Flightline: I saw this new extra-fee attraction recently. It is a 70 dollar experience that actually is two seperate ziplines. The ticket office for it is a hut located on the former Wgasa Bushline Monorail unloading dock. This is rather close to the first of the ziplines, which is a practice line that is 470 feet long and begins there and ends near the bottom of the Great Rift Lift and near the Balloon Safari. The first zipline is in a cleared area of the eucalyptus forest that formerly was an Australian exhibit area (I spotted a few of the aviaries still there but they are no longer accessed by a visitor path). The second zipline is the main experience, and the top of it is reached by a truck that takes the paid visitors up a back road to a tower that has been built above far end of the old Asian Plains exhibit area and is faintly visible from a few points along the Kilimanjaro Walking Trail and Condor Ridge. The second zipline is about 3500 feet long and as much as 160 feet above the ground, and appears to go over a large part of the old Asian Plains exhibit. It also goes over a small corner of the East Africa exhibit, but this portion has been walled off from the animals so that one could argue it does not cross over it at all. The landing platform is at Kilima Point, the viewing point along the trail above East Africa, where visitors who have not paid for the experience can see the entire length of the ride head-on. The landing looks temporary and a more permanent one in the same location was being built when I was there. I asked a few of the happy guests who rode the zipline and they said that they did not notice any of the animals below, it was too exciting and scary to notice! The second zipline really does not impact the standard visitor experience, although I am curious if it is an annoyance for extra-fee Photo Caravans and Savanna Safari and VIP and Rolling Safari Tours that go to the Asian Plains exhibit. The first zipline, however, is an unfortunate and visible eyesore from the Great Lift Rift and Balloon Safari area. The park claims that one third of revenues from this attraction this year will go to the California condor conservation program.