Safari Niagara Safari Niagara Trip Report - July 9th 2024

SwampDonkey

In the Swamp
Premium Member
5+ year member
This is part of a series of reviews from a trip to Ontario (mostly Toronto) from this July. Also to be reviewed will be Ripley's Aquarium, Toronto Zoo, and Bird Kingdom.

Safari Niagara is the kind of place I have a "soft spot for", I like the independent zoos that are not AZA but are also striving to be a decent place for animals with a good guest experience. Wildlife World in Arizona is one of my top 3 favorite zoos and I prefer it over the major AZA zoo, Phoenix Zoo.

Safari Niagara seems to be making the right moves to make the place better for animals too, several small enclosures were clearly recently demolished in the "Silent Forest" area. The large herbivore enclosures are really nice, which is pretty par for the course of these types of zoos. Some of the carnivore enclosures need work, but in all honesty are not much worse than some new AZA carnivore enclosures that I have seen (thinking ZooTampa's Florida Panther enclosures).

The entry and exit both happen in the same main building, which is also the only gift shop. You enter this building after paying for your tickets. To be honest I am a bit surprised they didn't have a gift shop on the back side of the zoo near the giraffes and hippos as there is also a restaurant there.
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Current ticket price is $39.95 for adults and $32.95 for kids. This is Canadian dollars, so in USD today that would be $29.18 for adults and $24.06 for kids. This is a reasonable ticket price for this place - it is very large and if you have kids there is a lot to do that is included in that price.

The entrance area are also has a fairly small enclosure for red panda (unseen):
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After entering you have the option of going left or right. Left takes you to the large herbivores, right takes you to the birds of prey. We went left for the birds. The Birds of Prey are housed in aviary domes and two large flight cages for Andean condors. The birds seen include bald and golden eagles, Eurasian eagle owls, great horned owls (two aviaries), Victoria crowned cranes, and Andean condors. There was an empty aviary that recently held barn owls.

The dome and curved design of steel fencing is common in the zoo for primates, birds, and some carnivores.

Eagle Owl dome:
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Andean Condor cage:
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We saw the Wings of Wonder show, which was really well done and kept to a tight 15 minutes. They had great horned owl, harris hawk, burrowing owl, and turkey vulture. The show was well done and educational.

After the bird show we headed to Base Camp, where there is a huge playground and an adjacent petting zoo area named Papa Steve's Farm. Typical farm animals. You will also find the Siberian Tigers in this area. They have a large yard with several climbing areas and a nice pool to cool off in.
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Leaving the playground you can go down the Primate Path or straight to Silent Forest. We went to Primate Path and backtracked later for Silent Forest. Primate Path houses lar's gibbons, two siamang enclosures, and a cage for ring-tailed lemur. The gibbon enclosures are quite nice with plenty to climb on and swing from, both the siamang and lar's were brachiating around their enclosures. The lemur enclosure needs to be replaced.

Lar's gibbon:
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Siamang enclosure #1:
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Lemur dome:
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Leaving the primates takes you into the "Silent Forest" area. This area had enclosures for South African Lion, American Badger, red fox, and African Leopards. It is kind of hard to tell where Silent Forest ends and Big Cat Trek begins as there is no sign. In one of those areas there are Grey Wolves, Jaguars, and Caribou. Caribou are definitely in Big Cat Trek along with snow leopards, serval, and clouded leopards.

The carnivore enclosures here are far from terrible, but they leave something to be desired.

South African Lion:
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African Leopard:
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Clouded Leopard:
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Continued in next post.
 
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Now it was time for lunch, they have a restaurant with typical snadwich and fried things beside a really nice deck for giraffe feeding. The restaurant is outside, but they have a covered area with picnic tables.
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Across from the picnic tables is another playground and a very large pond for Nile hippos:
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I only saw one hippo's ears, but they have a calf right now as well.

Backtracking took us to the Mbali Outpost, which is kind of a strange name when the only African animal here is the white rhino. This area has white and Indian rhino, black and brown bears, North American river otters, and IMO the star - musk oxen. There is also another playground in this area as well as a pedal car ride.

We happened to arrive at the Indian rhino enclosure when they were doing $5 feedings, which is a bargain. We paid $10 and all three of us had plenty of feed for the rhino.

The bear enclosures are spacious and have plenty of different pools, climbing and vegetation for the bears.

The real star (to me) of this area is the musk oxen. I have never seen one before and almost did not here. When we first went by it was not out, but I back tracked one more time and was able to see it, which was fantastic.

White rhino:
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Indian rhino:
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Musk Oxen:
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To be continued.
 
We had intended on spending all day at Safari Niagara....but due to planning on other Niagara Falls activities we had to be leaving by 2:15PM to make it to the White Water Walk by 3:30 and later the Aero Car that we had intended to do the day before but were not able to.

So, my wife and son decided to take the Gator Express Tram to the entrance while I literally ran from exhibit to exhibit taking pictures. From where I started it was about a 1.25 K run around, so not really that bad at all.

Following the hippo leads one to Predator Ridge with nice enclosures for African lions, wild dogs, red river hogs, and waterbuck.

wild dog:
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African Lions:
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Red river hogs:
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Following Predator Ridge is Furaha Fairgrounds which has kids rids, catch and release fishing lake, another play area, as well as Bactrian camels, macaw, and common squirrel monkeys.

Macaw:
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Squirrel monkeys:
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Taking a nice swamp walkway leads to the Reptile House. The Reptile House is a nice house that you view the terrariums from the outside, you do not go inside the house. There are a number of terrariums on the two long and one short side of the house and a habitat for meercats on the fourth side.

It was nearly impossible to take pictures of the terrariums due to the light.

Reptile House:
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Gila Monster:
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Next I passed the Jungle Aviary, which is rather deceptively named. I imagined it to be a typical free flight aviary themed around the forest, but in fact it is a budgie feeding aviary. I did not go in due to the time shortage.

Jungle Aviary:
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The last area is the Serengeti Savana, which houses blue gnu, zebra, nilgai, various ibis in a dome aviary, red kangaroo, ostrich, barn owl, and common eland. All of the ungulate yards are spacious and well designed. The Ibis aviary is another dome and houses sacred, red, and white ibis, among other small birds.

Common Eland:
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Gnu:
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Ibis aviary:
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Zebra:
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That pretty much completed the whole tour. The last half was very rushed, but I was able to see pretty much everything, unlike the Toronto Zoo where we only saw about half the zoo in a day. All in we were there from about 10AM-2:25pm, which was enough time, but barely. I think the entry is reasonable and I quite enjoyed the whole zoo. You can get very close to a lot of the animals and they had a really good collection. The names of the sections is a bit strange as there is not a whole lot of consistency in terms of zoographic placement, but that's OK.

If you are in the area I think this makes a nice day. I am not certain that I would drive down from Toronto just for this, but if you are going to Niagara and are a zoo fan then it is a good option.
 
Thanks for the review and Safari Niagara reminds me of Greater Vancouver Zoo, only better! For example, Vancouver lacks a second rhino species or any monkeys whatsoever. Niagara seems to have a lot of functional, basic exhibits that aren't spectacular but aren't awful either. The enclosures are either a bit 'cagey' or are very open, such as the Lion and Tiger exhibits, but the Red River Hog, White Rhino and Indian Rhino enclosures all appear to be excellent.
 
Leaving the playground you can go down the Primate Path or straight to Silent Forest. We went to Primate Path and backtracked later for Silent Forest. Primate Path houses lar's gibbons, two siamang enclosures, and a cage for ring-tailed lemur. The gibbon enclosures are quite nice with plenty to climb on and swing from, both the siamang and lar's were brachiating around their enclosures. The lemur enclosure needs to be replaced.
Was there no sign of agile gibbons on your trip? This species is listed on Safari Niagara's website and is half the reason I'm eyeing a potential visit.
 
Was there no sign of agile gibbons on your trip? This species is listed on Safari Niagara's website and is half the reason I'm eyeing a potential visit.
They have four. A breeding pair and their two offspring. They are on display as well.
 
Was there no sign of agile gibbons on your trip? This species is listed on Safari Niagara's website and is half the reason I'm eyeing a potential visit.
I dind't see them when I was there.
They have four. A breeding pair and their two offspring. They are on display as well.
Can you let me know where they are kept? I did not see a enclosure signed for them. It is possible I missed them in that area of Silent Forest/Primate Path/Big Cat Trek that kind of joins together.
 
If you detoured through the silent forest, you would’ve missed them. They have a total of eight very similar set ups for their assorted gibbon species. Two breeding pairs of Lar Gibbons, at least three breeding pairs of siamang, and one breeding pair of agile Gibbons.

Safari Niagara easily has one of the largest overall gibbon collections in North America in terms of number of individuals, outside of probably the gibbon conservation centre in the states. They have somewhere around 28 to 30 odd individuals at the moment!
 
That pretty much completed the whole tour. The last half was very rushed, but I was able to see pretty much everything, unlike the Toronto Zoo where we only saw about half the zoo in a day.

Any chance did you see the six-banded armadillo they have/had? They are listed on the website but when another ZooChatter visited last year they did not see them.
 
If you detoured through the silent forest, you would’ve missed them. They have a total of eight very similar set ups for their assorted gibbon species. Two breeding pairs of Lar Gibbons, at least three breeding pairs of siamang, and one breeding pair of agile Gibbons.

Safari Niagara easily has one of the largest overall gibbon collections in North America in terms of number of individuals, outside of probably the gibbon conservation centre in the states. They have somewhere around 28 to 30 odd individuals at the moment!
Yep that sounds like what happened. Too bad, but I can see myself getting back there someday.
 
Any chance did you see the six-banded armadillo they have/had? They are listed on the website but when another ZooChatter visited last year they did not see them.
I did not, frankly I am not sure where they would have kept it. There were a few recently removed cages in the Silent Forest area that were small enough to hold something like that.
 
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