Wednesday, August 10th, 2022
After posting my longest review of the trip (3,200 words on Norwegian driving and the spectacular Kristiansand Zoo), here is my shortest review:
Zoo/Aquarium # 22: Den Lille Dyrehage/The Small Zoo (Sundebru, NO)
After my visit to big, popular Kristiansand Zoo, I then drove an hour north to The Small Zoo. Clever name, right? This place is located alongside a string of stores in a shopping area. I could see some captive animals and grab a whopper combo at Burger King right afterwards! The zoo is made up of two buildings and a small outdoor area. The first building is the entrance, a gift shop and a small restaurant. Outside consists of a Meerkat exhibit, a walk-through yard for Bennett’s Wallabies and Grey Kangaroos, plus an Emu enclosure. There’s also a big walk-through yard with domestic goats and pigs and a couple of playgrounds, which I avoided. By now, I’d purchased my ticket and seen the entire zoo in the space of approximately 10 minutes. It was $22 Canadian, as Norway is an expensive nation. But wait, just when I thought I was done everything, I went to check out the second building…
Zoo Entrance:
On the zoo map, the three outdoor exhibits are # 5, 8 and 9. Then there's the big Tropical House (#10):
Meerkat exhibit (here's a side view of the 'tree-trunk' exterior):
Australian walk-through exhibit:
The Tropical Rainforest is a nice little gem of a structure. It’s basically a big greenhouse, hot as hell during my visit, but I spent almost half an hour inside and my body adjusted to the blistering temperature on what was already a scorching day. Right off the bat, there’s a pool for a big Cuban Crocodile. The free ranging primates are incredibly bold here, with White-faced Sakis crashing around, Pygmy Marmosets hunting insects, and Goeldi’s Monkeys coming so close that I could have easily touched their tails…but I didn’t. I saw a Sunbittern with a brood of chicks and Red-footed Tortoises, both wandering around in the dirt. There’s a nice Green Anaconda exhibit, with an adjacent murky pool for giant Amazon fish such as Arapaima and Red-tailed Catfish. There’s a Boa Constrictor exhibit, free ranging Douroucoulis (although I didn’t see those nocturnal primates), a half-dozen free ranging Flying Foxes, and a pool for Dwarf Caiman and turtles. Free ranging Poison Dart Frogs are here, along with a sign for Basilisks, but there are very few birds in the canopy. There's a side area called the 'Snake Jungle', which is like Randers and contains a walk-through area with big pythons and loads of butterflies. In truth, I only saw two Carpet Pythons, but even so, this is something that would never be seen in North America and it's a little thrill to have seen two walk-through python exhibits in Scandinavia. At the back of the jungle is a hut that has a sign saying: “the world’s most poisonous snakes”. It initially looks like an employee area, but I entered and was delighted to see a series of terrariums with the following 7 species: Black-headed Bushmaster, Russell’s Viper, West African Gaboon Viper, Western Diamondback Rattlesnake, Mangrove Snake, Spectacled Cobra and Eastern Copperhead. That’s certainly a part of the zoo that was unexpected, and at least it wasn’t a walk-through!
Tropical House Map:
Cuban Crocodile exhibit:
Goeldi's Monkeys and other free-ranging primates are extremely bold here:
Green Anaconda exhibit:
Giant Amazon Fish exhibit (with a very wet visitor area):
Dwarf Caiman exhibit:
Venomous Snake House:
After Kristiansand and Den Lille Dyrehage, I had an 8-hour drive through 3 nations!
It will be sad when my 10th ZooChat road trip thread comes to an end. I have two facilities in Copenhagen left and after that I'll wrap things up with a few posts discussing the entire journey.
After posting my longest review of the trip (3,200 words on Norwegian driving and the spectacular Kristiansand Zoo), here is my shortest review:
Zoo/Aquarium # 22: Den Lille Dyrehage/The Small Zoo (Sundebru, NO)
After my visit to big, popular Kristiansand Zoo, I then drove an hour north to The Small Zoo. Clever name, right? This place is located alongside a string of stores in a shopping area. I could see some captive animals and grab a whopper combo at Burger King right afterwards! The zoo is made up of two buildings and a small outdoor area. The first building is the entrance, a gift shop and a small restaurant. Outside consists of a Meerkat exhibit, a walk-through yard for Bennett’s Wallabies and Grey Kangaroos, plus an Emu enclosure. There’s also a big walk-through yard with domestic goats and pigs and a couple of playgrounds, which I avoided. By now, I’d purchased my ticket and seen the entire zoo in the space of approximately 10 minutes. It was $22 Canadian, as Norway is an expensive nation. But wait, just when I thought I was done everything, I went to check out the second building…
Zoo Entrance:
On the zoo map, the three outdoor exhibits are # 5, 8 and 9. Then there's the big Tropical House (#10):
Meerkat exhibit (here's a side view of the 'tree-trunk' exterior):
Australian walk-through exhibit:
The Tropical Rainforest is a nice little gem of a structure. It’s basically a big greenhouse, hot as hell during my visit, but I spent almost half an hour inside and my body adjusted to the blistering temperature on what was already a scorching day. Right off the bat, there’s a pool for a big Cuban Crocodile. The free ranging primates are incredibly bold here, with White-faced Sakis crashing around, Pygmy Marmosets hunting insects, and Goeldi’s Monkeys coming so close that I could have easily touched their tails…but I didn’t. I saw a Sunbittern with a brood of chicks and Red-footed Tortoises, both wandering around in the dirt. There’s a nice Green Anaconda exhibit, with an adjacent murky pool for giant Amazon fish such as Arapaima and Red-tailed Catfish. There’s a Boa Constrictor exhibit, free ranging Douroucoulis (although I didn’t see those nocturnal primates), a half-dozen free ranging Flying Foxes, and a pool for Dwarf Caiman and turtles. Free ranging Poison Dart Frogs are here, along with a sign for Basilisks, but there are very few birds in the canopy. There's a side area called the 'Snake Jungle', which is like Randers and contains a walk-through area with big pythons and loads of butterflies. In truth, I only saw two Carpet Pythons, but even so, this is something that would never be seen in North America and it's a little thrill to have seen two walk-through python exhibits in Scandinavia. At the back of the jungle is a hut that has a sign saying: “the world’s most poisonous snakes”. It initially looks like an employee area, but I entered and was delighted to see a series of terrariums with the following 7 species: Black-headed Bushmaster, Russell’s Viper, West African Gaboon Viper, Western Diamondback Rattlesnake, Mangrove Snake, Spectacled Cobra and Eastern Copperhead. That’s certainly a part of the zoo that was unexpected, and at least it wasn’t a walk-through!
Tropical House Map:
Cuban Crocodile exhibit:
Goeldi's Monkeys and other free-ranging primates are extremely bold here:
Green Anaconda exhibit:
Giant Amazon Fish exhibit (with a very wet visitor area):
Dwarf Caiman exhibit:
Venomous Snake House:
After Kristiansand and Den Lille Dyrehage, I had an 8-hour drive through 3 nations!
It will be sad when my 10th ZooChat road trip thread comes to an end. I have two facilities in Copenhagen left and after that I'll wrap things up with a few posts discussing the entire journey.
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