not interest in building new exhibits st all, instead focusing solely on guest amenities like rock climbing, a ropes coarse, camping, and a hiking trail :rolleyes:. The only major project slated is a new ramp and renovated Japanese Macaque exhibit.

North Carolina has had some luck recently getting a presumably less friendly state legislature to fund some mid-size projects. I think a director with the right mentality could definitely turn things around. Alas, the shift towards upcharge guest services is pretty common in the industry.

Having just visited Brookfield for the first time in nearly a decade last week, I definitely echo your comparison. It felt a lot like a mix of Minnesota and Bronx (which I also had the pleasure of visiting recently). Both zoo's have a large amount of undeveloped land and underutilized grounds. While both are still some of the best in the country, they have both fallen far from grace in many respects, with many parts of Brookfield are feeling quite empty and depressing nowadays, with the Hoofstock row, Tropic World (minus South America), and most og the east end feeling very empty. The one key difference is that Brookfield has shown a great initiative and desire to expand and build new exhibits/complexes since their new director took the helm a couple years back, with multiple new exhibits being built and many more to come, while Minnesota continues to fall behind the park and refuses to build any new exhibits. I'll try and write a review of Brookfield (as well as Shedd and Lincoln Park) to elaborate on my thoughts, but we'll see how much time I have in the coming weeks.

Brookfield also has a larger fundraising pool that seems to have moved on from Lincoln Park after fueling that zoo’s revival. Minnesota will have to rely on a combination of convincing twin cities donors to fund them instead of the much more accessible zoo and persuading the legislature expansion a good use of tax dollars.

Glad you enjoyed GPZ! I've always found it to be an enjoyable small zoo & It's been very exciting to see the zoo progress over the past few years! just a couple of notes
- I think you meant to saw Dwarf Mongooses, not Meerkats :p.
- pretty sure the ambassador yard has a Red-Footed Tortoise in the summer.
- The "Asian" zone isn't so much one coherent zone as it is a mix of a bunch of smaller zones that just so happen to have Asian animals.
- The Zebras should have access to the Giraffe Yard, although they were off exhibit when I was last their so I don't know for sure.
- Agreed on the Giraffe holding. I don't understand why almost all indoor Giraffe exhibits in the U.S. are so tiny. Bronx, Lincoln Park, Brookfield, Como Park, and Great Plains all have painfully small indoor giraffe accommodations, and all should probably update and expand their indoor exhibits as soon as possible. Thankfully, the Giraffes will be getting an updated holding building durring the Master plan.
- The draft implementation strategy lists the aquarium project as "Aquarium + Penguins, so I would assume this means they plan on adding penguins to the aquarium.
- Pretty sure the barn itself is staying, but I'm not sure the farm animals will. In any case, the Red Panda/Raptor Building seems to remain unchanged, so at least that will still be around. I do find it strange they’re ditching the farm so soon, as afaik it was only built in 2012.

It’s a good farm! Not a great one, sure, but good! Actually Minnesota has one of the best zoo farms I’ve seen, bizarre cow exhibit aside. Curious what they do with the red panda building with the red pandas moving to the other side of the zoo. I’m glad GPZ is expanding their giraffe holding area but still kind of concerned that the AZA hasn’t taken on a bigger role here.

I liked your version of the master plan, I likely would have done something similar. Definitely very excited to see this master plan play out!

Yeah I assumed they were just going to fix the zoo they had rather than pretty much building a new one. My bad. Still very excited for the future of the zoo.
 
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I think in general zoochat doesn't have as much interest in indoor exhibits, and that's what hurts the Tropics Trail. Tropic World is pretty much solely well-known on this site for the fact that nobody likes it and I am often embarrassed to acknowledge it still exists. I don't think anybody would talk about if it were just adequate. I would similarly say when Jungle World comes up it's mostly discussing the langur habitat or whether there is enough space for certain residents. While every zoochatter has a favorite indoor rainforest, they rarely seem to every be listed as anyone's favorite exhibit in a zoo in general. It's always massive outdoor paddocks that win, of which Minnesota has far too many successful examples for Tropics Trail to be worth highlighting in comparison. This connects back to what I said about Brookfield -- which tends to fall by outdated outdoor areas while the indoor exhibits are rarely ever highlighted, but do tend to come up when you ask people their favorite parts of the zoo.
 
I'm afraid I can't give you a fresh perspective. I have been before, but that was before I started the quest to visit every AZA zoo and put all the old ones back on the table. Wanted to revisit the Georgia Aquarium, anyway, so I was fine going back to Atlanta. Zoo Atlanta has a lot going for it as far as I remember. A good gorilla complex, a surprisingly good reptile house, a few Asian rarities, and the pandas. And also a godawful Africa area. I'm told they've fixed up some of the Africa section and lost most of the rarities (they still had sun bears and raccoon dogs when I went). Curious to see how it holds up now as they prepare to lose their pandas and enter a new era.

Went to three places. Going to do a new kind of thing with one. I'll explain later.

Butterfly House and Aquarium

It was a little less impressive than I was expecting in many ways, and better in a few. As a dedicated butterfly house it's similar to some of the better ones I've been to like the one in St. Louis and the Indianapolis Zoo's. A full room with plants and a water feature or two. It had butterflies. You could feed them out of flower shaped cups (I did not). There was a pretty large area accessible to two native turtle species and king quail. I don't remember seeing king quail before and they are really, really cute. One was sitting on her eggs in a flowerpot tipped on its side. I thought their size let them work very well with the whimsical world of a butterfly house.

The tanks for herps and fish were nothing special. The aquarium signage was so bad I didn't even try a species list, which is a real shame because there were definitely species there that were unsigned and I'd rarely seen before. Some really pretty reef fish. Short-tailed nurse sharks were unsigned but present. Also had marbled jellyfish, yellow-headed jawfish, engineer gobies, and lumpfish. Pretty good selection for a one-room aquarium in South Dakota attached to a butterfly house. I wished there was a docent to ask but the only staff member I saw in the aquarium was clearly an aquarist busy with their job. There's an open-top tank that is not a touch tank. Kind of surprised that wasn't supervised.

The herp selection wasn't exceptional. A few fun cockroaches but not a dedicated insect zoo like the Butterfly House in St. Louis. The one that I don't remember seeing before was the Devil's Flower Mantis. I spent a very long time looking for it before realizing it was clinging to the mesh roof.

It's a good trip. You can buy a double-pack of tickets with the Great Plains Zoo and save some money. The two combined feels like a proper zoo experience, and for $21 it's probably worth it.

Falls Park

A free city park in the heart of Sioux Falls. There's some good signage on the history of the falls and the city, although it's pretty disappointing that they're just a shadow of their former self. The biggest fall is about twenty feet high. No Niagara, but still pretty impressive. They also let you climb on the rocks and get pretty close to the water. I did not as I did not trust my shoes to keep traction on wet rock. There's an observation tower but it's kind of wasted because there's just not much to see from it. Only worth it because it's free and there's an elevator. It's a good way to kill an hour. Would recommend going if you're ever visiting the zoo and have some time to kill.

Great Plains Zoo

It was better than I was expecting! Granted, my expectations were low. There used to be a sizable museum on property but it's closed because the old specimens had asbestos / arsenic in them and they aren't sure they have the budget to retrofit them. Can't fault them. Best not to expose their employees unnecessarily. The only part of the museum that's open is the cafe, gift shop, and an exhibit for hornbills and dwarf meerkats. The meerkats had climbing structures that they were using, a layer of substrate to dig in, and an exercise wheel for zoomies. The exercise wheel was incredibly popular and the mongoose kept lining up in single-file lines to run in it. The wheel's an ingeniously simply way to exercise energetic animals that don't get big exhibits in zoos. Surprised the meerkats didn't have one.

The park is split into rough zoogeographic areas, although the borders kind of break down a little. The front of the park has an Asia section with macaques, Chinese alligators, komodo dragons in an enclosed area, Pallas cats, snow leopards, and amur tigers. The alligators and dragons were off display. The komodo dragon house could not be entered.

Both the big cats were sleeping on straw beds placed right against the glass. The tiger exhibit is fairly good for a small zoo. Water feature, different elevations, decent space. It's not the best I've seen but it serves its purpose. The snow leopard exhibit is one of the only ones in the zoo with a netted roof but it's really low and the elevation changes amount to a few small rock piles. It's still a little more space than I'm used to snow leopards getting but it's disappointing that there's no verticality for them. The Pallas cat exhibit felt too small for a cat that size. Or maybe Brookfield earlier in the month spoiled me with a large, highly vertical exhibit for their cat. The snow monkeys had some climbing structures and a water feature. I only saw two macaques and neither moved. I feel like I can't really judge it well.

The North America section has a genuinely excellent red fox exhibit with a fair bit of space and a burrow. The adjacent wolf exhibit is... fine. A little small. Especially since they seemed to have a pack of six. They were active and exhibiting pack behavior, including a howling session towards the end of the day. Just wish they had a little more room to run in. The exhibits for black and brown bears are among the best from a small zoo that didn't just fence off natural habitat. The black bear had a climbing structure. The brown bears had water features and patches of natural substrate to dig in. Exhibit size wasn't mind-blowing but it was decent, especially for the size of the zoo.

North America / The Americas also had exhibits for flamingoes and Galapagos tortoises as well as an ambassador animal yard. All were unoccupied. The flamingoes didn't seem to have that much water. There's also a small indoor area with tegu, bats, and snakes. The bat exhibit felt way too small for the species. About the size and quality of Milwaukee's vampire bat exhibit, but for Seba's. I won't call it the worst exhibit in the zoo because, trust me, that's bad, but it's up there. Next to the rainforest building as it's called (it's one hallway with five or so terrariums) is a set of aviaries for macaws and rainbow lorikeets, neither of which were out.

North America also has the zoo's best exhibit. It's basically just a large grassland with some trees that they fenced off and put bison and mule deer in. There's a small area separated by a concrete barrier that the mule deer can presumably get to but the bison probably won't. I did not see the deer. The bison were mostly at an angle where they were all but out of view. Kind of weird they get a privacy angle like that on such a large exhibit, but I won't complain.

The zoo is actually pretty good about animal privacy. Most species had the option to be off-show.

To the west of the entry / Komodo area there's a whole bunch of stuff that isn't zoogeographically themed. There's an expansive area consisting of a wooded island and banks, a fair amount of flat space, and a lot of water with a bridge over it home to... a pelican that was off exhibit and Canada geese. The zoo is on a river / stream. It's already overflowing with Canada geese. They did not have to bring their own. Next to it is a fairly standard caprid mountain with bighorn sheep. They were all on the ground. It was one of the nicer mountains I've seen, though, and the caprids had actual grass. Next to that is a large picnic area. Across the way is a primate house with decent indoor-outdoor holdings for squirrel monkeys, colobus monkeys, and ring-tailed lemurs. It's an older building but still seems to be satisfactory. Not big enough to have much signage, though.

Nearby is a penguin exhibit. Oh, cool, an iconic cold weather species. Good choice for a South Dakota zoo... No. The penguins were indoors. In March. In South Dakota. The pool was drained. I guess they can't heat it to keep it from freezing. Anyway, the penguins had an admittedly pretty okay indoor area they shared with inca tern. There was a chart outlining who the penguins were, how they were related, and what their personalities were. The bears and big cats had similar charts. I liked that a lot. More zoos should have those.

The flamingoes have indoor viewing and it's actually pretty decent for a concrete room. Lot of water. Pads and faux grass put on almost all the floor to keep them from walking on concrete. They might have even been flighted in the winter as there was a perch attached to the wall. None of the flamingoes were on it.

Finally, there's a barn and barn-adjacent area. There's a small building with a few herps, none exceptional, and pretty good habitats for a flightless hawk and bald eagle. The red pandas were being fed and actively eating their bamboo. Seemed to have a decent amount of space between two enclosures and a solid amount of verticality. It's not an award winning exhibit or anything but it's good for a small zoo. Next to the building was a large sloped habitat with a pop-up window in the middle. It was home to a leopard tortoise. That was probably off display for the winter. I do not understand.

The only farm animals were sheep, goats, pigs, and chickens. The chickens were confined to a coop that seemed too small for such large birds. The goats and sheep only had access to half of the potential yards. The pigs were fine. I dunno. Farm struck me as kind of weird.

The rest of the area to the left of the entry is an Australia zoogeographic area. Kind of? The walkthrough area was closed and bizarrely enough the macropods weren't allowed into it, either. They were confined to smaller side enclosures. They weren't actively cleaning it or doing landscaping or anything. Other than that the only Australian animals in the area are singing dogs. The rest of the area is made up of alpaca, which had little signage, and bactrian camels and sheep whose signage connected them to the feral populations in Australia. There was also an unoccupied aviary for Australian birds that looked pretty nice, actually.

And now we come to Africa. Because every zoo's largest section must be Africa. There's a lion exhibit under construction that actually looks pretty modern. Should be one of the best in a small American zoo. The rhinos have a 2010 exhibit with decent outdoor space and atrocious indoor holding, even if the room was fairly big. The only saving grace is that the animals apparently had the choice to be outdoors or indoors. The only toy the rhino had was a single barrel. Otherwise it was just an empty concrete room. I get that ungulates don't have the highest enrichment needs but it was kind of sad.

You know what isn't kind of sad, though? It's the giraffe winter holding. Now, look, I have more animal rights sympathies than most on this board. But I'd hope that we can all agree that a giraffe should not be confined for months in an area smaller than my one bedroom apartment. I have no idea how this is acceptable in the modern era or how the AZA hasn't mandated better holding for giraffes in northern zoos because it's starting to look like a chronic problem. The holding building also had meerkats so I guess it has some value in the summer.

As for the African savannah area, the outdoor giraffe exhibit looked okay. The African painted dogs had an exhibit that was bigger than many I've seen at much larger zoos. I was genuinely impressed. There's also a fairly large yard for a sulcatta tortoise who was off display.

And now I introduce you to the grand savannah, a massive piece of grass with a train route looping around it. About the size of the bison exhibit, if not bigger. Home to zebra and bongo... in a tiny corner of it, fenced off and across the stream from guest view. Most of the savannah isn't even an enclosure. It's just a lot of grass. It's genuinely in the top five most baffling things I've seen in a zoo.

I think I've given a pretty decent tour now. So here's where I do a new thing. The Great Plains Zoo put out a new master plan on Wednesday. I have not read it. While going through I kept an eye on how the exhibits actually looked, where trees were, how hard changes would be, how large empty spaces were, and tried to come up with my own master plan that would be realistic with the zoo's probable budget. There ended up being a few expensive projects but I'll try to present alternatives to them in case they proved to be too much. So, here it is. The master plan I would pitch to the Great Plains Zoo. And once this is done I will actually read the master plan, summarize it, and see how far off I was.

I would work to enhance the zoogeographic theming in the front half of the zoo. The Asia area would be expanded to include some of the unrelated exhibits such as the bighorn sheep and Canada goose pond. First change, I think the Pallas cat should be replaced with birds or squirrels. They fit the exhibit size better and the zoo is seriously lacking in birds (although that might just be the time of year I visited). Second, the snow leopard should get a higher ceiling and an actual climbing structure. The first big change, and one that I know probably won't happen, is that I would replace the komodo dragon area with an actual greenhouse. This would allow for year-round viewing and the new building could also provide updated holding space for the adjacent tropical animals in the winter. This would require some expansion into the pelican exhibit, but that was getting overhauled anyway.

I would split the pelican exhibit in two along the bridge. On one side would be small-clawed otters because there's a fair bit of water and land and how does this zoo not have otters. Every zoo should have otters. They're crowd-pleasers that don't take too much space. River otters could also work if they were ignoring the zoogeographic theme and wanted something that could be out year-round. Some trees would need hot-wired or removed so the otters couldn't climb out. On the other side I would put either tapirs, babirusa or mutnjacs and a few Asian waterfowl and turtles. Tapir might need too much holding space. Muntjacs or chevrotains wouldn't but are a bit small for the space. Babirusa are more likely to attack turtles or waterfowl. Take your pick. I think there's some adjacent space that could be used for tapir holding, but it might not be enough.

I would like to get rid of the caprid mountain and replace it with a red-crowned crane aviary for more birds and compliment the snow monkeys. But there's, like, a zero percent chance that happens so at least they could put in gorals instead of bighorn sheep. Lake Superior and New Zoo have gorals and they aren't very big. If they want to keep the bighorn sheep they could build a new caprid structure in the bison paddock so the goats could have a place to retreat from bison. Would also add another species to the exhibit.

The Chinese Alligators are kind of weird being right across from kangaroos but honestly I can't see the zoo getting freshies and there's nothing better for that exhibit so I say leave it be. I'd replace the alpaca yard with either a red fox exhibit (spoilers, they're getting booted from North America) or a lorikeet aviary and winter holding. Camels and singing dogs can stay. I'd replace the sheep exhibit in Australia with emu. For the primate building I'd give tree kangaroos the area now occupied by colobus monkeys and then, on the other side, have two other arboreal species to compare and contrast in signage and maybe a skeleton model lineup. The ring-tailed lemurs can stay. They're iconic and I couldn't fit them elsewhere. Island primates, close enough. I'd put a cockatoo in the squirrel monkey area. I think they could do well in a primate exhibit and some of them are Australian. If the foxes don't make it into the alpaca area there are two 0.1 acre plots beside the house that could be used for them and maybe kookaburra if they can't go in the main Australia aviary. Feels wrong to have an Australia section without kookaburras.

As for the picnic field, I'm of two minds. It could just be left alone. There isn't another picnic area in the zoo. But it feels like a lot of wasted space. It's 0.7 acres, which is more than enough for a modern sea lion exhibit. Now, California sea lions don't live in Australia. But it would be easy enough to tie Australia to ocean and make it work. Sea lions are also another iconic cold weather animal that I've seen northern zoos keep outdoors. Riverbank's sea lion complex and Ft. Wayne's Australia aquarium could both fit in that space for a small aquarium complex.

I would find a way to give the chickens more space and also give the goats one of those overhead paths between paddocks that zoos love so much nowadays. It's popular for a reason and it's because they're really cool. The hawk / eagle / red panda building makes it through with zero changes. The leopard tortoise exhibit should be slightly modified for prairie dogs. Another species I'm shocked they don't have and it works well with the bubble in the middle.

Back to North America for a bit. Easiest section by far. The bear exhibits are among the best in the zoo and are going untouched. Same for the bison. I would merge the wolf and fox exhibits to give the wolves more space. It would be cool to have actual American birds instead of the lorikeets. Monk parakeets, maybe, if they could swing it. Or just have screech owls or something. I would also merge the tortoise and flamingo yards and expand the water area. Flamingoes and tortoises have been mixed at other zoos and I think the tortoises would appreciate a shallow pool to wallow in during the summer.

And... Africa. I would replace the outdoor giraffe area with cheetahs. They're a little more cold tolerant. I would do leopards since they could have a climbing structure alongside the elevated viewing platform, but i don't think they would want to net over the entire area. And then a very obvious change: fence off the savannah. Put the zebra, bongos, and tortoises in there. Maybe giraffes if they can afford better winter housing, but at this point I'm deeply skeptical on small zoos keeping giraffes in cold weather. Toss in ostriches and wildebeest and, bam, instant savannah exhibit. New savannah would be seven acres. About twenty times the size of the current zebra / bongo exhibit. Old giraffe housing can be demolished if the zoo isn't keeping giraffes anymore. Could maybe put (Amur) leopards in the outside yards and repurpose the inside into a Congo building with an aviary, fish, and herps. They don't really need to keep the meerkats since they have dwarf mongoose but if they insist they could probably fence off a small portion of the Africa area somewhere. Or put them in the current leopard tortoise exhibit. Whichever works.

I have never been in the Delbridge museum and can't comment on it but it would be cool if they made it into a proper museum on the Great Plains with some smaller species like loggerhead shrikes, black-footed ferrets, and burrowing owls alongside the taxidermy and display pieces.

Okay. Time to read the actual master plan.

...

A few things I got right: wolf / fox areas merging. There is some expansion in the Africa area, with giraffe / bongo taking up a lot of currently unused space (and getting better holding) and zebras getting the wild dog exhibit and some of the unused space. Wild dogs moving into the old giraffe area. They are keeping the mountain but there's no indication of which species will be there.

Overall, they're a lot more ambitious than I was in some ways. Except the entrance. It seems like that's staying the same. I hope they at least get better waterfowl. The pallas cat exhibit is getting expanded and the snow leopards are moving, which is good. The red pandas are taking over the area around the very underwhelming tropical rainforest building. Even getting some raptors out by the bison. All good stuff. A little confused since the tigers are staying in the cat area and also taking over almost all of the Australia pens, save the kangaroo space. That's becoming a new primate complex. The old primate complex, Australian aviary, and the picnic space are getting bulldozed for a new kangaroo yard and maybe something else.

It seems like the barn's going away entirely in favor of an otter habitat and a nature play area. As for the museum? That's becoming a new aquarium and butterfly house. Apparently on a much grander scale than the current facility with a walkthrough tunnel with large sharks / sea turtles swimming around.

So. Seems my main problem was assuming they'd keep the zoogeographic theming lol. Are my plans better or worse than what we're getting? Well, I'm a little disappointed there isn't a massive savannah since they have the space, but I get that those are a bit overdone. The new areas for zebras and bongo / giraffe look pretty good-sized at least. New tiger habitat is going to be good for the species. Looks like a lot of the bigger species are getting habitat size increases.

It's such a small thing, but I honestly can't believe they're entirely scrapping the farm. Zoos have farms! That's, like, a rule! And no penguins! I get that they'd have to make major changes to the exhibit to keep them, and they might just be moving to the aquarium, but no penguins! How dare they! Oh well. If the master plan is realized it'll be a much stronger zoo than it is now. Here's hoping they move on the giraffe holding quickly.

I'm happy you enjoyed the trip to GPZ!

I loved your master plan, and I think the zoo's new master plan will be spectacular once fully realized.

I also just wanted to let you know about a few small things to explain what you saw during your visit:

  • HPAI is still a big issue in this part of SD because of the flyway, so that's why nearly all the birds were inside (the waterfowl area and the aviaries next to the australia sheep usually have a lot of birds in them)
  • The Australia area originally featured different species (the Komodo dragon exhibit actually used to be a lorikeet exhibit and then flamingos before that), but the theming for that exhibit was kinda weak and I'm glad they're going to bulldoze it
  • The rhino building indoors is actually foam flooring instead of concrete, so don't worry about their feet ;)
  • The outdoor giraffe and zebra area (next to the lion construction) was actually twice as large as what it is now, obviously because of the lions now being built there
  • The farm used to have goat bridges, but they started falling apart and were removed

And just as a quick sidenote, the current state of the zoo has a lot to do with its history; the GPZ was in total disrepair and almost lost its accreditation in 2005, and most of the good exhibits you see there now were only constructed within about the last decade.

Apparently, they're going to be moving the penguins into the aquarium when it's built, and once the Amur Tigers move to the southeast side of the zoo, the old habitats will be revamped for snow leopards and Amur leopards. And it does look like they'll be keeping the red barn in the farm area, it just won't be a farm exhibit anymore. I think the Prairie House on that plan is going to have SD native species, including prairie dogs, black-footed ferrets and others. Additionally, believe it or not, they're going to be expanding the brown bears again and adding a third flex bear yard between the black bears and brown bear.
 
Atlanta trip approaches! I’ve been altering my schedule a bit to allow for more long distance-trips and try to space out expensive ones. Tulsa will probably be in October with Gladys Porter and South Texas in December.

Any suggestions for a good half-day activity in Atlanta? I suspect the zoo and aquarium / Olympic park will take full days. Still leaves another in the trip. I was thinking the botanical garden if that’s worth it. Honestly don’t know much about Atlanta.
 
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McDonald’s

Travel day today. Glad to have someone else to spend it with. Skirted the edge of the Smokies, only got held up by one bad wreck and/or construction site. That’s good for Tennessee on a holiday weekend. Didn’t really stop anywhere, but did insist on swinging by McDonald’s for a Grandma McFlurry.

Every stage of its design is baffling to me. Butterscotch ice cream isn’t a bad idea in and of itself but they butchered the execution and made something that is, at best, passable.

Zoo and botanical gardens tomorrow.
 
Zoo Atlanta

Ah, Zoo Atlanta. Almost certainly the zoo most bolstered by its pandas. I’d been before in the mid-2010s and was interested to see the changes. There weren’t that many, actually, other than some shrinkage of the collection’s most interesting species.

I went with my mom and, later in the afternoon, some friends. Spent a full six hours there. Overall, for the zoo as a whole, I thought the landscaping was top tier. Maybe the entry pavilion for the pandas is… overdone, but the more naturalistic forests and bamboo through most of the zoo is excellent. The food is bad. And expensive. Even for zoo standards on both counts. Don’t eat there. Leave the zoo and get something better or at least only buy snacks. The admission price of $37 is unjustifiable without pandas and I’m curious how much it shrinks to. I would peg this as a solid 22, 25 dollar zoo, tops.

Let’s go section by section.

African Savannah

I can’t remember what this is actually called and I’m too lazy to look it up. This is one of the two worst areas of the zoo. The elephant exhibit is new and it’s decent, but not winning any awards. It’s big for the space the zoo had available and there were multiple different types of feeders, but the exhibit itself was leaning into mud (or fake mud) as an aesthetic choice, which made it ugly. Didn’t help that most of the section did that, too. I know the animals don’t mind but I did. The rhino, warthog, and giraffe, zebra, and ostrich exhibits are similarly passable without being great or even particularly notable.

I liked the meerkats! There are a number of smaller sub-exhibits, it’s decently well planted, and there were enough different features like faux termite mounds, small tunnels, or ramps that they were interesting to watch. The meerkats also had access to a backstage area. This is true of many of Zoo Atlanta’s animals and, while it’s not great for guests, I love it. I found that I saw more or less everything in two sweeps of the zoo, which is imminently doable with its size.

The lion exhibit is maybe a little small for three lions, even with the lower area they have access to. It had a good deal of elevation changes and some fun climbing structures. The lions seemed to love basking at the top. My mom and I watched them for a while and observed a few behaviors that would’ve been right at home on our housecats. Fun way to display them, even if I wish it was bigger.

Zoo Atlanta has a lot of clipped birds. It’s a little disappointing with the direction of the industry and something my friends remarked on. But for cranes and bustards it isn’t that bad. Both blue cranes and kori bustards are gorgeous birds that I love looking at. The cranes are probably in my top three species in the zoo. The heavy planting and presumed backstage area (I couldn’t see the cranes in a fairly small exhibit in my first sweep) makes it good for the animals, too.

Okay, with the “just okay” section of the zoo out of the way, let’s talk about the highlights.

Scaly, Slimy Spectacular

I ended up hunkering down in here for an hour during a thunderstorm. An hour is about right to get through it. Probably the largest reptile house I’ve been in, but with a kind of unimpressive collection and atrocious signage. Yes, every species was signed. The signage, despite being screens with theoretically unlimited space, only had one or two lines of text per animal. That’s a problem when your animals aren’t always visually impressive. You need to make them interesting to guests. They did not.

I also feel like the collection might have slipped a little. I remember chameleons in one of the entry terrariums in my last visit but didn’t see them this time, even though they’re featured in large pictures in the interior. Some of the larger exhibits were empty. It felt like a lot of the spaces were held by pythons. Not great for showcasing reptile diversity if signage doesn’t identify what’s unique about each. Final criticism, promise: I wish they banned strollers. The building often has pretty wide viewing windows to bypass reptile house throughput problems, but a stroller can block the entire thing and even cause traffic jams. Almost every group had one.

Spectacular begins with an outdoor portion for Burmese mountain tortoises and impressed tortoises, both of which are repeated a few times throughout the zoo. Neither has great signage anywhere. Then there’s a large summer yard for Aldabra tortoises. During the storm both retreated to water, one a formal pond and one a muddy puddle that had formed. It was cool to see them using water features.

There are also a few smaller outdoor spaces for turtles, tortoises, and frogs that emphasize hibernation. Apparently the residents are outdoors year round. The exhibit was probably a little big for actually seeing the gopher frogs and I missed them.

There’s a large turtle pond with four species of turtle, including alligator snappers. The pond has indoor viewing in a room dedicated to Georgia amphibians and reptiles. The terrariums are large and heavily planted and I barely saw any of the species, but I’m fine with this if it lets the inhabitants hide when they want to. Signage was a little better than the rest of Spectacular but still pretty bad.

The main building is big. I kept thinking it had to be over soon and then, surprise, no. It opens with a slender-shouted crocodile exhibit that was good for the size of its inhabitant. There are a few terrariums along the wall for pythons and a monitor species. This leads into a room with a pretty decent anaconda setup, a large empty enclosure, and a pretty tall poison dart frog terrarium. This is far from the last dart frog display.

The next room is framed as a desert canyon although most of the species were forest animals. I remember they had Gila monsters here on my last trip. Those have left the collection. One of the largest exhibits, a long stream for turtles, was empty. All of the remaining large exhibits held turtles or tortoises, including an exhibit with lots of rocks and verticality that was clearly meant for lizards but now had an (unseen) pancake tortoise.

The next section is a hall of terrariums of varying sizes, most pretty large. Terrariums are on both sides of the hallway so strollers both monopolized views of wide terrariums and caused traffic jams when they tried to cross and get behind another stroller.

This is where the signage really started to grate on me. The collection here is interesting, with pretty birdsnakes, rattlesnakes, a pretty active cape cobra, a large iguana species, a massive Burmese Python exhibit, a large and well signed terrapin enclosure, and a basilisk habitat. One of the largest enclosures, signed for alligator snapping turtles, was empty. I suppose that’s their winter home.

I want to talk about the basalisk. They were impressive and the enclosure was decently sized for a lizard. I always wish they had more horizontal space. They’re known for running. Their signage emphasizes running. It is not big enough to run. I know they probably wouldn’t even if they had the chance, but it’s annoying anyway.

Oh, fine, one more criticism. I thought that Scaly, Slimy Spectacular was a bit short on interesting amphibians. There were a lot of dart frogs, titicaca frogs, hellbenders, and some spiny newts and native salamanders. But surely they could’ve had, like, a little more? Giant salamanders might be too much to ask but a larger frog species, sirens, something that wasn’t dart frogs… something? One of the python exhibits could’ve gone to a larger tree frog species at least.

I know this exhibit gets a lot of hype but for me it was definitely good, but not quite great.

African Forest

Oh, hey, it’s greatness at last.

This is what the elephant exhibit should have been. A very large amount of space given to one species, but it’s surprisingly well planted, has a lot of toys, climbing structures, and enrichment naturally incorporated, pretty good signage across the exhibit, and good atmosphere. I wish the gorillas could climb at least some of the trees but I know why that isn’t allowed. They’d probably break them. Every time I walked past here during the day the gorillas were doing something of note, whether it was eating, grooming, playing, or just a male patrolling his territory. I thought it was one of the best gorilla exhibits I’ve seen, and at a fairly small zoo to boot.

There was a stage for presentations but they hadn’t started yet for the season. We arrived at 10:30 to a staff member sheepishly telling the crowd that it shouldn’t have even been signed for the day.

The treehouse and attached primate enclosures are great. My mom had a moment of wonder when she realized that there weren’t any barriers with the birds. The superb starlings had a nest (and are gorgeous as always). We got to see a keeper weigh the babies while the parents watched on.

Golden pheasants, hamerkop, sunbittern, and whistling ducks is a good starting lineup with a number of pretty birds rounding it out. Not the best free flight aviary I’ve seen but being on the second floor does elevate it. Only the black-and-white ruffed lemurs were on display on the other side of the walkway and they went indoors pretty quickly as the storm approached.

Drills are probably Zoo Atlanta’s greatest rarity other than the pandas. They have more than I was expecting and one was prominently displaying his buttocks to the window. That made a lot of the general public interested because it’s a strange color. Not as vibrant as mandrill’s, but more natural looking if that makes sense. The other primate exhibit was large, had a lot of climbing and jumping opportunities, and was well used by its inhabitants.

This is the most consistently good area of the zoo and a really good showing for the facility.

Asian Forests

It doesn’t quite reach the same heights as Africa, but it’s not bad either. The sun bears were both active whenever I passed by and the deck gives good viewing. One was tearing into a rotten log to get at insects, which was excellent enrichment and a showcase of natural behaviors. They’re gorgeous bears, too. Shame they’re on the way out in the states. The giant otter exhibit breaks the theme but I won’t object to otters. My mom and I only saw them once between us in six hours, but they’re visually impressive and we’re being cuddly when I saw them. Otters are otters. A top tier zoo animal and in my top three in the zoo, along with the sun bears and cranes. The Komodo exhibit is pretty good for the species. Didn’t see the red pandas in multiple sweeps, but it’s good that they can be offstage or in an air conditioned box on warmer days.

The loss of raccoon dog hits hard. Loved them last time. I’m not even sure what replaced them, if anything. There was a very large yard for impressed tortoise but I doubt that would’ve fit raccoon dogs.

The orangutan exhibits were decent. Relatively large ground spaces with a few good climbing structures. Not nearly as good as the gorillas, but not really behind the curve, either.

The panda exhibits were a lot smaller than I remembered. Certainly behind the Smithsonian. I kind of get the appeal of the species, but not really. They look cuddly when they’re asleep on top of a climbing structure, but I wouldn’t want to hug a bear under any circumstances. The coloring is rather striking in person. Probably the prettiest bears. Nothing I would anchor an entire zoo’s branding, on, though. I’m not sure what will replace them. I think you’d need to modify the space pretty heavily to be up to standards for a modern large carnivore exhibit. Maybe the clouded leopard if they merged the dayrooms / outdoor areas, but their current exhibit is more or less fine. The sun bears might have it better than the pandas. The tigers wouldn’t work there without heavy alteration to merge the spaces.

A docent said that Atlanta hoped they would get pandas back given the excellent care they received at the zoo, but the official statements from management make it sound like they aren’t seriously invested in it.

My mom is obsessed with pandas and thought the merch selection in the nearby gift shop was limited. I didn’t check.

Central Pathway

This covers Complex Carnivores and a few miscellaneous exhibits.

The flamingo exhibit is fine. Sells the illusion that they could just cross the pond and walk out if they wanted. A few aren’t pink, which caught the attention of both my mom and friends.

The vulture exhibit feels a bit small for a clipped bird. If they merged the aviary complex (and ideally covered it), it would admittedly be a pretty good vulture and/or hornbill exhibit. I love ground hornbills and one of my friends was mildly obsessed with them. Toucans are in the middle aviaries. A docent suggested they were new-ish.

The bald eagle exhibit is perfectly fine for eagles. Closer to great than bad. Next to them is the bird show area with some birds in corncrib cages outside. I know they probably get free flight opportunities in the show, but they were pretty sad for parrots. Not even big corncrib cages.

Complex Carnivores still holds up pretty well. They had a lot of binturongs and they were active / social both times I passed them, grooming or cuddling each other, moving around, showing off their arboreal abilities in the process. They made a strong impression on both myself and my friends. I was lucky enough to see the fossa moving. I’m mildly surprised they still have it as I thought I’d seen them getting phased out with the bush / raccoon dogs and it wouldn’t have surprised me. It’s a solid enough exhibit for the species with good planting and verticality.

The replacement of bush dogs with mara in an exhibit focused on carnivores is baffling. At least put in foxes or a mustelid or something in there if bush dogs are unrealistic. Anything that eats meat.

The clouded leopard and tiger exhibits were a little small but not atrocious. The clouded leopard had good verticality and the tiger could easily blend in with the plants. Nearly missed it entirely. A good enough showcase for large cats, even if the lion was maybe better.

Children’s Zoo

If you’re a zoo nerd this isn’t really a necessary stop. A lot of birds. That’s kind of it, other than domestics, tamarins, and sloths. With the loss of cassowary there aren’t even any show-stoppers. The white peacock in the entry is probably as close as it gets, and he was very impressive. Had flown up to a perch and his tail was hanging down behind him. Victoria crowned pigeons were upstaged, and they’re usually the birds upstaging their fellow aviary residents.

The king vultures are separated out because one has apparently been having difficulty integrating because she’s hand-reared and doesn’t know how to interact with other vultures. She had a mirror next to her. A keeper explained all of this and that a mirror helped calm her down. That was cool. I didn’t see a lot of staff around but the ones there were seemed willing to answer questions.

I saw a tawny frogmouth on the ground. Initially confused it for a lizard with the coloring and odd pose. Their head was in the air, body hugging the ground. They opened their mouth a few times and wow is that big. Turned them from a background bird into a highlight.

The tamarins were pretty active. The sloths weren’t. Friends seemed to enjoy both, although my mom seemed disappointed that the sloths were being slothful. I don’t know what she expected.

Wattled cranes, hooded vultures and white storks are the largest birds on display in the proper children’s zoo. The vultures were flighted, the cranes and storks were not. The latter two are pretty. The storks had a pretty good sized-exhibit for them. I think it used to be the cassowaries, but I could be wrong. The farm area was kind of generic. Alpaca, pigs, goats, sheep. Didn’t pet the goats. There’s also a little pond area with signage about wetlands. Abojt a half dozen species are signed. Only saw one or two of the turtles. Didn’t expect to see bullfrogs, though. They’re pretty elusive during the day.


It’s probably not a top twenty zoo for me. Certainly not something I’d stop at on future trips that run through the city unless they make another big change. But it’s good for what it is and I’d be happy to have it as a home zoo.


Atlanta Botanical Gardens

I was tired after six hours in the heat at the zoo. Had a minor headache. Still agreed to do the botanical gardens. Do I regret it? No. They’re good gardens. Tons of pretty plants and top tier landscaping, even by botanical garden standards. I was exhausted and couldn’t really form more coherent thoughts. The gardens are a lot smaller than the map makes them look and we saw most of them. There are lots of pretty glass and wire sculptures through the gardens, an understated but beautiful Japanese garden, a fun little children’s area, and a walk through the woods that incorporates a gorgeous aqueduct and a few sculptures with the feeling of being in nature. There were a few Alice in Wonderland themed sculptures up.

The highlight is The Earth Goddess, a twenty foot sculpture of a woman’s face and hand with plants forming the skin. Multiple colors of flowers weave through the hair and, despite the organic layer, the textures are still really good. One of my favorite sculptures ever.

Are the gardens worth the $30 weekend admission. Eh… I think $20 for the weekday admission is more reasonable. It was a good stop. Even if I was thoroughly exhausted by the end and just wanted to sleep.

Today, Georgia Aquarium and whatever else I feel like doing in downtown Atlanta.
 
Great review. Really useful for my hopes to plan a future Atlanta trip - was especially interested by your passage on Slimy Scaly Spectacular but also really appreciated some of the advisory on the less well-known parts of the zoo.
 
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Georgia Aquarium

Your aquarists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, that they never stopped to ask if they should.

Look, you’re familiar with this behemoth by experience or reputation. However you rank them, this is a top three aquarium in the United States. They have a reputation for acquiring species no other aquarium can or will, most notably their manta rays, whale sharks, and tiger sharks. It’s impressive. But, as the saying goes, you can’t make an omelet without breaking a few whale sharks.

Anyways, I’m not going to get into the ethics of it in this post because I don’t really want the thread to be about that and you’ve probably already formed your opinions. Let’s talk about what there is.

Entry

The aquarium opens with the largest moon jelly tank I’ve ever seen. Probably about thirty feet long. The colors vary across it to form a rainbow effect. I thought the shark tank was supposed to be the new entrance but I guess not. It’s not bad. Pretty good even. But you aren’t meant to linger here.

Sharks!

One of the new exhibits since I was last here in the mid-2010s and one of my most anticipated, simply because they still had a tiger shark. It’s a little smaller than I was expecting but not bad by any means. Especially since in parts of it the sharks have space above the guests. The great hammerheads were doing their best to be the stars of the show. They’re large sharks and we’re being a lot more active than I expected. They seemed to like hugging the glass or swimming alongside it at odd angles. There were a lot of them, too. I was just expecting two to three. They ended up being one of the highlights of the trip.

The tiger shark was being a bit more elusive. I saw them, short glimpses at a time, hanging around the top of the tank. They’re a massive fish. The irony, though, is that with their less prominent teeth the smaller sand tigers almost look scarier. I don’t know how much longer the tiger shark will be around but they’re definitely a rarity worth seeing while they’re here.

Oh, right. There are also sand tigers and silvertip sharks. The silvertips are pretty and the sand tigers are suitably intimidating. They definitely take a backseat here, but that’s a running theme in the aquarium.

Tropical Diver

This is probably the most normal section of the aquarium. It’s dedicated to tropical reefs and corals. There are a few tanks of varying sizes showing off tropical fish. Signage is a set of slowly rotating screens that often cut to advertisements for aquarium supplies. Pretty much every major exhibit here is sponsored with varying degrees of subtlety. The signage also usually only covers a handful of more prominent species. There was one fish, grey, very thin, with a sturgeon or alligator gar like mouth, that was not on the signage or the website.

One wall of larger tanks had a ton of eels. Like, about ten green morays hanging out in pipes or just in the open. I am very curious about the chain of decisions that led to this and why a few couldn’t have been moved to Voyager or Sharks!.

Sea nettle are beautiful with their trailing tentacles and we stayed to watch them for a while. But the real star is undeniably their large living coral reef. The actual fish species take a backseat to the coral. A lot of people were taking photos in front of it. Neither my friend or I was terribly interested so we left after two minutes or so. It’s cool! I’ve just seen this kind of thing before.

The garden eel tank is one of those clever curved glass exhibits that will give you a headache if you look at it for too long or at the wrong angle. I love garden eels so it’s a bit of a disappointment, but I can see them in Chicago.

Ocean Voyager

Yeah. Can’t see this in Chicago. Of course this showed up on the thread of 100 Must See Exhibits. A repeat with ten or even five would probably still feature it. When people talk about the Georgia Aquarium, especially before the tiger sharks, this is what they mean. And it doesn’t disappoint.

It’s hard to really convey the scale of 6,000,000 gallons except that most aquarium’s signature tanks would fit in here ten or more times over. You can’t see the halfway point from the ends. Half of it is behind the tunnel and out of public view. Other than the whale sharks and manta rays, you aren’t guaranteed to see anything on any one sweep. And this aquarium is loaded with stars. Sawfish, bowmouth guitarfish, sandbar sharks, goliath and giant groupers, zebra sharks, sea turtles… I had fun going through pointing species out to my friend and telling them which aquariums they were the star attraction in. I didn’t see all of them in one sweep, but I saw everything I wanted to save the wobbegongs in two. Tank that size you’re only seeing the wobbegongs by dumb luck.

The whale sharks are suitably enormous. Bigger than most zoo’s main aquarium tanks. And they can still disappear into the back of ocean voyager easily enough. Personally, though, I love the manta rays just as much. They’re also enormous, have fun patterns on their stomach, and have a very distinct silhouette. It’s fun to see them swim beside stingray species that I know are big and see them absolutely dwarfed.

It’s Ocean Voyager. There’s nothing like it in the Americas. What do you want me to say?

My one minor criticism is that I thought the upstairs cafeteria used to have viewing of Voyager and the belugas. The walls seemed to have been covered up. Is this new? Am I making it up? I remember loving the seating there because the mantas and whale sharks tended to stay at the top of the water column.

Cold Water Quest

The other part of Georgia Aquarium’s one-two punch, although far less impressive. I went through this in reverse after trying to see the cafeteria views at its exit so I will describe exhibits in reverse order.

The beluga tank is a lot larger than I remembered. There were five of them I saw and they didn’t really look overcrowded. After about a minute or so they all retreated to the out of view shallows, probably for training and/or feeding.

The African penguins seemed to be mating or nesting. They were all paired off. One pair was standing next to each other but standing back to back, refusing to look at each other. It was quite the contrast to the other cuddling couples.

The Arctic seabird exhibit is one of the new additions since my last visit and I liked it a lot. Puffins are wonderful birds and the murres and guilemots were also both interesting. It’s one of the larger seabird exhibits I’ve seen, even if it isn’t really massive. There were a lot of docents around the aquarium, many of whom overheard our conversations and chimed in. I thought the aquarium did that really well. We spoke with her about seabird intelligence (the guilemots apparently all share one brain cell) before she got on the microphone to talk to the crowd.

Sea Otters are always great. Georgia’s exhibit lacks the consistent depth of Shedd’s, but they were still diving, cuddling, and generally playing. Otters might be the best display animal and Georgia wasn’t an argument against that.

There are a few aquariums to close out the area. One had living sand dollars, which I rarely actually see above the sand in aquaria. That was cool. Watched them for a while. Another had some very pregnant potbelly seahorse. Then weedy seadragons. I love seadragons. One of my all time favorites. They don’t seem like they’re doing anything. Just drifting along like jellyfish. They had a lot of the dragons, too, which was cool.

The giant pacific octopus was out and moving. They were a lot more vibrant than I expected and it was a delight to see them move against the glass for several minutes before settling in the opposite corner as where they’d started. All the fish stood very, very still during this.

There’s a raffish / Japanese spider crab tank, but the crabs are still fairly small. Still Japanese spider crabs, though, and even small ones are impressive. Final / first tanks are a non-touch tide pool tank and a tall kelp forest tank with swell sharks, kelp bass, sheepshead, and some smaller fish. It was cool how much verticality they had, even if the bigger species were tucked into rocks at the bottom.

This is probably my second favorite area of the aquarium, ahead of sharks, just due to the combination of fun species. Puffins, sea dragons, sea otters, penguins, octopus… it’s a good all-around area rather than one large tank.

Dolphin Cove

I did not watch a dolphin show. Just saw them in their off-show exhibit. Georgia Aquarium has some really good rockwork and the dolphins were swimming down to and interacting with it. No toys, which after seeing them play at Brookfield feels like it should be mandatory. My friend remarked that it would have made them way more interesting if there were toys present. The off-show tank is pretty small for a dolphin enclosure and really only exists as backup for the much larger (and blander) show tank.

The ibis / spoonbill aviary is new from my last visit. It’s not too big, but there are several faux trees to perch on, a roof area with a clothesline, and a few other perches. There’s also a few water areas for them. Both are charismatic species and I probably watched them for longer than the dolphins.

Upstairs

This combines Ghosts of the Swamp and Aquanauts because neither could really anchor their own section.

I’m 90% sure Ghosts of the Swamp is new from my last visit. It’s a second floor alligator exhibit where you can view seven alligators, three albino, from above. I’m pretty sure at least one pair was mating during the visit. In River Scout below you can look up into the tank and see the alligators there. It’s not the biggest alligator exhibit I’ve seen but for the size and number of the gators it was very much sufficient. Beyond a few tanks for smaller native fish, the other exhibit is a top-down view of the large native fish tank seen in River Scout. It was cool but with no signage was hardly game changing. I’m at least glad this expansion happened so the alligators got more space.

Aquanauts is clearly filler. There are two good exhibits: one of the best electric eel tanks I’ve seen, and a touch tank for freshwater stingrays. The rays did not want to be touched and were all away from the glass but the idea was cool.

The rest of Aquanauts is themed around “extremes” with a lot of gray paint, a few small-ish terrariums and aquariums, and some signage about extreme animals that are not on display. There’s also a flashlight fish tank. I did not see any light inside and it was two dark to see silhouettes or movement so I just have to assume they were there. This is clearly just filler for future expansions and unless you’re really into flashlight fish I would just hit the eel tank and touch tank on the way back from Ghosts of the Swamp.

I did not eat in the aquarium and while the new skyline view is good it has nothing on the old cafeteria view. Cost me $9.50 for two fountain drinks and I don’t remember the food being good on my last trip. Best avoided beyond quick snacks.

River Scout

I’m not sure how to feel about river scout. Parts of it are pretty solid! It opens with some beautiful discus and a large tank for piranhas, which are often relegated to kind of cramped undersized tanks. The native fish tank has some signage but it’s incomplete and slowly rotates. The sturgeon, for example, were unsigned. The tank’s gimmick is that it’s overhead for most of the gallery. It’s cool but the effect doesn’t really land for me.

After a few native species tanks there’s the old alligator enclosure. It now houses a single Mbu puffer. It’s a big, interesting fish, but the space feels underused. A friend commented on the lack of an alligator snapper. I know those are way, way more common than the current inhabitant, but I think I would personally prefer them in that space.

Tigerfish are a cool species. They aren’t too big, but their teeth and scales are impressive. Took my friend a moment to realize that the tiger fish were not the ones with stripes. For some reason I thought tiger fish were a lot larger but they’re still pretty cool.

After a few more tanks, the trail concludes with Asian small clawed otters. We did not see them on three attempts. The exhibit is a bit uneven and water-heavy for a fairly terrestrial species, but the non-public area might compensate.

Pier 51

There are two ways to see the sea lions. In the show, or in a small publicly viewable area. By the time we finally got here the shows had ended for the day and the lights were off in the publicly viewable area. This place definitely closes by 7:00. Keep that in mind when visiting.

Conclusion

It is what people say it is, for better or worse. It’s certainly a must-see attraction. I suspect I’ll lake Monterey Bay more, though, whenever I get around to visiting San Jose and the lower Bay Area. I was planning to visit San Francisco / Oakland / San Mateo next year, but I don’t think I’ll be able to get down to Monterey.


Tennessee Aquarium today on the way back. My second favorite aquarium so far right after my first. Wanted to do the Smokies, but neither my mom or I brought proper hiking shoes and the weather this morning is pretty bad.
 
Thanks for your detailed reviews of Zoo Atlanta and Georgia Aquarium. It sounds as if both are a bit hit-and-miss, especially the newer African section at the zoo and a couple of the galleries at the aquarium that underwhelmed you. But you are absolutely correct that Ocean Voyager is stunning, one of the world's great captive animal exhibits and as wonderful as Shedd and Monterey Bay are, they have nothing that can even compare to Ocean Voyager. It's just such a pity that the rest of Georgia Aquarium struggles at times.

Looking forward to a review of Tennessee Aquarium, a fabulous facility!
 
Tennessee Aquarium

The Tennessee Aquarium opened in the early nineties, right at the start of the aquarium boom, as a freshwater-centric aquarium telling the journey of water from the Appalachians down to the Gulf of Mexico. In the mid-2000s they added a second aquarium building focusing on saltwater, islands, and generally more charismatic species. The aquarium denies they did this to compete with the newly announced Georgia Aquarium two hours away, which, sure.

I last went to the Tennessee Aquarium in the late-2010s and absolutely adored it. While it doesn’t seem like there have been many additions since my last visit, I still think highly of it.

This time I went with my mom, who is not a zoo nerd. It was fun seeing her reactions to the aquariums.

Tennessee Aquarium does not let you walk in after buying a ticket, even if it isn’t particularly busy. You have to wait for the next half hour block to enter your first aquarium. This was mostly fine. The campus is gorgeous and consists of a mock stream running through the pavement and towards the Tennessee River and a number of heavily planted bridges rising above the ground. You can kill twenty minutes easily enough looking at the landscaping, but it is a little annoying.

River Journey

I adore River Journey. Even the parts that didn’t blow me away were still good and a part of a cohesive whole. The building starts with an escalator up a long, dark passage with signs overhead explaining the aquarium’s premise. You’re following water that starts in the mountains down to the sea.

After a pretty view of the river and mountains, the first real exhibit is Appalachian Cove. It’s a pretty naturalistic greenhouse exhibit on top of the building. In the past I know it had birds. I did not hear, see, or find signage for them and don’t know if they’re there. There are a few herp terrariums inlaid into trees or rocks throughout the cove. My mom thought they were small for larger native snakes. I thought they were bigger than average for their species.

The highlight of the cove (and, for my mom, the aquarium) is the otter exhibit. The otters have a complex environment consisting of multiple pools on different levels, places to hide, and a great deal of verticality. It was fun seeing an otter dive from one pool to another and play under the waterfalls. The aquarium has six otters but only one was visible during the visit.

After the otters are a few aquariums for trout and smaller fish. There isn’t much signage in either building for individual species, even some of the larger ones like sand tiger sharks or arapaima. Instead, the signage mostly focuses on ecosystems and environments. The story is about the water, not the creatures that live in it. For someone like me that’s fine. For someone who doesn’t know much about the animals I can imagine that’s very annoying.

After the cove, River Journeys lets out into its central room. Guests constantly move down a floor, weave through the exhibits on the exterior of the building, and come back into the main room to see its large tanks at a new elevation. I’ll talk more about those tanks later, but I think it’s a really cool dynamic.

Ridges to Rivers has a few tanks for smaller local species, some rarely featured in public aquariums, that aquaria nerds can gawk over and the general public can walk right past. There’s also a lake sturgeon touch tank. I usually skip touch tank but I did engage with this one since it wasn’t very crowded. I love how sturgeon feel. These clearly weren’t full adults so the aquarium was fine.

At this point my mom was pretty bored. The otters had been some time ago and everything after it had been fish. As she told me, she’s not a fish person. The next exhibit helped.

Delta Country is an alligator exhibit and probably an excuse to win over the public they might have lost. It makes the most sense to have this at the bottom of the aquarium because having it here wrecks the pacing of the water story, but it’s probably a necessary evil. The room is a free flight aviary with two duck species and three separated enclosures. Two hold alligators. The first only has juveniles with some turtles and smaller fish. The second has an alligator snapping turtle, a fair few adolescent alligators, and a small alligator gar. A bowfin was signed but unseen. The last tank has the ducks, a crayfish, some fish, and larger turtle species like a softshell. The aquarium has one of the nations largest turtle collections and they’re proud of it.

The next tank, and I believe the largest in the freshwater section, is River Giants, another major expansion that had absolutely nothing to do with Georgia Aquarium having opened just down the road. River Giants is an awe-inducing tank, mixing large catfish, freshwater whiprays, giant gourami, arapaima, sturgeon, barramundi, and alligator gar in one tank. On my last visit I’d thought it a little small, or at least overstocked. I retract this complaint. It’s well sized for what it is, even if this concept would work even better on a bigger scale. My other small complaints with what’s otherwise a breathtaking exhibit are the lack of diversity and proper signage. The species are all signed, but it’s just a plaque listing their common and scientific names, maximum length, and conservation status. I think this is where the zoo could really benefit from touch screen signage, as all of these species could have a lot of text written about them and the exhibit is about the animals rather than a particular ecosystem. There are also five or six catfish species in here. Most are readily distinguishable, some aren’t. I’m 90% sure I correctly identified the giant pangasius but I wouldn’t bet my life on it. Wasn’t sure I saw it last time, either. Since my last visit they’ve also lost eels and Nile perch. I think moving the blue catfish / red-tailed catfish to the other large tanks for their native region and replacing them with eels and perch would be a good idea if the aquarium could acquire them. Even a very large turtle could work here. Or just move in the pacu from the Amazon tank. There are options.

I guess the concept of the rest of River Journey is that it’s about the stories of other rivers now that you’ve learned about the Mississippi. Again, the order of exhibits undercuts it a little bit, but it’s a cool idea.

Rivers of the World is a number of good-sized aquariums themed around different rivers of the world. Some of the anchor species, like west African (?) crocodiles, electric eels, and fly river turtles, are common enough. Others include Siberian sturgeon, Malayan painted terrapin, elephantfish, and tiger fish that I personally found a lot more interesting. Lack of signage sometimes struck for these species as I couldn’t tell her about them and there was no information available. Tennessee also didn’t have as many docents around as Georgia. We spent a while debating if the elephantfish rooting around in the gravel with their nose were trying to stir up food or were sucking it in through the trunk.

Turtles of the World is where my mom kind of lost interest again while I was over the moon. It’s not a terribly big gallery but it’s crammed full of rarities, some of which I hadn’t heard of after 70+ zoos and aquariums. There’s also a nursery and baby turtles are very cute. Had to limit time because I had a guest who, when bored, would start thinking about how long we had left to drive. Still, top tier exhibit for nerds.

The Tennessee River is where we abruptly jump back to native species for some reason. Don’t get me wrong, it’s a very large and generally excellent gallery on larger native species, most notably the paddlefish, but also longnose gars, a half dozen turtle species, and (in a side gallery) hellbenders. You also get to see them at three separate elevations, from the surface / shallows to the middle of the water column to the bottom. It’s an excellent exhibit but also probably should have swapped places with River Giants or the Bayou. Paddlefish are always a delight and might be my favorite exhibit species for fish. Relatively low maintenance, very interesting, ties into local conservation efforts.

There are also two more tanks about Lake Nicaragua and the Amazon and if this feels like an afterthought it’s because the tanks feel like one, too. I don’t know why they’re outside rivers of the world but they’re decently big and the first has pretty cichlids and the second aowana and ripsaw catfish so they’re cool, I guess.

Intermission

My mom wanted to see the gift shop because she couldn’t imagine what the gift shop of a zoo mostly focused on fish and turtles would look like. She ended up being impressed and almost bought something. It was, in my opinion, a top tier aquarium gift shop with a mix of tacky, cheap items, standard merch, and genuinely interesting pieces. We didn’t actually buy anything, mostly because I’d already bought some cheap gift shop jewelry at Georgia the night before. I love aquarium gift shop jewelry. Can’t explain it.

We got snacks for the blood sugar boost. The snack cart knows what it is and doesn’t offer anything more advanced than hot dogs or prepackaged nachos. There are multiple restaurants right across the street from the aquarium campus. Go there if you want a real meal.

Ocean Journey

My mom liked this building way more. I don’t like it very much. The parts are all perfectly fine, if generic, but the storyteller in me hates it for not even trying to weave together a narrative when it would have been so easy to do so. The rarities also let up a lot. It’s clear this was an aquarium racing to cram in crowd pleasers to ensure its own survival. It worked, I guess. It’s hard to stand up with Georgia in driving distance. I just can’t be too enthusiastic about most of it. With one very notable exception.

The aquarium once again starts with an escalator ride to the surface. There isn’t any signage and the view is open and right next to a window. At the top is an island themed greenhouse complex. The first has some freshwater fish with minimal signage and radiated tortoises and three lemur species in a decent but not outstanding enclosure. One was lounging on his back in the sunlight which was pretty cool. Didn’t see the ringtails here or at Zoo Atlanta weirdly enough. I don’t care a whole lot since my home zoos (Brookfield, Potawatomi) both have them. Just a little strange.

Then there’s a touch tank. There are two species of small sharks, but they were hiding. The rays were being pretty active. Two fiddler rays were unsigned but caught my mom’s attention because they’re very pretty. There was also an unsigned horseshoe crab. The guitarfish had buried themselves, which was cool.

Next is a butterfly house. They had a small bird, which was cool. It was kind of underwhelming though. Nothing bigger than blue morphos was signed, although there was what looked like a pair of atlas moths in the hatchery. Don’t trust my ID here, not an insect girl. I think that butterfly houses live and die based on their value as a garden, and this one wasn’t it. No cool water features, kind of boring landscaping, not even fun statues or benches or something. Compared to really good butterfly houses, like the ones in Sioux Falls and the suburbs of St. Louis, this one felt weak. Even compared to okay to good butterfly houses like St. Louis, Raleigh, and Cincinnati it fell short.

Next is an exhibit for Antarctic penguins. It was fine. Nothing exceptional. Probably a little bigger than usual for an Antarctic exhibit without kings. What was really cool was a board identifying penguins names based on their species and wing bands. More zoos should do that. Elevated the experience as suddenly I was trying to figure out which penguin was which. The penguins objectively weren’t doing anything cool but they were still more entertaining than usual because of it.

Secret Reef, Ocean Journey’s main tank, is incredible. The species list is kind of weak, with sandbar / sand tiger sharks, a green sea turtle, and eagle rays leading the pack. Barely matters. The exhibit is just cool. You start at a surface level viewing window and weave your way down to the floor two or three stories down, occasionally breaking for other exhibits. The rockwork is altogether excellent. Setting aside the collections, this is the second coolest tank I’ve seen behind Ocean Voyager. Still feels like it needs eels, grouper, zebra and/or nurse sharks… something a little more. Not even a new star attraction like sawfish or bowmouth guitarfish. Just a few more interesting supporting fish.

Boneless Beauties is a perfectly fine marine invertebrate gallery. It has four column tanks with moon jellyfish and adjustable lighting, which is very pretty and was one of my mom’s favorite parts of the aquarium but nothing I haven’t seen before. Then there’s a perfectly fine lobster tank, a perfectly fine sea nettle tank, and, for some reason, a perfectly fine potbelly seahorse tank. I think there were cuttlefish here on my last visit. That would’ve been nice.

Oh and I got to see a second giant pacific octopus out and moving, which is making me wonder if I’m blessed and/or cursed. My mom commented that his tank felt too small. It was far from the smallest I’ve seen for the species. Still wish more aquariums gave them a bigger, or at least more intricate, space to navigate.

There’s a flashlight fish tank. I actually saw them this time. Then a pretty solid set of coral reef community tanks with purple tang, clown triggerfish, dories, and other common but never unwelcome fish. There are Madagascar-themed terrariums here. One had a panther chameleon and a few mantella frogs. The chameleon snapped up multiple insects while we were there and my mom was absolutely fascinated by its tongue. I was less intrigued but still found it really cool.

Then there’s a rocky shores exhibit with occasional waves. The fish are decently large. There’s a dungeoness crab. A few large invertebrates that cling to the rocks and demonstrate how they survive in the waves that blow the fish around. It’s cool. Nothing spectacular.

Back to Secret Reef! The first floor of the aquarium is dominated by large tunnels on or near the aquarium’s bottom. These aren’t pure glass tunnels, but are just glass panels sticking out of the rockwork to provide a view. A lot of the smaller fish stick to these areas and there are glimpses of the larger sharks, rays, and turtle above. The light is great since it’s moving with the surface water creating ever-shifting patterns on the floor. If there’s anywhere I could spend the night at a zoo or aquarium, this has to be near the top of the list.

So, yeah. No story. Kind of themed to islands but not terribly well. If I had a chance to redo it, I would move the Madagascar terrariums to the top and then merge the touch tank into the butterfly enclosure for a mangrove forest exhibit, signifying the transition from land forest to the sea. The next level would have the rocky coast exhibit and the penguins for a more stark transition. Then the story is about water or food falling down from the surface as the exhibits weave around secret reef at different levels. Towards the top can be reef or schooling fish. Than jellies. Then flashlightfish and benthic or deep organisms at the bottom, including the octopus, spider crabs or isopods, etc. Nothing on Monterey Bay’s level. Just describing how the food webs work at different levels of the ocean as resources become scarce. Maybe have a mock whalefall on the bottom.

I don’t mind Ocean Journey but, secret reef aside, there’s nothing setting this apart from Newport, Ripley’s, Sea Life Minnesota, or any other second tier aquarium in the United States.

Final Thoughts

It was really nice having other people with me on this trip. Probably won’t be able to talk anyone into going with me to Tulsa this October. That’s fine. Should be passing through Kansas City and St. Louis on the way there and back. Want to revisit the Kansas City Zoo and see moles again at the nature center. Maybe give City Museum another shot. Can’t wait to tell you all about it then.
 
A great read. I find it fascinating that you, and likely every single zoo nerd on this site, would choose the River Journey building as their favourite, while your mom and many other regular visitors might opt for the Ocean Journey building. It's easy to see why the 'Ocean' complex would appeal to the masses, with its butterflies, penguins, lemurs (!!) and sharks, but absolutely the 'River' complex is the best in terms of a narrative and the quality of the exhibits. Plus all those dozens of turtle species...
 
A great read. I find it fascinating that you, and likely every single zoo nerd on this site, would choose the River Journey building as their favourite, while your mom and many other regular visitors might opt for the Ocean Journey building. It's easy to see why the 'Ocean' complex would appeal to the masses, with its butterflies, penguins, lemurs (!!) and sharks, but absolutely the 'River' complex is the best in terms of a narrative and the quality of the exhibits. Plus all those dozens of turtle species...

It's also an interesting study in how catering to zoo nerds isn't great, financially. The Georgia Aquarium has budget for new exhibits every few years. I don't think Tennessee has added much of note in the last decade. Some of it is surely the different size of their local population bases, but some of it is surely in their appeal to tourists and philanthropists.

I just found out that Tulsa isn't done with their new master plan yet and has another major project in the works. Is there anything in the pipeline at Omaha (that we know about)? I'm thinking of going there this October instead. Only problem is that Lee G Simmons might be closed in mid-October. Might be safer to shoot for September. I can't find any good numbers on when its season ends.
 
It was really nice having other people with me on this trip. Probably won’t be able to talk anyone into going with me to Tulsa this October. That’s fine. Should be passing through Kansas City and St. Louis on the way there and back. Want to revisit the Kansas City Zoo and see moles again at the nature center. Maybe give City Museum another shot. Can’t wait to tell you all about it then.
Kansas City is also on my near future list! Whichever of us makes it first, I look forward to your thoughts there!

Great review of the Tennessee Aquarium. It sounds very unique and appealing. I love a good narrative exhibit, but the lack of species-specific signage is a nitpick of mine, and something I think really undermines the Shedd Aquarium as well -- are any aquariums particularly good at that sort of thing?
 
Solid reviews of my 'home' zoo and aquariums! Sad to hear that Zoo Atlanta's collection is still declining in some areas; it's been two years since my last visit and I didn't have time to see everything then. I didn't know about some of those losses, like the gila monster and cassowary. The zoo does have some very nice high points to balance out its shortcomings, though. Glad you enjoyed the Ford African Rainforest! It's my favorite area, for sure. The gorillas have a fantastic setup with lots of viewing angles for the guests, and the Living Treehouse is a very nice little aviary; putting the elevated walkway level with the lemur climbing structures is fun.

The Georgia Aquarium's Ocean Voyager is straight up magnificent. Any other gripes one might have with the facility are totally overshadowed by the magic of the big tank. Honestly, I had to visit three times before the sheer immensity of it really sunk in for me. I haven't seen the new shark tank yet; I'll have to check it out one of these days.

Tennessee Aquarium is a bit mixed, but I thought it was consistently very nice on my last visit in February. The freshwater building is clearly the superior of the two, with some beautiful exhibits and a nice overall atmosphere. It's cool that the aquarium is built right beside the Tennessee River and incorporates that into its theme and collection so well, along with offering nice views out the many large windows. The gift shop is pretty respectable; I bought a nice hoodie with a penguin and the aquarium logo when I was there.
 
I just found out that Tulsa isn't done with their new master plan yet and has another major project in the works. Is there anything in the pipeline at Omaha (that we know about)? I'm thinking of going there this October instead. Only problem is that Lee G Simmons might be closed in mid-October. Might be safer to shoot for September. I can't find any good numbers on when its season ends.

I just visited Tulsa this weekend and they are finishing up renovations to the old elephant house into a museum and demonstration pavilion for elephants that will open sometime this summer it seems. Doesn't look close though seeing the outside of the former elephant building. Other than that, they haven't started any work for the new African Wilds area which replaces the old grottoes at the south end of the zoo.

Omaha has the renovated Orangutan complex opening up in two weeks on the 14th of June. After this, not sure what they have on the docket, but nothing planned for as I can tell and they haven't broken ground anywhere on the zoo other than the new vet hospital, but that doesn't have any animal exhibits.

Simmons usually closes end of September before opening up for a day or two around Halloween for a special drive thru. I plan on getting out there in the coming weeks for the ice age animatronics they have this year and can give an update then.
 
Heading out to Omaha next week. Four days in the city (Friday - Monday) to hit the safari park, zoo, and the zoo in Lincoln. Devoting two full days to Henry Doorly, one to each of the other and exploring the cities. Is there anything I should know about the zoos to avoid having a bad time? Any particularly notable species that are a pain to see?
 
First, absolutely avoid Lincoln next Saturday as Nebraska football has a home game at 2:30 pm and traffic is always absolutely bonkers even coming from Omaha.

Depending on what days you do what, now that school is back in session around here, you should have most of the zoos to yourself definitely on Monday and for the most part on Friday.

Omaha's zoo can be hectic on weekends, but you may actually catch a break with the football game being next Saturday. The joke around here is that if you need to get errands done on a Saturday, go when Husker football is playing as a ton of the population is busy watching the game. Usually the aquarium is by far the busiest building at the zoo, I usually go late in the day when most families are done with the zoo by then. Also, before setting off from the core of buildings at the entrance, make sure you have a snack or something to drink. Besides the Tusker Grill or the Alaskan Area, you might not be able to find a food and beverage kiosk that is open.

The hardest rarity to find during the day is the Togo Slippery Frogs, they are Kingdoms of the Night so it's pretty dark and their exhibit is heavily vegetated. Usually along the back wall on a ledge, but still may be hard to see.

In Madagascar, the Aye-Aye and Grey Mouse Lemurs are always pretty active, just note they are also in dark red-lit exhibits so if you are a photographer they may be difficult to catch on film.

Most of the animals are all pretty showy, definitely the cats in the Desert Dome are some of the most elusive. The African Wild Cat had been a no show for years but has been very active each of my last four visits. Make sure you check all of the rock ledges in that exhibit if not visible at first.

The Philippine Crocodile can be hard to find sometimes as the viewing can be a little limited in spots, but definitely scan 180 degrees at each viewing window if not seen right away.

Whatever day you do the Safari Park should give you ample time to explore the City as well. Will take a couple hours tops depending on how far you want to go along the walking trail. Just be aware that the black bears and gray wolves are very hit or miss here. Wolves can be especially hard to find (as most wolf exhibits seem).

Lincoln is pretty easy to get around, but the old part of the zoo can make you feel boxed in at times if it is crowded since the vegetation has really run wild over the last couple decades. This zoo has not been very crowded in my last couple of visits on weekends. Not too many of the animals here are that difficult to spot in their enclosures, the clouded leopard may be the most difficult to spot. The Animal Kingdom building can be quite warm and humid and can get a little crowded at times. Be aware that before you set off to the old portion of the zoo, make sure you have a drink or something with you or filled as there aren't many options on that side anymore other than the Safari Grille place.

If you need any other suggestions on other places of interest or restaurants, send me a message if you want. Omaha has a bit of everything and is pretty easy to get around.
 
First, absolutely avoid Lincoln next Saturday as Nebraska football has a home game at 2:30 pm and traffic is always absolutely bonkers even coming from Omaha.

Depending on what days you do what, now that school is back in session around here, you should have most of the zoos to yourself definitely on Monday and for the most part on Friday.

Omaha's zoo can be hectic on weekends, but you may actually catch a break with the football game being next Saturday. The joke around here is that if you need to get errands done on a Saturday, go when Husker football is playing as a ton of the population is busy watching the game. Usually the aquarium is by far the busiest building at the zoo, I usually go late in the day when most families are done with the zoo by then. Also, before setting off from the core of buildings at the entrance, make sure you have a snack or something to drink. Besides the Tusker Grill or the Alaskan Area, you might not be able to find a food and beverage kiosk that is open.

The hardest rarity to find during the day is the Togo Slippery Frogs, they are Kingdoms of the Night so it's pretty dark and their exhibit is heavily vegetated. Usually along the back wall on a ledge, but still may be hard to see.

In Madagascar, the Aye-Aye and Grey Mouse Lemurs are always pretty active, just note they are also in dark red-lit exhibits so if you are a photographer they may be difficult to catch on film.

Most of the animals are all pretty showy, definitely the cats in the Desert Dome are some of the most elusive. The African Wild Cat had been a no show for years but has been very active each of my last four visits. Make sure you check all of the rock ledges in that exhibit if not visible at first.

The Philippine Crocodile can be hard to find sometimes as the viewing can be a little limited in spots, but definitely scan 180 degrees at each viewing window if not seen right away.

Whatever day you do the Safari Park should give you ample time to explore the City as well. Will take a couple hours tops depending on how far you want to go along the walking trail. Just be aware that the black bears and gray wolves are very hit or miss here. Wolves can be especially hard to find (as most wolf exhibits seem).

Lincoln is pretty easy to get around, but the old part of the zoo can make you feel boxed in at times if it is crowded since the vegetation has really run wild over the last couple decades. This zoo has not been very crowded in my last couple of visits on weekends. Not too many of the animals here are that difficult to spot in their enclosures, the clouded leopard may be the most difficult to spot. The Animal Kingdom building can be quite warm and humid and can get a little crowded at times. Be aware that before you set off to the old portion of the zoo, make sure you have a drink or something with you or filled as there aren't many options on that side anymore other than the Safari Grille place.

If you need any other suggestions on other places of interest or restaurants, send me a message if you want. Omaha has a bit of everything and is pretty easy to get around.

Thank you very much for the advice. Leaning Henry Doorly Friday / Saturday, Lincoln Sunday, Lee Richardson Monday. Friday will probably be my shortest available day because I have a late arriving train the night before, but I think I can see Henry Doorly in a day and a half.

Assuming the 2023 species list is still accurate, I’m particularly interested in:

Lied Jungle: Nile softshell, Pangasius catfish, spot-necked otter, flying fox, great argus

Desert / Kingdoms: Perentie, African Wildcat, Freshwater Croc, Vampire Bat, Bulldog Bat

Aquarium: Alaskan Pollock

Pavilion: Cairo Spiny Mouse

Madagascar: Aye-Aye
 
Lied Jungle: Shouldn't have too much trouble with any of these. Catfish is easiest seen from the viewing area after the rope bridge and cave with herp exhibits. There is an overlook between the rocks before the continuing to tapir exhibit. Great Argus is free-roaming floor, so might have to do some searching while down there, but this is one of the birds not bothered by people down there. Spot-necked otter exhibit is a good size and is well planted at the back so if they aren't being active in the front pool they may be hiding in the back or in one of the many hollowed out logs in the exhibit. Might be a little tough to see them at times.

Desert Dome/KOTN: Perentie is easy with two exhibits, wildcat discussed in my first post. Freshwater croc exhibit is darker now than it used to be but still should be able to see them, vampire bats have two exhibits and should be seen. Bulldog bats have a big exhibit for these bats and you might have to search for them for a little bit since there isn't a huge swarm of them.

Aquarium: That tank the Alaskan Pollock is in is one of the tanks that seems to always have new things and the signage isn't the greatest or updated so it may or may not be in there. But the fish are usually seen in that exhibit so if it is there, you should at least see it.

Pavilion: There is only one spiny mouse and it likes to hide in the boxes or logs in the exhibit, so look inside those to find it if it isn't out and about.

Madagascar: Discussed in previous post.
 
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