Wow. I didn't realize that. That is... interesting.
Indeed. There's a girl at my school who always brings her Yorkie in with her and I imagine it's due to the same reason (though she certainly never needed one when I had class with her..)
~Thylo
Wow. I didn't realize that. That is... interesting.
Was that me? lol- Singing "I like to move it, move it" when faced with lemurs
I currently work on an island where dogs are not permitted at all. By law.I'm not sure if zoo rules are different, but where I currently work we legally have to let anyone with a dog in as long as they claim it's a service dog. They don't even need to have papers, literally just say the dog helps with anxiety or something and we legally have to let them in.
~Thylo
Hmm, it's a difficult subjexs; of course, a dog can make other animals nervous, but at the same time, some dogs are relatively chill around other critters. Still, I'm not sure if these are exceptional; of course, rules must stick to the most probable situation.I'm not sure if zoo rules are different, but where I currently work we legally have to let anyone with a dog in as long as they claim it's a service dog. They don't even need to have papers, literally just say the dog helps with anxiety or something and we legally have to let them in.
~Thylo
Yikes! That's a whole new dimension of stupid!At the Los Angeles Zoo in the late '60, in the original Children's Zoo, I had three Harbor Seals in a deep pool that had I just drained for cleaning. A young boy rushed up and peered over the railings and excitedly called out, "Daddy, look at the size of those gophers!" And "Daddy" never corrected him . . .
I have both giant anteaters and Brazilian tapirs (kept with Patagonian mara) at my local zoo.I recal a parent telling their child a tapir was an anteater a year or two back - but mostly, I think I fare better than a lot of zoochatters, heh.
Yeah, but it's still a mistake; and the signs all have clear illustrations on them! How the flying f*** can you mistake a long-legged rodent with the squat, hoofed, long-faced animal you're faced with?!At least they read the sign. There are so many people that wouldn't look at the sign and just guess the animal from their own knowledge
We get at least one nappy a week in the car park.
Twice in five years we've had condoms in the toilets - on the floor, not in the bowl
But the cigarette butts are Steph's pet hate too. The one's that the public leave stubbed out everywhere are bad enough but the tradesmen are worse - they're here for eight hours a day! She just about got our welder trained when he sold the business and now she's back to square one with the new crew![]()
It is very frustrating when people block paths (anywhere, not just at zoos) with no awareness of the other people around them - stopping to have a chat whilst blocking the way for others, argh.And when tourists take selfies in the middle of the path with no animals anywhere to be seen
It makes me sick how people can be so inconsiderateIt is very frustrating when people block paths (anywhere, not just at zoos) with no awareness of the other people around them - stopping to have a chat whilst blocking the way for others, argh.
Lol what...it's a zoo,you go there to observe and learn about animals....isn't that a thing to do? I guess they aren't animal lovers...Amoment at my local zoo yesterday: it's the time of year when school groups visit presumably as an end of term treat. Some aimless teenagers were sitting on a bench and I overheard one saying something along the lines of 'that's what I hate about zoos, there's nothing to do'.
(Facepalms)When I went to the Henry Doorly Zoo, we were in the Lied Jungle building by the Malayan Tapir exhibit. This woman comes up with her kids, where she is standing right in front of the sign, but she says: "It's a rhino! Wait no, it's a pig! No, it's defiantly a hippo, kids!"