Actually, you know what, I’ll give you the updates now while I’m on the train home.
- New glass panels have been added to the dingo exhibit for ease of viewing
- The grass in the macropod walkthrough (Buru nura) has been redone
- The Moore Park/Circular Aviary finally has birds in it again! A group of Nicobar Pigeons have moved in.
- The Guinea pigs now have a rabbit mixed in with them, and the indoor hutch now has a layer of perspex as well as the mesh
- Semi-arid Aviary: an Eastern Yellow Robin is now in this aviary! A pair of Turquoise Parrots, several new Diamond Firetails and at least one Star Finch are being gradually introduced. The Little Lorikeets are nesting.
- Blue Mountains Bushwalk: several Brush Bronzewing matings were witnessed, so hopefully some chicks soon
- All 7 lions are being housed together
- The Green Pygmy Goose is back in the Finch Aviary
- The gorillas’ fencing has been strengthened
- The Cultural Garden now has signage about the different plant species. Interestingly, over half of the plants in the garden are endemic to the Sydney region.
And finally:
- Nguwing nura - wow!! So peaceful! So tranquil! So futuristic!
The experience starts with a long glass-fronted exhibit for a large colony of Spinifex Hopping Mice: at least 30 of them! All of the exhibits are extremely large and most of them house a large number of the species they hold. Hidden speakers quietly play a mesmerising soundtrack of calming indigenous music, intermingled with the calls of nocturnal creatures. The effect is an incredibly relaxing environment with no sense of time, where guests don’t even need to be told to keep the noise down!
Next was a similar exhibit, though rather smaller, for unseen Fat-tailed Dunnarts. This was followed by the best Ghost Bat exhibit I have ever seen, themed as a cave with large stalactites that the bats roost on. After this was the lifer of the experience: a Chuditch. I eventually saw it on my second visit to the building.
An interesting feature up next was a large open fronted exhibit for around 5 Greater Bilbies. I have never seen bilbies housed in these numbers, and I had never seen an open fronted exhibit in a nocturnal house before either!
Next was a long and tall exhibit for at least 4 Yellow-bellied Gliders, which was followed on the other side of the path by a second open fronted exhibit for a group of Long-nosed Potoroos. The sound of a potoroo hopping across a hollow log in the quiet of a nocturnal house is one that I will never forget.
The experience ended with a very dark exhibit with a large pool, reminiscent of photos I have seen of San Diego’s platypus exhibit for Matilda, the 6-month old rescued Platypus.
Overall, Nguwing nura is an incredible experience that has to be seen to be believed. I did not see any sign of the promised Feathertail Glider, Rufous Bettong, Barton’s Long-beaked Echidna or the mysterious 12th species; but I thought that the bettongs could be mixed with the Yellow-bellied Gliders in future, and the echidna either with them or the potoroos. I did not see any way that Feathertail Gliders could be housed here, as I have never seen them mixed with any other species before.