Eurasia Wilds was open all day for members unlike the usual 3 or 4 hour availability.
We were able to walk through only part of the Wilds but could go inside the new Snow Leopard/Eagle Owl/Steller's Sea Eagle exhibit. Of course none of them were there. A Gyrfalcon from the Outreach program and Mikisi, the Bald Eagle from the entry plaza were standing in! Snow Leopards Tiga and Kota are in their old exhibit which we could not visit. After Kota returned from Safari Niagara a few months ago to the Health Centre he then went back to the old exhibit. The Eagle is in the Savannah hoofstock/bird barn, and the owl is in the Discovery Zone Bird Barn.
Since Tiga is now 15, there is a four year old F coming from Tokyo for breeding. No time estimate yet, but no one believes the zoo's estimates anyway!
For the Snow Leopards there are 4 indoor holding spaces, 3 outside, and a large outdoor space. It has several ways for them to climb and to hide, and there are many ways for visitors to view them, including a place to climb beside the exhibit. From there you look down into it and into the nearby chamois and tur exhibits. We were able to go right into the exhibit for a closer view and chat with keepers.
There was an older Chamois pair out and they have more off-exhibit.
There were at least 21 West Caucasian Tur out (I counted 15, then 19, then 21, and gave up) and it was great to see them all over their mountain after close to three years. There were quite a few young ones.
The Bactrian Camels were all out except the male who is kept separately. That is 6 adult F and 1 baby F (mother is Sally). In the morning they were in the paddock where there are basic yurt structures inside and one finished and looking lived-in yurt outside that you can examine closely. In the afternoon the camels were in their holding area - the Camel Palace - but outside and quite visible.
Both Red Pandas were out and quite active morning and afternoon.
The Dr Schofield Garden is beautiful, with a large pond, unstocked at this time of year, a statue of him, and gardens surrounding it. Eventually, when funds are raised, the plan is to include birds and small mammals.
The pathways and landscaping throughout the parts we could walk in are very nice. There is a lot of new signage that seems very informative, although I did not stop to read many of them. On the offside of the path passing the camel paddock, there are viewing points that are not ready yet for watching the Przewalskis, Yaks, and Mouflon.
There were a llama, donkey, groundhog, skunk, and maybe more out for meeting and petting.
This was not disappointing at all - there were many keepers around to talk to, animals we have not seen since early 2012, fellow interested and knowledgeable members, no groups, and a pleasant day. Obviously the Newsprint edition announcing this was not up to date on the construction situation so I was not expecting to see the Snow Leopard, etc, but we did get inside the holding.
I will post a few pictures but showing the enclosures well is always difficult for me - need to work on that -so they are mostly of animals.