If you like Big Cat Falls, you must have been lucky to be there on a day when the Zoo wasn't too crowded, and the sun wasn't causing a glare on the glass that makes it difficult to see the animals.
I've never been to that zoo when it hasn't been largely packed with minions of the devil (you know, children) but I've never had a problem any of the times I've seen it.
I agree with this, not just because it destroys the hoped for peaceful atmosphere during the time the school children are there, but also because during the time the school children are there, they are NOT learning as much as they could be because they are just too noisy, and distracted.
Yes but the alternative is cutting a large portion of a zoos revenue from it. Unless you or others are interested in more closed exhibits, no zoo can ever do this.
The best time to visit any zoo I think is on weekday afternoons in the late fall and winter.
I would disagree. That's the best time to visit zoos on the Eastern seaboard when it's not a seasonal attraction (i.e. not around any holiday or promotion). There are very few days on a calendar that fit that, however.
Weekday afternoons are also the best time to visit during the spring and summer.
I'd disagree here too--the later in the day one gets to the zoo, the more school trips and parents have come out.
I want to be able to hear the sounds of animals breathing, or calling to each other, or eating, or digging ... I want to hear their footsteps, or the sounds of their wings flapping ...
So then, I'm assuming you are not a fan of any building exhibits (where you can't get this) or monorails?
Jungle World does not have any piped-in sounds.
True landscape immersion exhibits, and open-air exhibits do not have any.
I don't believe Jungleworld is immersion at all--too many doors to alert me to the fact I'm indoors.
I am surprised that your fiance can walk around the Bronx Zoo so easily. My son and I have no trouble walking far and/or fast, and my son has designed a route for seeing everything in one visit. To include the time we want to spend quietly observing animals, we must stay at least 5 hours. Also, the way the paths are layed out, it is impossible to design a route that doesn't require some backtracking.
There are routes that don't require doubling back--especially now with the closing of WoD. Even with WoD, there were only several routes that required passing three exhibit in Africa twice. I don't feel that's a large crime, however.
I understand what you mean. But the Zoo is relatively small at 45 sq. acres, so it can't really spread out. I think the Reptile and Amphibian House is perfectly designed to showcase so many different species in attractive exhibits. I also very much liked the inside of Pachyderm House, which is no longer open to the public. With its high ceilings, and large exhibits, it was a kind of immersion exhibit, although not a modern, landscape immersion exhibit. But when you were inside, you could get close to the hippos, rhinos, okapi, and elephants, and there were no glass barriers between you and the animals.
Much like Cincinnati, space is the biggest limitation at Philadelphia.
And if we could walk around the Bronx and the Philly Zoos together, we would probably realize we agree more than we think about them, too. I sounded much more critical of the Bronx Zoo than I meant to. The closing of the World of Darkness, which was also a kind of immersion (into night-time darkness) exhibit really upset me.
It was sort of like a last straw after the slow reduction in the number of animals over the past decade, and what I still believe to be an over-emphasis on conservation and education.
But, in fairness, it actually is only a part of the Wildlife Conservation Society, so at least it is true to its parent organization's name.
I think you may be forgetting that part of the reason animals have declined over the years is because that's how things happen. It's not always money. Animals die, require a zoo change, etc.
Zoos are 100% education centers. Even for someone like you who enjoys open & atmospheric feels, zoos are a chance for you to get that 'education.' For children, it's a chance to learn about something other than their pet dog. Conservation must go hand and hand with this. If we loose all of our animals, there will be nothing to give zoos atmosphere. Zoos would also be useless if either of these purposes were removed. They'd also be mildly inhumane: how can one justify keeping an animal in a cage 1,000's of miles from it's home if there's no interest in helping the animal or it's populations or learning about them?
(I also like the open-air part of the Aquatic Bird House, where the roseatte spoonbills and scarlet ibises perch on the railing inches away from visitors.)
As I often get attached by an ibis, I do not like that part lol. That whole building though requires demolition IMO. The Sea Bird Aviary next to it is however, underrated. Personally, I am surprised you have not mentioned it, especially as that plot is normally abandoned.