Lincoln Children’s Zoo
I haven’t really gone out of my way to research these zoos. I knew by far the least about this one. Half my google searches showed results for Lincoln Park. Having been, does it deserve to live in the shadow of not only Henry Doorly, but a similarly named zoo two states away?
Yes.
It’s not bad! I enjoyed my time. It just isn’t great. To start with, it has to be one of the smallest zoos I’ve been to. Wikipedia lists it at ten acres. It felt a little bigger but I could believe that. They mostly try to make up for that disadvantage by having smaller species. There are tigers and giraffes near the front and camels in the back but that’s about it for giant animals. As a result (almost) none of the exhibits feel way too small. Just on the smaller side of acceptable for the species. The bobcat, camel, alpaca, and maybe emu exhibits were the only I really wish they’d either expand or replace. Also the parrots on a stick. They even have a large unoccupied aviary at the moment.
Okay, so, ten acres. What do they got? Quite a bit, actually. Six species of cats, crocodiles, otters, giraffes, a fair few primates, one canid, penguins, flamingoes, red pandas, and camels for the ABC animals.
It leans into the children’s zoo angle by having a lot of play areas for kids. About as many as major exhibits.
Most exhibits are pretty simple. A few stood out. The red panda enclosure has a lot of overhead walkways between different plots of land. The penguin exhibit was basic but had a chart to identify individuals based on their wing tags. I like that. The serval had a lot of verticality and a fair bit of space for the species. Probably more than the clouded leopards. There was a nice little well-themed ravine area with otters, turtles, koi, and crocodiles. The naked mole rat exhibit was a series of tubes and chambers, but in 3D! It wasn’t just a wall. Most chambers had three exits and it spread over a decent little space. The butterfly house has free q-tips to dip in (also free) nectar. I had no luck but others did.
And I got to see great argus without even setting foot in Henry Doorly!
Is there a reason to go over Henry Doorly? Probably two. If you have young kids who might appreciate the play areas or if you’re a college student who can’t easily get to Omaha for a day trip.
It’s a perfectly adequate small zoo. Still wouldn’t be surprised if it lost accreditation as standards rise. You can go back to ignoring it unless you’re in Lincoln and have some time to kill.
Of course, there’s another, probably better, way to do that.
University of Nebraska State Museum
Thanks to
@MGolka for telling me about this. There’s a natural history museum on UNebraska’s campus. It’s pretty nice. Has a large central hall with skeletons and teeth from prehistoric elephants, which Nebraska apparently had a ton of. Other highlights include a giant camel reconstruction and a good gallery on the Photo Ark project, which is apparently based out of Lincoln. Lots of Pleistocene animal fossils in general. The native history gallery is currently closed due to laws requiring tribal permission to display their artifacts. Which is going to be more and more of an indictment of museums that have to keep their galleries closed as time rolls on. There’s also a single species in their living collection, the European honey bee.
I spent a little less than two hours here and enjoyed it well enough. Probably more than the zoo. After that I went on a stroll to the Haymarket district, got dinner, and walked back to my car. The campus is pretty. A lot of sculptures. Glad I’m not here on game day.
Tomorrow I’m planning to hit whatever I have time and energy for around Omaha. Starting with Lee Simmons. Then the Durham Museum and maybe the Luminarium. We’ll see how long everything takes. Saving Henry Doorly for last so I have better weather.