biggest_dreamer
Well-Known Member
So, in an amusing twist of fate, it looks like I will be going to Japan (likely) this year after all… just as a trip for work, not the two week recreational trip I was initially planning (though that is still absolutely in the works for 2026!). The timing hasn’t been pinpointed quite yet, but it will include a few free days, so that means I’m going to have to hit at least a couple of zoos. My wife who will be tagging along says Saitama Children’s Zoo is non-negotiable, which I’m very much fine with. I have various thoughts about what to do with a potential second day, but since my original trip is still going to happen next year, I figured the best way to check for priorities would be by asking this question:
Out of Ueno, Tama, and Zoorasia, do any of these zoos have any rare species on display where it’s particularly uncertain whether they’ll be alive in a year?
It’s a very morbid question, and of course one that it’s impossible to ever truly know, but it’s unfortunately also a very easy way to gauge priorities. Two separate US zoos that I would’ve been visiting next week have lost the star species that was drawing me to them within the past month or so since I committed to visiting them. If I can avoid having that happen in Japan, I’d very much like to. Specifically, I think these are my top species at each facility:
Ueno: Chinese pangolin, spectral tarsier, either(?) slow loris, Prince Demidoff’s bushbaby
Tama: Tasmanian devil, parma wallaby
Zoorasia: Proboscis monkey, red shanked douc, Tibetan macaque, woolly monkey, dhole, Goodfellow’s tree kangaroo, African fur seal
These aren’t all weighted equally, but there are at least a few that would make the decision for me on the spot. So if anyone knows off hand if any of these are down to just an elderly o
Out of Ueno, Tama, and Zoorasia, do any of these zoos have any rare species on display where it’s particularly uncertain whether they’ll be alive in a year?
It’s a very morbid question, and of course one that it’s impossible to ever truly know, but it’s unfortunately also a very easy way to gauge priorities. Two separate US zoos that I would’ve been visiting next week have lost the star species that was drawing me to them within the past month or so since I committed to visiting them. If I can avoid having that happen in Japan, I’d very much like to. Specifically, I think these are my top species at each facility:
Ueno: Chinese pangolin, spectral tarsier, either(?) slow loris, Prince Demidoff’s bushbaby
Tama: Tasmanian devil, parma wallaby
Zoorasia: Proboscis monkey, red shanked douc, Tibetan macaque, woolly monkey, dhole, Goodfellow’s tree kangaroo, African fur seal
These aren’t all weighted equally, but there are at least a few that would make the decision for me on the spot. So if anyone knows off hand if any of these are down to just an elderly o