I agree, and most guests rarely glance at signs (I know as I used to do this myself) so either way they are redundant. Zoo's should post volunteers or educators at enclosures where guests are notoriously misbehaved, to really put the metaphorical foot down.The problem is that sometimes those signs can have the opposite impact. You put up a sign telling folks not to tap the glass, for instance, and now all the visitors can think about is tapping the glass...
This is more of an annoyance than anything else, though is still frustrating whenever you hear it: people who don't read the signs, and go up to an Orangutan and go "look at the monkey!" or "look at the crocodile" to an american alligator. Like, its not that hard to glance at a sign for two seconds!
I imagine that the animals like to think what are these apes trying to say? They don't even speak the language correctly lol!The one type of zoo visitor that really really makes me angry are the visitors who try and get an animal's attention. And the parents of children who don't dissuade that behavior.
Don't get me wrong- I'm known to approach an enclosure and say "Hi gorgeous!!" or "Hey there [insert cutesy nickname]". But I think there's a big difference between quietly greeting an animal versus trying to get their attention; tutting at them, repeatedly calling their name/shouting at it, tapping at glass, or my least favorite of all- making animal noises at them. Hissing/growing/meowing at big cats, barking and howling at wolves, cawing at birds... it just drives me nuts. I cannot imagine being in the position of the animal, surrounded by people mocking you with loud repetitive noises all day. It just feels disrespectful- it's a hill I'll die on.
I visited my local zoo twice in the last week with two different friends. One was very respectful; pretty quiet, very observant, making comments but not trying to get the animal's attention. The other tutted a lot and while they didn't make a ton of ruckus or animal noises, there was a definite difference in their approach. It got really grating.
That's really the only category that I vehemently hate, though. I hold no resentment towards children below the age of like 10 or 11 in any instance- only their parents. (Once you hit preteen territory my patience wanes lol). I will say that I quite dislike people with huge strollers, like the big covered wagon type cart things... I've never seen someone who both has one of them and is conscious and mindful of the people around them.
Indeed. Who it is to blame if a three-year-old toddler chases around a crowned pigeon in a walkthrough aviary? Is it the kid themselves? No. Is it the parents, who let them do it without repercussions? Maybe.Kids aren't the problem--the adults who enable them are. If a toddler bangs on the terrarium glass but her mom immediately pulls her back and tells her to stop, that's a problem solved.
I absolutely agree with a lot of the points made here. As a former zookeeper, an in just my opinion, my biggest pet peeve is unengaged visitors. So this is unlikely anyone on these forums. If you've ever approached a zookeeper and had a 20-30 meaningful conversation with them about an important conservation issue, then thank you, sincerely. .