Snowleopard's 2012 Road Trip

@Snowleopard (or anyone else who knows it): Has Little Rock Zoo the opportunity to extend/enlarge its grounds?
That would be the better way - if possible - then to reduce its collection. (Of course, when there is not a such option, then there is no other way as to do so)
 
DAY 36: Monday, August 6th, 2012

Road Trip Review # 40: Dickerson Park Zoo

Dickerson Park Zoo’s website:

Home | Dickerson Park Zoo

Zoo Map:

http://www.dickersonparkzoo.org/assets/files/2012 ZooGuide-map only.pdf

Dickerson Park Zoo is an AZA-accredited facility located in Springfield, Missouri, and it originally opened in 1922. The annual attendance is around 300,000 and there are 150 species of animals. It does not take very long to tour and even though there are some extremely hilly sections we still only spent just over 2 hours at the zoo. It was an enjoyable day and the giraffes were bold with their tongues (that sounds exotic!) but in truth the zoo is not a great one and there are many basic exhibits that are somewhat boring and basic.

THE BEST:

Reptile House – This is an excellent building that has 3 major zones: Deserts & Dry Places; Under the Canopy – Rainforest Life; and Ozarks. There are 9 species of rattlesnake and 43 species in total within the structure, and outside are yards for Aldabra tortoises, leopard tortoises, western tufted deer and an open-topped bald eagle enclosure. The building is actually called “Diversity of Life Exhibits” and for a tiny zoo it is a surprisingly solid addition and arguably the highlight of an entire visit.

Species List (43 species): Western diamondback rattlesnake, timber rattlesnake, southern Pacific rattlesnake, northern blacktail rattlesnake, western pygmy rattlesnake, banded rock rattlesnake, uracoan rattlesnake, Mojave rattlesnake, panamint rattlesnake, anaconda, Brazilian rainbow boa, Amazon tree boa, desert rosy boa, Kenyan sand boa, green tree python, Mexican cantil, Trans Peco copperhead, Osage copperhead, western cottonmouth, northern water snake, Sri Lankan spectacled cobra, rhinoceros viper, eyelash viper, tentacled snake, bullsnake, black rat snake, Great Plains rat snake, speckled kingsnake, Mali uromastyx, desert spiny lizard, gila monster, green crested basilisk, American toad, Solomon Island leaf frog, tomato frog, Vietnamese mossy frog, black-and-yellow banded poison dart frog, green-and-black poison dart frog, Golfodolcean poison dart frog, eastern tiger salamander, ornate box turtle, Missouri tarantula and Madagascar hissing cockroach.

THE AVERAGE:

Missouri Habitats – This area contains numerous species that are located in the surrounding forests: black bear, grey wolf, mountain lion, bobcat, white-tailed deer, red fox, river otter and raccoon. The best exhibit out of the 8 is perhaps for the river otters as it is large, features a lot of natural substrate and has underwater viewing as once again otters make for an entertaining zoo habitat. There are curiously large viewing windows into the deer yard; the black bears have a steep incline in their natural-looking habitat but the only way to view them other than chain-link fencing is via an overlook. Some of the other enclosures are a bit on the small side (especially for the mountain lion) but overall this is an enjoyable loop and it showcases the diversity of species found in some peoples’ backyards.

Africa – A number of marquee, popular mammals reside in this area but none of the exhibits stand-out and some are fairly dull and unimaginative. There is a Baringo giraffe yard that is spacious but almost completely devoid of grass and surrounded by high rusty fencing. My kids had a blast feeding the animals as there are 6 of them and while standing there taking photos twice I was nuzzled by the tallest of the lot as it searched for food. A couple of ostriches have a huge yard that is totally bare; a pair of lions have a chain-link fenced exhibit that is adequate but nothing more; warthogs, colobus monkeys and Damara zebras are seen mainly through metal or mesh in average exhibits.

A small building has a trio of small exhibits (meerkat, crocodile monitor and Burmese python) and outside there are two 7 ft. high aviaries with rainbow lorikeets and sun conures; plus an American alligator pool and a European wood stork enclosure in an area that is obviously not geographically accurate. Visitors can stroll through the giraffe barn and see two exhibits set into the wall (African rock python and savanna monitor) and there is a white-crested turaco aviary next to the warthogs. Bongos share a yard with East African crowned cranes and perhaps the best part of the African zone is the cheetah section as there are two large chain-link yards that are seen via an observation deck. The entire African section is extremely close to being in my “worst” section.

Tropical Asia – There are only 3 exhibits in this part of the zoo, and the 4 elephants (1.3) are the highlight for the majority of visitors. All are 31 years of age or older and there is not really a great deal of space for them in an exhibit that is sort of C-shaped as it curves a little bit around the onlookers. This is not a noteworthy elephant exhibit but it is more than likely enough to squeeze by AZA regulations and with 4 elephants the zoo seems to be a safe bet to maintain its program. Calgary Zoo is sending its 4 elephants away in a few years but of course the climate is a major reason for that decision as it is on welfare grounds that the Canadian city will soon no longer have elephants. Anyway, a smaller siamang enclosure and a pair of chain-link fenced Malayan tiger exhibits, with glass viewing areas, are the only other animal areas in Tropical Asia.

South America – This small zone has a maned wolf yard that is spacious and a rhea paddock that is quite grassy but for the most part it consists of wire cages that are adequate for the inhabitants but not especially appealing to visitors. Spider monkeys, squirrel monkeys, white-fronted capuchins, cotton-top tamarins, blue-and-yellow macaws, scarlet macaws, Chilean flamingos, mute swans and yellow-throated toucans can all be found here in basic cages.

THE WORST:

Australia – A chain-link fenced yard with a mob of red kangaroos, a couple of emus and two aviaries (kookaburras and eclectus parrots) make up this tiny part of the zoo near a goat petting corral. Yawn.

Lemur Islands – There are two lemur islands that are strong contenders for the worst that I have ever seen. Ring-tailed, red ruffed and black-and-white ruffed are the representatives and the enclosures would be decent if it were not for an obscene amount of fencing and wire around the grassy islands. Maybe some of the lemurs swam for freedom? Other than a bizarre method of escaping captivity I cannot think of a single good reason for such an appalling eyesore.

Nile Hippo Exhibit – There is a very basic sandy yard and then a small doorway where the solitary hippo can squeeze its massive bulk into its tiny pool. Visitors look down onto the shallow water and I’m not sure if the animal can even submerge its entire body in such a shoddy environment.

OVERALL:

Dickerson Park Zoo is a zoo like many other smaller ones in that there are just enough big-name animals (elephants, giraffes, lions, tigers and bears) to draw in visitors but not much going on in terms of quality habitats. Just about all the 2-3 hour zoos that I’ve visited on this extensive road trip have had a couple of outstanding sections but other than the Reptile House I found that Dickerson Park was for the most part mediocre and lacking imagination. Missouri Habitats is a okay loop of the zoo and the animal enclosures are all decent, but they don’t always offer great viewing opportunities and it doesn’t take much to hammer home a chain-link fence and toss a few exotic animals in for show. Of course there are the naysayers when it comes to zoo exhibitry that state that the animals don’t care about crashing waterfalls, mock-rock caves and other extraneous augmentations to their habitats. That may be true, but visitors are the ones that keep zoos in business and walking around for hours looking at chain-link fenced yards can be a bit on the dull side. A certain inventiveness, liveliness, vitality, etc, is needed and Dickerson Park Zoo would do well to examine what other modern small zoos have done in terms of creating ecosystems that can be admired.

Looks like a Nile hippo needs to be replaced by a pygmy hippo.
 
Road Trip Odds n’ Sods:

- I spend a long time writing my reviews at night when the kids have gone to sleep, all the chores from the day have been completed, and my wife either reads a book or watches DVD’s on our little portable player as we savor the silence. Some reviews are 3 pages in length while some are much longer (Omaha’s is 10 pages in size 14 font) and the only prep work that I did before the road trip was to basically write the opening few sentences. It was time consuming but I located the website and the map and provided links to those in my reviews (hopefully they are useful for at least a few people) and then I looked up things like attendance, year of inception, number of species, etc. Everything else comes from my visit and I take absolutely zero notes. Every single exhibit sign is photographed and if there is an extensive Reptile House then it certainly takes a long time to see it and then type out all of the names once the photos are uploaded onto the computer. I spend a lot of time and I’m a fast typist and when I am finished I always re-read it and often I leave it until the morning or next day and then re-read it so I can make slight editing decisions. When I read my reviews for the second time I occasionally decipher the tone of a review and thus when I am positive or negative about a zoo then it has been with deliberate thought and intent and the finished article gets placed onto ZooChat. My reviews are 100% superior on my 2011 and 2012 road trips in comparison to the 2008 and 2010 journeys as they are much longer and better written.

- I’ve visited Melbourne Zoo and really enjoyed most of it as there are wonderful exhibits for orangutans (one of the best in the world), gorillas, otters, tigers, butterflies, etc. I’ve visited close to 20 zoos/aquariums in Australia.

- The smaller the zoo means a tinier, crappier gift shop. Also, many smaller zoos have cafes and restaurants that can rapidly become overwhelmed on busy days. The mega-sized zoos often have huge air-conditioned restaurants and shack-like gift shops seemingly around every corner while smaller zoos rarely have extensive indoor seating areas.

- Jackson Zoo in Mississippi is set in a neighbourhood that certainly seems to be 95% African-American, and the staff at the zoo is also mainly all African-American. Yet on the Saturday morning when we visited the vast majority of the visitors were Caucasian. Bizarre.

- Dickerson Park Zoo in Missouri featured the largest people I have seen in years, as family after family was not just chunky or hefty but outright obese in a morbid fashion. Twice whole families had to turn sideways on the wooden boardwalk in the Missouri Habitats section as they were so big that they could not pass us straight on. We sat for 10 minutes on the outdoor deck near the café and every single family around us was massive. Again, bizarre.

- It is amazing at how fast children change, as people often joke about how time flies and before you know it a toddler is a teenager and asking for keys to the family vehicle. My son Jeffrey was quite sick for the first week of the trip and then one morning he woke up around the 8th day and it was as if he had never been sick in his life and the whole road trip he has been terrific. Along those same lines he was crawling everywhere as he is just over one year of age but then one morning he woke up and at St. Augustine Alligator Farm instead of his usual 5 steps before crashing down to the ground he took at least 50 steps and walked all along the wooden boardwalk occasionally glancing at crocodilians. Since that day he walks everywhere with no one holding his hand and it seems that it just dawned on him that he had the ability to walk all along. Kids go from 0 to 50 in the blink of an eye!

- Jeffrey also adores birds, which is sort of ironic as bird houses are always the least interesting aspect of zoos for both my wife and I. Raptors just sit on perches looking back at you in zoos and they rarely ever move, while pinioned birds in open-topped enclosures cannot even fly if they chose to. Often large bird houses are more like museum dioramas than actual live animal exhibits. Anyway, Jeffrey was so excited at the giraffe observation deck at Brevard Zoo in Florida that my wife said “finally he gets excited over something other than a darn bird” and sure enough he was actually pointing at a blue crane below one of the big giraffes. At Audubon Aquarium of the Americas he began hooting and pointing and we couldn’t figure it out until we saw a red-tailed hawk in the upper reaches of the canopy. The kid can spot feathers a mile away!

- My daughter Kylie loves giraffes and they are almost certainly her favourite animal. Both kids enjoy aquariums as zoo yards are often so large that it is difficult to see the animals but in an aquarium the species on show are usually always moving, colourful and are easy to locate.

- I’ve had to wait on many an occasion to gain access to a zoo as perhaps 5 out of 40 attractions have had a cashier that recognizes our AZA membership cards. I often have to get the employee to call their manager, then we have to wait for at least 5 minutes or so before someone finally arrives to confirm that we do get free admission. It can be a painful process at times and I hate holding up the line of people behind me. What works best is to deliberately choose a queue with a teenager behind the counter as almost every time they can’t be bothered calling a manager and they simply say “sounds good to me” and hold over some free tickets.

- If I had a dollar for each time I’ve seen a father or mother standing texting while their kids run along looking at animals I’d be retired from teaching by now. I do not personally own a cell phone but perhaps I should buy one as they certainly are popular, but I do not know why folks want to spend a day with their family only to stand around and text everyone else they know.
 
Ever thought of coming to the UK or Europe in general SL?, would love to hear your views on our collections.
 
DAY 37: Tuesday, August 7th, 2012

Road Trip Review # 41: Topeka Zoo

Topeka Zoo’s website:

The Topeka Zoo | Friends of the Topeka Zoo

Zoo Map:

Topeka Zoo

Topeka Zoo is an AZA-accredited facility located in Topeka, Kansas, and it originally opened in 1933 although somewhat surprisingly did not hire its first official director until 1963 (Gary K. Clarke – at 24 years of age!). Much later, in 2001, the zoo actually lost its accreditation but after a massive overhaul regained it in 2003. Much the same thing is occurring at the moment, as the zoo is hanging on to its accreditation as USDA and AZA inspectors have been visiting the establishment periodically during the last couple of years. The annual attendance is only around 150,000 and there are about 400 animals at the zoo.

Topeka Zoo has been plagued by so many problems in the past decade that to list them all here would fill a page of this review. From construction projects going over budget, creatures escaping, numerous animal deaths, mismanagement issues, outdated facilities, struggling to maintain its accreditation, declining attendance and even a hippo that had a seizure from being boiled in its outdoor pool. The temporary Penguin Plunge exhibit (which is awful) seems like a stopgap until the zoo sorts out what to do with its two species of elephant and how to stem the nonstop tide of negativity in the press. I’m not sure that any other American zoo has fallen from grace like Topeka, as it used to be known as “World Famous” and now it receives 50% of its former attendance and is overshadowed by probably 75 better zoos in the nation.

We spent 2 hours at the zoo and then drove for about an hour and spent a further 1.5 hours at Sunset Zoo in Manhattan, Kansas. This review can be considered Part I of our August 7th Kansas experience. One true highlight of Topeka Zoo is that I finally got my hands on Gary K. Clarke’s autobiography “Hey Mister – Your Alligator’s Loose!” and the 500-page hardcover book is $40 in Canada, was selling for $30 in the gift shop and was on special so I paid only $20 for the hardcover version. Smiling with my latest zoo purchase I saunter out of the gift shop and a few minutes later who do I see walk into the zoo on his cane? Gary K. Clarke! The guy who was director during Topeka Zoo’s famous years, and who ran the zoo for 26 years, was standing there with a Fort Worth Zoo t-shirt on. He was swarmed by keepers and the current director Brendan Wiley and even though my wife kept pressing me to get his autograph I chickened out as I did not want to disturb him as it would have meant interrupting a crowd of about 8-9 people.

THE BEST:

Black Bear Woods – This forested area opened in 1997 and the highlight is a grassy, natural-looking mini-forest with 4 roaming black bears. There is a wooden walkway that overlooks the habitat as well as large viewing windows at ground level. Two extremely tall aviaries for bald eagle and golden eagles are far superior to the majority of raptor exhibits at other zoos; a coyote (an ambassador animal) inhabits an enclosure that used to house an Arctic fox; a pronghorn antelope has a spacious, grassy yard; and there are two very small cages that hold a red-tailed hawk and a Virginia opossum. Other than the latter two metal cages this entire area is very well done and possibly the highlight of the zoo. One downside is that a major road goes past the black bear forest and that sort of kills any immersive feeling. Can you imagine a freeway roaring past the back of Congo Gorilla Forest in the Bronx?

African Exhibits – A large lion enclosure that opened in 1989 is still very impressive, although most of it is essentially a giant metal, open-topped cage. There is a very nice Kopje formation that creates a cave for visitors to enter to see the viewing windows and there are 3 lions currently in this grassy yard. African wild dogs have a similar habitat across the pathway that is well-shaded just as the lion exhibit is, and a couple of Addra gazelle have a nice yard with cars cruising by in the background.

The Living Classroom – This is a learning center that has one large room open to the public and there are many hands-on, interactive features available to children. Skeletons and taxidermy specimens line the walls; there are pull-out drawers with all sorts of nature items, and many terrariums where ambassador animals live out their days when they are not involved in presentations. Species list (30 species): African pygmy hedgehog, three-banded armadillo, eastern screech owl, American alligator (juvenile), red-footed tortoise, Indian star tortoise, African spurred tortoise, western hingeback tortoise, hognose snake, corn snake, common garter snake, California kingsnake, speckled kingsnake, milksnake, African ball python, children’s python, Kenyan sand boa, red-tailed boa, bearded dragon, blue-tongued skink, crested gecko, Gray’s treefrog, tiger salamander, rose-haired tarantula, Texas brown tarantula, curly haired tarantula, white-striped bird-eating spider, Arizona desert scorpion, ferocious water bug and Arizona desert centipede.

THE AVERAGE:

Tropical Rain Forest – This building opened in 1974 and it was the first domed rain forest structure in North America, beating out Sedgwick County’s Jungle building by three years. It is therefore a historic structure but in reality it is very tiny and most families that entered were gone within 10 minutes. Outside is a diabolically tiny fishing cat metal cage that is a total disgrace, and indoors is a crashing waterfall, newly modernized skylights on the dome, a handful of free-ranging birds (including scarlet ibis, spoonbill, African grey parrot and two Chilean flamingos that came within touching distance of us on the pathway) and these other species: dwarf caiman, large Malayan chevrotain, southern three-banded armadillo and red-footed tortoise. There are probably 20 rainforest buildings that are larger and more impressive but this will always be the first and one positive thing about it is that it has that damp, grown-in feel of a true rainforest and thus I’m glad that the zoo has maintained the structure. Incidentally the zoo recently reopened this building (in May) due to a 6-month overhaul that had many facets to it but all 235 glass triangular pieces were replaced to create a brighter effect beneath the dome.

Bornean Orangutan Exhibit – This was completed in 2003 and is more than adequate for the apes but also fairly basic. A net covering goes over a couple of wooden towers (complete with ladders) that is modeled on Camp Leakey in southern Borneo. There is no naturalism involved with the mown lawn and wooden climbing frames but it is no worse than dozens of other great ape enclosures. The indoor area for orangs was built in 1981 and it is a bit on the dodgy side with its extremely fake tree branches and green painted walls.

Animal and Man Building – This building opened in 1966 and it is a hodgepodge in terms of quality as there are great, average and terrible enclosures and anyone who has visited the zoo will know right away where the 3 main exhibits will be placed in this review. The reticulated giraffe/East African crowned crane yard is excellent, with at least a dozen mature trees, lots of shade, tortoises in a narrow yard in the foreground and this exhibit looks even better from the side as the size of it is deceiving. The Nile hippos have a standard pool that lacks underwater viewing (and yet it opened in 2004), and the elephant exhibit is a disaster. There are 3 indoor areas with no outside access for these 3 species: African crested porcupine, Rio Fuerte beaded lizard and black-and-white ruffed lemur.

The indoor area for the elephants is a joke in terms of size and structure (all cement floors with nothing but bars and walls), and there is one African and one Asian elephant and that is obviously a major negative these days. There have been numerous protests about this zoo over the last few years and I have no idea why Topeka is holding out and determined to keep its pachyderms. The zoo will not be AZA-accredited by 2016 unless they can find 3 female elephants to stick into an outdated paddock, but the indoor area is nothing but pure cement and I'm not sure that they even have room for more than two elephants. The sensible solution is to shift the elephants to accredited zoos with multi-acre paddocks.

Jungle Cats – Two exhibits side-by-side feature all-glass viewing areas and the black African leopard is a real rarity these days. That habitat is the lushly planted one while the Sumatran tigers have a basic enclosure that is another average effort for that species of cat and this area opened in 2005.

Kansas Carnivores – This area consists of two enclosures that opened in 2009. An average-sized river otter exhibit with all-glass viewing is adjacent to a large mountain lion cage that is not aesthetically appealing but has viewing windows into the fairly large habitat. There could definitely be more climbing opportunities for the two cats but overall it is one of the larger cougar enclosures I’ve seen.

THE WORST:

Metal Cages – There are a handful of traditional cages that are perhaps 15 ft. wide by 15 ft. in length that hold these species: bobcat, Pallas’ cat, African crested porcupine, Virginia opossum and red-tailed hawk. Why keep these eyesores?

Gorilla Exhibit – This enclosure created quite a stir back in 1985 when it opened because visitors walk through a glass tunnel directly down the middle of the gorilla outdoor yard. I saw a sign for a 44 year-old female ape named Tiffany but looking around it appears that she is the only one in what I’ve been told is the smallest outdoor gorilla exhibit in all of North America. The plain, fairly barren grassy yards on either side of the tunnel are outrageously outdated and with a few renovations I can imagine mandrills in the exhibit. This innovative enclosure is well past its due date and the sooner the gorilla(s) are gone the better.

Children’s Zoo – A red barn towers over a petting corral that represents one of the smallest children’s sections I’ve seen in a long time. A playground and some waterfowl ponds are nearby in a part of the zoo that is very scenic (as is most of the landscape) but underwhelming.

Penguin Plunge – This is only a temporary exhibit as the rent-a-penguin fad has also arrived in Topeka but the lead-up to the birds is amateurish with many signs and graphics poorly done, and then the 6 African black-footed penguins have a tiny exhibit that is incredibly small. Poor bastards!

THE FUTURE:

There have been many proposed ideas (Creatures of Darkness nocturnal house, African Aviary, hyenas, etc.) but the big issue is what to do with a single African and a single Asian elephant? Does Topeka dig in its heels and keep the animals, thus losing AZA accreditation and free-falling even further? Or does the zoo come to a sensible solution, replace the elephants with white rhinos, and attempt to eke forward towards modernization?

OVERALL:

Topeka Zoo is unfortunately a zoo in decline as its glory days are long since gone, and what was once innovative and modern (Gorilla Tunnel, Tropical Rainforest) is now dated and has been surpassed by many institutions. The good news is that there is nowhere to go but up, and with Black Bear Woods and a handful of other decent exhibits there is a base to build on. I realize that it is a massive decision but I would urge the zoo to send away its elephants and gorillas and stop clinging to the past and embrace the future. The handful of metal cages should be destroyed as they are eyesores amongst the pretty landscaping, and no one will miss a few small mammals and birds. The Animal and Man building is almost 50 years old and seeing the new, much more spacious barns being constructed in the past decade simply makes this one appear to be even more antiquated than it already is. I hope that Topeka Zoo takes a giant leap forward before it takes too many more steps back.
 
Road Trip Odds n’ Sods:

- I spend a long time writing my reviews at night when the kids have gone to sleep, all the chores from the day have been completed, and my wife either reads a book or watches DVD’s on our little portable player as we savor the silence. Some reviews are 3 pages in length while some are much longer (Omaha’s is 10 pages in size 14 font) and the only prep work that I did before the road trip was to basically write the opening few sentences. It was time consuming but I located the website and the map and provided links to those in my reviews (hopefully they are useful for at least a few people) and then I looked up things like attendance, year of inception, number of species, etc. Everything else comes from my visit and I take absolutely zero notes. Every single exhibit sign is photographed and if there is an extensive Reptile House then it certainly takes a long time to see it and then type out all of the names once the photos are uploaded onto the computer. I spend a lot of time and I’m a fast typist and when I am finished I always re-read it and often I leave it until the morning or next day and then re-read it so I can make slight editing decisions. When I read my reviews for the second time I occasionally decipher the tone of a review and thus when I am positive or negative about a zoo then it has been with deliberate thought and intent and the finished article gets placed onto ZooChat. My reviews are 100% superior on my 2011 and 2012 road trips in comparison to the 2008 and 2010 journeys as they are much longer and better written.

- I’ve visited Melbourne Zoo and really enjoyed most of it as there are wonderful exhibits for orangutans (one of the best in the world), gorillas, otters, tigers, butterflies, etc. I’ve visited close to 20 zoos/aquariums in Australia.

- The smaller the zoo means a tinier, crappier gift shop. Also, many smaller zoos have cafes and restaurants that can rapidly become overwhelmed on busy days. The mega-sized zoos often have huge air-conditioned restaurants and shack-like gift shops seemingly around every corner while smaller zoos rarely have extensive indoor seating areas.

- Jackson Zoo in Mississippi is set in a neighbourhood that certainly seems to be 95% African-American, and the staff at the zoo is also mainly all African-American. Yet on the Saturday morning when we visited the vast majority of the visitors were Caucasian. Bizarre.

- Dickerson Park Zoo in Missouri featured the largest people I have seen in years, as family after family was not just chunky or hefty but outright obese in a morbid fashion. Twice whole families had to turn sideways on the wooden boardwalk in the Missouri Habitats section as they were so big that they could not pass us straight on. We sat for 10 minutes on the outdoor deck near the café and every single family around us was massive. Again, bizarre.

- It is amazing at how fast children change, as people often joke about how time flies and before you know it a toddler is a teenager and asking for keys to the family vehicle. My son Jeffrey was quite sick for the first week of the trip and then one morning he woke up around the 8th day and it was as if he had never been sick in his life and the whole road trip he has been terrific. Along those same lines he was crawling everywhere as he is just over one year of age but then one morning he woke up and at St. Augustine Alligator Farm instead of his usual 5 steps before crashing down to the ground he took at least 50 steps and walked all along the wooden boardwalk occasionally glancing at crocodilians. Since that day he walks everywhere with no one holding his hand and it seems that it just dawned on him that he had the ability to walk all along. Kids go from 0 to 50 in the blink of an eye!

- Jeffrey also adores birds, which is sort of ironic as bird houses are always the least interesting aspect of zoos for both my wife and I. Raptors just sit on perches looking back at you in zoos and they rarely ever move, while pinioned birds in open-topped enclosures cannot even fly if they chose to. Often large bird houses are more like museum dioramas than actual live animal exhibits. Anyway, Jeffrey was so excited at the giraffe observation deck at Brevard Zoo in Florida that my wife said “finally he gets excited over something other than a darn bird” and sure enough he was actually pointing at a blue crane below one of the big giraffes. At Audubon Aquarium of the Americas he began hooting and pointing and we couldn’t figure it out until we saw a red-tailed hawk in the upper reaches of the canopy. The kid can spot feathers a mile away!

- My daughter Kylie loves giraffes and they are almost certainly her favourite animal. Both kids enjoy aquariums as zoo yards are often so large that it is difficult to see the animals but in an aquarium the species on show are usually always moving, colourful and are easy to locate.

- I’ve had to wait on many an occasion to gain access to a zoo as perhaps 5 out of 40 attractions have had a cashier that recognizes our AZA membership cards. I often have to get the employee to call their manager, then we have to wait for at least 5 minutes or so before someone finally arrives to confirm that we do get free admission. It can be a painful process at times and I hate holding up the line of people behind me. What works best is to deliberately choose a queue with a teenager behind the counter as almost every time they can’t be bothered calling a manager and they simply say “sounds good to me” and hold over some free tickets.

- If I had a dollar for each time I’ve seen a father or mother standing texting while their kids run along looking at animals I’d be retired from teaching by now. I do not personally own a cell phone but perhaps I should buy one as they certainly are popular, but I do not know why folks want to spend a day with their family only to stand around and text everyone else they know.

One of my favorite ZooChat posts! So many gems. :D
 
@Snowleopard (or anyone else who knows it): Has Little Rock Zoo the opportunity to extend/enlarge its grounds?
That would be the better way - if possible - then to reduce its collection. (Of course, when there is not a such option, then there is no other way as to do so)

Sadly they have tried and been unsuccessful:
Little Rock Zoo Loses Elephant Expansion Option Designing Zoos

We must take note that it is one of so many under-funded zoos. They have done the best with what they have and if they are to remain open then all they can do is make small improvements stretched over many years.
 
He was swarmed by keepers and the current director Brendan Wiley and even though my wife kept pressing me to get his autograph I chickened out as I did not want to disturb him as it would have meant interrupting a crowd of about 8-9 people.

SL, he may have also been intrigued to have met you! You need to listen to your wife. It may have led to all sorts of opportunities????
 
The male elephant sired the baby born at Oaklahoma. As the oaklahoma two girls were sent to Topeka while there exhibit was built. Then returned to Oaklahoma and gave birth brilliant timing for the opening of the enclosure.

I wonder if Topeka will do something similar to retain its accreditation.
 
The male elephant sired the baby born at Oaklahoma. As the oaklahoma two girls were sent to Topeka while there exhibit was built. Then returned to Oaklahoma and gave birth brilliant timing for the opening of the enclosure.

I wonder if Topeka will do something similar to retain its accreditation.

Sorry, Asha and Chandra (the OKC Asian elephant cows) were housed in Tulsa where Asha conceived with the bull, Sneezy. The Topeka elephants are both females!;)

The Topeka zoo has stated that they wish to continue their elephant program. And will be phasing out either African elephants or Asian elephants and bringing in two more of the chosen species in a EXPANDED (I wonder how great an expansion could be as there have already been several in their current exhibit). I guess time will tell in this situation.

Personally I think Sedgwick county should build holding in its exhibit for a third cow. Tembo (Topeka's African cow) should be moved there. To allow Sedgwick to maintain its accreditation as it raises the funds for its groundbreaking elephant exhibit.
 
DAY 37: Tuesday, August 7th, 2012

Road Trip Review # 42: Sunset Zoo

Sunset Zoo’s website:

Manhattan, KS - Official Website - Sunset Zoo

Zoo Map:

http://www.ci.manhattan.ks.us/DocumentView.aspx?DID=991

Sunset Zoo is an AZA-accredited facility located in Manhattan, Kansas, and there are around 300 animals of 100 species. The zoo receives over 100,000 visitors each year and it opened in 1933. It is a pretty zoo with nicely manicured lawns and an assortment of adequate enclosures. The exhibits are all fairly basic but they suit the needs of the animals and with a bit of spit and polish the zoo seems to be improving with a new entrance area and gibbon habitat.

We spent 2 hours at the Topeka Zoo and then drove for about an hour and spent a further 1.5 hours at Sunset Zoo in Manhattan, Kansas. This review can be considered Part II of our August 7th Kansas experience.

For my review I will say that almost all of the exhibits would be in the "average" category as there is nothing neither brilliant nor appalling.

Asian Forest Trail – There are 10 exhibits in this section of the zoo, including a tall indoor area for a pair of white-handed gibbons that recently replaced an outdated grizzly bear cage. Within a year the gibbons will have a spacious outdoor exhibit as well as their tall but basic indoor zone. Amur tigers have a densely forested, steep habitat that is set against the backdrop of a hill and while it is brilliant for tigers it offers the public a very poor viewing experience as the containment system is a tall chain-link fence. Two sloth bears, whom I saw duel on their hind legs in a spectacular show of power, have a similar exhibit, and red-crowned cranes and western tufted deer share a third steep forest enclosure. All three are superb for the inhabitants but there is a very steep trail on either side of the enclosures and nothing but chain-link fencing as a reward for ones exertions.

The other 6 species all have smaller enclosures set against limestone walls and here is the species list: snow leopard, red panda, small-clawed otter, Edward’s pheasant, red-billed blue magpie and cinereous vulture. The snow leopards are currently off exhibit from their 1991-built home due to an ongoing renovation and their enclosure appears to be too small for them regardless of what alterations take place. The other animal habitats are all quite good and the only major issue with this area of the zoo is that it is only readily accessible by individuals without strollers. I had to go down an incredibly steep hill to see the bottom-half of the tiger, sloth bear and crane/deer habitats; and the rest of the Asian Forest trail is great until a certain point when there are two sets of steps and I had to turn around with my stroller and venture all the way back up the hill to return past a long line of enclosures that I’d already seen. Twice I went down hills only to push 50 pounds back up a hill and that was strenuous in the Kansas heat.

African Forest Trail – There are 5 exhibits in this section, and the first 3 of them are set at the top of the zoo before the steep incline to the main part of the establishment. A nicely furnished colobus monkey exhibit has a breeding pair as there was a two-week-old baby that was pure white and attracting many onlookers. A chimpanzee exhibit with 5 of the apes is basic but adequate, and an empty bird aviary completes the trio of habitats at the top of the zoo. There is indoor viewing for both types of primates, and then there is an extremely steep incline that takes visitors past the top of the spacious cheetah yard. At the bottom is a pair of glass viewing windows for the cheetahs, and then a large chain-linked yard next door for a couple of spotted hyenas.

Trails of South America – This area has Caribbean flamingos curiously enough inside a netted aviary; a grassy yard for a giant anteater and a maned wolf; Chacoan peccaries in a dusty exhibit; a contact yard with pot-bellied pigs and goats; llamas; a Cuvier’s dwarf caiman pool with indoor and outdoor viewing areas; a small terrarium for yellow-and-blue and green-and-black poison dart frogs; and indoor and outdoor viewing for a reed titi monkey/Geoffrey’s marmoset enclosure. The South American zone is very pretty, like most of the zoo, and it covers the basics for a small-town zoo.

Kansas Plains – There is a very large walk-through prairie dog/turkey vulture exhibit where visitors can walk into a central seating area that is surrounded by a very low wall of rocks. The prairie dogs can come into the visitor space but I think that they are intelligent enough to avoid that area. A beautiful Backyard Habitat pathway features tall grasses, and there are a series of 4 metal cages that are reasonably well furnished and have small occupants. The species list is as follows: raccoon, swift fox, bald eagle and bobcat. Of those exhibits the worst is the bobcat one but none of them are anything remarkable.

Australian Walk-About – This comprises a large walk-through yard with parma wallabies, red-necked wallabies and emus as well as an aviary with black swans, kookaburras, straw-necked ibises and several other species. They are all common animals in decent exhibits but there is nothing too flashy here.

THE FUTURE:

New 15,500 sq. ft. Nature Exploration Center/Entrance/Gift Shop + White-Handed Gibbon Indoor Exhibit (portions of these two areas are now open as of this summer):

Manhattan, KS - Official Website - New Additions 2012

Nature Exploration Center (3-page site plan):

http://www.ci.manhattan.ks.us/DocumentView.aspx?DID=10983

OVERALL:

Sunset Zoo is a fairly small zoo that serves its community well, and by having 5 geographical zones and a number of marquee animals it surprised me with its admission price of $4. That is a phenomenal deal and if it were not for local support and tax breaks then the zoo would surely struggle to exist. The landscaping is a bonus as the tiny staff work wonders to create an environment that is conducive to the wilderness with many blooming plants in all directions. The facility is only an hour from either Topeka Zoo or Rolling Hills Wildlife Adventure and it is easy enough to get to off of a major highway. Even though there is nothing outstanding the zoo is remarkable for what it does with several popular mammals the key to bringing in visitors.
 
Having attended K-State for 5 years I had many trips to this zoo with my girlfriend (now wife). It is too bad the snowleopard was not in the exhibit as he is very playful and a joy to watch even though his exhibit is on the small side. He would actually hide up above the viewing area only to jump down and scare the crap out of us on more than one occasion. Unilke most cats he was generally always active when we visited. Sunset Zoo also provided me with some of my most memorable moments while in Manhattan as there is an absolutely incredible hidden running/hiking trail that starts in the cemetary and winds its way rightseveral enclosures only to disappear into the forested hillside and up to a lookout point that I can only describe as a "zen spot" where I used to sit for hours sketching, pondering, ect. Sunset Zoo is a quality local zoo that is valued by its residents and I think with the population boom in Manhattan that the future will only get brighter.

Snowleopard, I thought your review was very accurate and I look forward to the next one.
 
Sorry, Asha and Chandra (the OKC Asian elephant cows) were housed in Tulsa where Asha conceived with the bull, Sneezy. The Topeka elephants are both females!;)

The Topeka zoo has stated that they wish to continue their elephant program. And will be phasing out either African elephants or Asian elephants and bringing in two more of the chosen species in a EXPANDED (I wonder how great an expansion could be as there have already been several in their current exhibit). I guess time will tell in this situation.

Personally I think Sedgwick county should build holding in its exhibit for a third cow. Tembo (Topeka's African cow) should be moved there. To allow Sedgwick to maintain its accreditation as it raises the funds for its groundbreaking elephant exhibit.


Ah thank you for correcting me, l should have checked my facts first, l was disorientated by the first letter similarities in the zoo names.
 
I've certainly been enjoying your trip snowleopard, especially as you've been touring the zoos of Kansas where I grew up. My family lived about 20 miles from Wichita (so we had the wonderful Sedgwick Couny zoo as our primary zoo) and I've seen all of the zoos in Kansas and Oklahoma City numerous times by visiting relatives in the area. Sad to say, I agree with you about Topeka it's declined a long way. I hope when you finish you'll have some comments about the ranking of the zoos in your current trip and suggestions for the small zoo both starting out and as it matures. Thanks again for including us in your family's journey.
 
DAY 38: Wednesday, August 8th, 2012

Road Trip Review # 43: Rolling Hills Wildlife Adventure

Rolling Hills Wildlife Adventure’s website:

Rolling Hills Wildlife Adventure

Zoo Map:

http://www.rollinghillswildlife.com/images/map_zoo.jpg

Rolling Hills Wildlife Adventure is an AZA-accredited facility located in Salina, Kansas, and it opened in 1999. There are over 100 species on 65 acres (an additional 80 acres are off limits to the public) and in the 1980’s the establishment used to be home to a Belgian horse breeding operation. The first exotic animals were purchased in 1986, the horses were all gone by 1989, and Rolling Hills Zoo opened to the public in 1999. The Wildlife Museum, a 64,000 square foot facility packed with 1,500 taxidermy animals as well as a conference center, opened in early 2005 and the official name change to Rolling Hills Wildlife Adventure took place in 2009.

Rolling Hills Wildlife Adventure was a remarkable visit due to the fact that we spent 3 hours at the facility and we only saw 4 other visitors! A family of 4 people travelling around together was the only other people to spend time at the zoo on the Wednesday morning of our tour, and even though the establishment only receives 130,000 annual visitors that is still an incredible fact. We spent close to 2 hours touring the zoo (with many of the animals still locked up) and then a further hour at the outstanding museum.

THE BEST:

Museum – The Great Plains Zoo in South Dakota (the very first review of this seemingly never-ending road trip) had a terrific museum with taxidermy specimens of all shapes and sizes. (I’m not sure where the dead animals come from and I’m not sure that I want to know). Rolling Hills has a far superior museum that has an incredible 1,500 animals from just about everywhere in the world and it opened in 2005. For those that do not like to see dioramas of stuffed animals it would be a waste of time, but I find it fascinating to be able to tour a natural history museum as they can come alive with modern technology. There are animals judiciously placed into every nook and cranny, as on some dioramas there is a focus on a herd but then there are creatures peering over rocks, swinging from vines or hidden in crevices. There are at least 7 animatronic humans who startled my kids; rare specimens such as zebra duiker, giant forest hog and saiga antelope; large groupings such as 4 polar bears together or 9 musk oxen in one diorama; and with more than 1,500 animals there is 10 times the amount to be found here in comparison to Great Plains Zoo. The entire area is 64,000 sq. ft. (including the adjacent Conference Center) and there are 4 crashing waterfalls and about 25 galleries along with a terrific kiddie corner with a tree house and puppet theater. If we didn’t have to embark on a 6 hour drive to Denver, Colorado, then we would have stayed another hour as my children loved every minute of the visit inside the air-conditioned museum.

THE AVERAGE:

The rest of the zoo is filled with basic structures that I would deem all perfectly adequate and thus they will all be lumped into my “average” category. The hoofstock have spacious yards that are very large but also quite barren, while all of the big cats, bears and wolves have chain-link cages that are aesthetically poor but often filled with just enough enrichment items to be enjoyed by the animals.

Big Cats – There are 5 big cat enclosures in one section and a lion enclosure in another section of the zoo. Besides the two male lions (brothers) there are exhibits for these 5: Amur tiger, white tiger (generic mutant), Amur leopard, snow leopard and cougar. All 6 of the big cat exhibits are fairly basic with wooden frames for resting, a small pool in each one, grassy yards with a couple of short trees and while they are all large metal cages there are thankfully glass viewing windows at each one.

Rhino Yards – The zoo has a white rhino as its logo and there are a series of long, narrow yards for a single Indian rhino and 4 white rhinos that I saw in a huge barn. The yards feature small shade structures, pools and are fairly barren but feature more than enough space for the lumbering beasts.

Hoofstock Yards – There are large yards for these species: scimitar-horned oryx, addax, reticulated giraffe, Grant’s gazelle, markhor, dromedary, muntjac, mule deer, white-tailed deer and pronghorn antelope. The last three species have a particularly impressive yard that has many viewing angles. Almost all of the yards are quite scenic but they are also unfortunately a bit on the boring side for an average family as there isn’t any kind of interactive elements but simple paddocks with a few large mammals.

Primates – The 5 chimpanzees have a large metal cage that is Howletts-style, and while it is naturally ugly to some folks and it lacks any outdoor glass viewing areas, there are plenty of climbing frames and the chimps were quite active. There were two outside and three indoors and it appears that there is some separation between the mini-troops going on as the doors were locked to the holding quarters. The Sumatran orangutan exhibit is almost identical in size and scope, again with the Howletts-style black metal, and both species of ape can be seen in their glass-fronted indoor viewing area. Mandrills are found in a metal cage that has a mock-rock corner with a small crashing waterfall; and cotton-top tamarins, brown-tufted capuchins and ring-tailed lemurs all have island habitats that are arguably the most natural-looking exhibits in the entire zoo.

Reptile House – There is a decent sized yard for a trio of Aldabra tortoises outside, plus a large cage for a rhinoceros iguana and a couple of red-footed tortoises. Inside the small Reptile House are indoor rooms for the two outdoor exhibits, as well as these 19 other species in basic terrariums: Burmese python, green tree python, Vietnamese mossy frog, White’s tree frog, waxy monkey tree frog, strawberry poison dart frog, golden poison dart frog, green-and-bronze poison dart frog, yellow-banded poison dart frog, phantasmal poison dart frog, mimic poison dart frog, Sonoran desert toad, gila monster, crevice spiny lizard, quince monitor, chuckwalla, chameleon forest dragon, desert tortoise and Madagascar hissing cockroach.

Kids Country – The typical farmhouse/barn set-up with zebu, goats, llamas and a couple of aviaries for a turkey vulture and a golden eagle. There is a petting corral and in truth this area is decent for children and features the ubiquitous red barn.

Odds n’ Sods – There is a large chained-link fenced yard for maned wolves; another all-metal cage for gray wolves (with a glass viewing section); Andean bears in two spacious exhibits that are the usual metal cages with a portion set aside for glass viewing; three Chilean flamingos in a large lake; white-nosed coatis in an exhibit that has pop-up bubbles and recently held American black bears; a capybara/black swan pool; a prairie dog town; a giant anteater enclosure; a sandy aardvark exhibit; and a large mob of red kangaroos in a basic chain-link yard.

THE WORST:

Opening Times – Once again I have to begin a rant about animal exhibits not being open at the same time as a zoo’s opening time, and this only occurs at the smaller zoos with struggling attendance. Upon entry at 8:00 a.m. we reached the Big Cat zone at about 8:20 and all 5 of the enclosures in the complex featured nothing but locked-up felines. The keeper apparently starts when the zoo opens and even though we ended up seeing 3 of the 5 species via their tiny holding yards it is obviously not the same experience as seeing the animals in their actual exhibits. At the Primates area we saw the chimps and mandrills but a full half-hour after the zoo opened there was still a keeper in the orangutan exhibit cleaning up the previous day’s mess. The orangs were not even in their indoor viewing area so there is obviously a third, unseen holding zone further back.

Over at the rhino barn all 5 of the rhinos were locked in their barn and while it was pretty cool seeing the creatures from about 10 feet away it was also extremely disappointing to be a full hour at the zoo and the rhinos still were not allowed into their spacious outdoor yards. I was told that the rhinos spend 18 hours a day in their small cement pens (75% of their lifetime) and are only allowed out for 6 hours in their enclosures and sometimes not at all in the winter. Lastly, the trio of giraffes was still locked in their barn at 9:30 and so even though the zoo had been open for an hour and a half their huge yard had a couple of cranes in it and the giraffes could be seen in their indoor stalls. Other than being cheap with finances I can’t figure out why a zoo does not start its keepers an hour before opening time so that when visitors pay hard-earned money to see the establishment there are actually animals on view. It is insane to comprehend the fact that individuals are penalized for visiting a zoo early, when if they want to see all the species on display they need to arrive in the heat of the day with the hordes of regular visitors.

OVERALL:

Rolling Hills Wildlife Adventure is a fairly new zoo as it has only been open since 1999. Glancing at its exhibits it is actually impossible to estimate the age of the establishment as the metal cages and hoofstock yards could easily be from the 1980’s or even 1970’s. The enclosures are definitely all perfectly adequate for their inhabitants, but there is not much of a conservation message, or any kind of discussion about the environment, biomes or ecosystems like what is found in many other modern zoos. A visit consists of walking around looking at animals in basic cages and while that is fine with some people and possibly an enjoyable outing for a family I seriously question whether that should be a long-term goal of an AZA-accredited institution. The addition in 2005 of the fantastic museum makes the establishment far more worthy as there are a lot of graphics and signs discussing endangered animals and the various ecosystems of the world. Children will possibly learn more about wildlife analyzing dead specimens than the living ones.
 
@Drew + SweetWilliam: thanks for the comments and I also think that my reviews are fair and balanced but of course I'm biased...haha.

I visited both Denver Zoo and Downtown Denver Aquarium today and I was hugely impressed by the zoo. I visited it in 2006 and while I have been obsessed with zoos since birth I have only been driving all over tarnation and reviewing them extensively in the last few years and so I think that I forgot just how great it is. Denver is an absolute lock for a top 10 zoo in all of North America, and I think that I would put it in the #7 or #8 position. Primate Panorama, Toyota Elephant Passage, Tropical Discovery and Predator Ridge are all outstanding, and almost the entire rest of the zoo is very good (like the great hoofstock collection) or at least of average quality. There is one atrociously outdated section (Felines Building) but overall I was massively impressed and that Felines House will be history within 5 years or so anyway. Tropical Discovery is one knockout of a rainforest complex with zero bad exhibits, and there were many species of snake and lizard that I have not seen in at least a couple of years as the collection is fantastic. My review is going to be enormous as I took almost 700 photos and I have complete species lists for each complex (including the jam-packed Bird World).

- Downtown Aquarium is a place that I spent an hour and ten minutes in, but just about everything is of a very high quality. Seeing 3 Sumatran tigers was cool but the exhibit is disappointing, but overall this is a small but especially worthwhile aquarium. If it weren't for the cold winters I wouldn't mind moving to Denver!

- In the book "America's Best Zoos" there are 60 major zoos listed and then 37 more in a Best of the Rest section. I've now toured 90 out of the 97 zoos in that book, with only one major zoo missing from my collection: Honolulu. The 6 minor zoos are: ZOO Northwest Florida (which does not actually exist anymore as it is now the non-AZA-accredited Gulf Breeze Zoo; Alaska Zoo, Cape May Zoo, Henry Vilas Zoo, NEW Zoo and Oglebay Good Zoo. Other than Honolulu I can sleep well at night knowing that I've seen almost every half-decent zoo (plus almost 40 aquariums) just between the United States and Canada. My wife thinks that I'm nuts but she is a saint for supporting my addiction.:)
 
SL, I know we have some disagreements about the virtues of some zoos that might be lower down that list of 90, but I've always felt confident in your ability to rank zoos. Once you're home I'm sure I and many others would be very interested in your attempt to rank the US/Canadian zoos you have been to in order of what you think are best. Or perhaps in groups of four or five if you don't think you could do it that precisely.

I was particularly looking forward to your Rolling Hills review, btw, as it is that very rare beast - a privately-owned, for-profit zoo with AZA accreditation. Thanks. :)
 
I look forward to your Denver Zoo review to see how Toyota Elephant Passage compares to National's Asian Trails and Virginia Zoo's Trail of the Tiger.
 
@Drew + SweetWilliam: thanks for the comments and I also think that my reviews are fair and balanced but of course I'm biased...haha.

I visited both Denver Zoo and Downtown Denver Aquarium today and I was hugely impressed by the zoo. I visited it in 2006 and while I have been obsessed with zoos since birth I have only been driving all over tarnation and reviewing them extensively in the last few years and so I think that I forgot just how great it is. Denver is an absolute lock for a top 10 zoo in all of North America, and I think that I would put it in the #7 or #8 position. Primate Panorama, Toyota Elephant Passage, Tropical Discovery and Predator Ridge are all outstanding, and almost the entire rest of the zoo is very good (like the great hoofstock collection) or at least of average quality. There is one atrociously outdated section (Felines Building) but overall I was massively impressed and that Felines House will be history within 5 years or so anyway. Tropical Discovery is one knockout of a rainforest complex with zero bad exhibits, and there were many species of snake and lizard that I have not seen in at least a couple of years as the collection is fantastic. My review is going to be enormous as I took almost 700 photos and I have complete species lists for each complex (including the jam-packed Bird World).

- Downtown Aquarium is a place that I spent an hour and ten minutes in, but just about everything is of a very high quality. Seeing 3 Sumatran tigers was cool but the exhibit is disappointing, but overall this is a small but especially worthwhile aquarium. If it weren't for the cold winters I wouldn't mind moving to Denver!

- In the book "America's Best Zoos" there are 60 major zoos listed and then 37 more in a Best of the Rest section. I've now toured 90 out of the 97 zoos in that book, with only one major zoo missing from my collection: Honolulu. The 6 minor zoos are: ZOO Northwest Florida (which does not actually exist anymore as it is now the non-AZA-accredited Gulf Breeze Zoo; Alaska Zoo, Cape May Zoo, Henry Vilas Zoo, NEW Zoo and Oglebay Good Zoo. Other than Honolulu I can sleep well at night knowing that I've seen almost every half-decent zoo (plus almost 40 aquariums) just between the United States and Canada. My wife thinks that I'm nuts but she is a saint for supporting my addiction.:)

I was there that day. I'm glad you were pleased with the zoo. It seems you came a the right time too. All of our new additions have been out on exhibit for a week/ couple weeks now so you hopefully have seen some animals that you wouldn't of if you came earlier.

I believe we still have a well balanced hoofstock collection but it won't ever be like it was a couple years back. Though the new additions of Somali Wild Ass, Gerenuk, and male okapi have boosted our count a bit. The African buffalos are not currently breeding like they used too, same goes for the bongo but hopefully that will change. Denver also has a very large primate collection too and a very good breeding record with almost every primate species we have. Though I do wish we would exhibit more species in the zoo. The back-rooms of BW and TD rival those of the on-show exhibits, collection wise.

I'll be interested in reading your full review about Denver.
 
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