From what I've seen and read here in Zoochat I do agree with AD and many others when it comes to limited viewing opportunities of the savannah exhibit. It is something that could be easily fixed and hopefully it will be fixed in the future.
I personally also had a bad experience which is unlikely to apply to most of you. I was there with my cousin who is also a photo enthusiast and we both had tripods. They let us in with them no problem, even after searching through everyone's bags at the entrance because it was just a month after the 9/11 terrorist attacks. And yet in the middle of the day a senior executive cornered us inside the park and demanded to know if we had a press pass and what we were doing with our photos. She literally gave us a 5-10 minute interrogation, even after we told her we were amateur photographers.
I know that in Europe a lot of zoos prohibit photography with tripods without permission. The theory is that professional photographers use tripods so banning tripods bans professionals.
Journalist Jim Hill recently did a podcast for a Disney travel site where they talk about the future of DAK. Jim Hill is usually pretty reliable. The podcast can be found here for free on the Unofficial Guide to Walt Disney World podcast page. The August 6 2012 is the DAK episode. From Jim Hill's sources it sounds like giant pandas may come eventually to DAK, but beyond that it sounds like "Avatar-land" is the main future development there.
iTunes - Podcasts - The Unofficial Guide's Disney Dish with Jim Hill by Unofficial Guide to Walt Disney World
acyually I have found Jim Hill to be relatively unreliable. He does have sources but he reports everything he hears and only a very small portion turn out true
That has not been my experience. Compared to many fan sites he seems pretty reliable, at least when it comes to reporting on the films and theme parks. It is true that some of what he reports does not come to fruition like his report of the "Night Kingdom" park that Disney was proposing to build but never did (at least not yet).
How could it improve?
By not being in Florida. Or, stop seemingly direct the further development of San Diego's Wild Animal Park.
I have yet to visit, but the addition of an Avatarland seems like it would cock up a good thing; you already account for fantastical creatures through Dinoland, U.S.A., and there are more terrestrial ways to push a conservation message.
For example, the African Nation of Wakanda. Yes, the Black Panther's home. For those of you unfamiliar with the Marvel Universe that Disney recently acquired, it's a technologically advanced country (fictional, of course) in Northeastern Africa. Go here for the full description on Marvel's website.
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Through it Disney can explore: indigenous rights to the land and its resources, the power of animal lore in traditional societies via the Black Panther and White Gorilla Cults, and the struggle of traditional societies to hang onto their cultures in the face of modernization. And that's just a couple of overarching themes they could use.
There'd be a spectacular stunt show, of course. It's almost a given.
From Jim Hill's sources it sounds like giant pandas may come eventually to DAK