What is the best zoo in new england

Don't get me wrong, Southwicks is much better than most non-accredited zoos that hold exotic species. And I would love to see the zoo improve its enclosures, but more needed is a change of animal welfare. As this thread has so focused on issues that seem to be widespread there. Hence why I wish they would never get another elephant :D

I think this is something that was lost in last nights "conversation". Southwicks was a better zoo than I was expecting it to be when I visited, and it's probably the best non-accredited 'standard zoo' I've visited in the US. That doesn't mean there still aren't many areas to improve upon, however.

I do agree with you though that Franklin Park should be high up on the list. Their collection alone has a nice mix of ABC animals and rarities. I haven't visited in a decade but the new children's zoo seems nice. I mean the only exhibits that stand out as bad are the outdated bird house (and surrounding habitats) and the indoor-only gorilla exhibit. Several zoos have indoor-only gorilla exhibits. I am not a fan of them, but Franklin Parks exhibit is 12,000 sq feet according to a source I found. So a nice size exhibit. I think the issue is that its one of those stagnant zoos, but stagnation does not make it a bad zoo when judged against the other zoos in the region. I hope to get back to the region in the coming years to finally visit Stone Zoo and revisit Franklin Park.

FPZ is a zoo I really need to revisit to get a feel on. I remember visiting and feeling disappointed in my visit, but I'm not quite sure why. I don't remember hating the bird house, it just felt a little dated and smaller than expected but not bad. The condor aviary is cool, though. I was hoping to visit all the Boston collections some time this year but..

I’ve never really been to any of the Connecticut facilities, are any of them worth going to?
Mystic Aquarium is great in my opinion. Its less focused on fish, as the marine mammal collection is the star. Their collection includes beluga, California sea lion, harbor seal, spotted seal, northern fur seal, and stellar sea lion. The indoor exhibits ain't bad but are weak compared to the outdoor sections.

Maritime Aquarium is definitely more fish focused of an aquarium, with a collection of animals largely from the nearby Long Island Sound. They have a few mammals though like river otter and harbor seal. I enjoyed visiting but as aquariums go it rather average.

I have not been to Beardsley in a long while so I'll leave that for @ThylacineAlive

As @nczoofan noted, Mystic is great. They have one of the largest and best Beluga Whale exhibits around, and they have a superb pinniped collection. I'd disagree that they're less fish focused, however, because despite the fact that their indoor gallery is a lot smaller than most major aquariums, they still have a lot of odd fish and I've seen a lot of cool species I've never seen before (and sometimes since) on my visits. In recent years they've clearly been working on updating the indoor galleries with further species from around the world, and in particular have added a lot of unique invertebrates. They also have a permanent amphibian exhibit now which is nice to see.

Maritime is definitely more fish-focused with an eye on the Northwest Atlantic but they do it very well. I think it's a pretty underrated aquarium tbh, though they don't have any massive draws like many other well-known aquariums do. The aquarium actually does a lot of jellyfish breeding for institutions around the country, and part of their breeding set-up is on-show which is unique. They had a really great amphibian room for a long time, but unfortunately they've gotten rid of it in favor of an awful new exhibit with tiny basic enclosure filled with more ABC animals for public enjoyment (skunks, owls, parrots, etc.). I believe they're working on a new Meerkat enclosure, at which point it'll be interesting to see what happens to the current enclosure. I'd like to see them stick with the overall reptile-centric theme of that room.

Beardsley is tiny but solid. They don't have the best exhibits out there but they're slowly but surely improving one step at a time. My biggest problem with them is the horrible raptor cages and the supposed permanent destruction of their native reptile house/the phasing out of their reptile collection in general. That said, they do still have a pretty solid collection: Mexican Wolf, Red Wolf, Maned Wolf, Grey Fox, Amur Leopard, Amur Tiger (only pure ssp tigers in New England I believe), Brazilian Ocelot, Nepali Red Panda, Black Howler, White-Faced Saki, Geoffroy's Spider Monkey, Golden Lion Tamarin, Goeldi's Monkey, Common Vampire Bat, Giant Anteater, Hoffmann's Two-Toed Sloth, Chacoan Peccary, Greater Rhea, Andean Condor, Sandhill Crane, White-Naped Crane, four native owl species, American Alligator, Yacare Caiman, Hispaniolan Slider, Amazon Tree Boa, and Eastern Hellbender among others. They sometimes bring in giant tortoises as a seasonal display, and I do hope they one day make them permanent residents. I do miss their Pronghorn and Canada Lynx, but I do look forward to seeing them expand their currently very small Asian complex and especially the tiger exhibit. A new aviary for condor and Andean Bears are upcoming projects as well. Should everything continue to come together as it has been, the zoo will undoubtedly become a bigger contender for NE's best as they update the handful of poorer areas and expand both their collection and the zoo as a whole.

(Livingstone) Ripley Waterfowl Conservatory is a mainly bird zoo with a waterfowl focus, but it's still one of my favorite zoos in New England. It's small and privately run, but it also breeds a lot of waterfowl and cranes for AZA zoos. The place also boasts six first breeding records which are displayed proudly in their nursery barn. These include rarities like New Zealand Scaup and well-known endangered birds such as Hawaiian Goose. The place also has a couple of sea duck aviaries, where they keep scoters, eiders, mergansers, Harlequin Duck, and Long-Tailed Duck. While the focus is mainly ducks, I know the center has been expanding their sights on birds in general in the past couple years. A handful of exotic raptors now call the center home, as well as a few lapwing and dove/pigeon species. I know 2020 was supposed to be the years they built a brand new row of aviaries to be used as a pheasantry but I don't know if that ever happened for obvious reasons.

Action Wildlife is "drive-through" zoo in the middle of nowhere, CT. Despite their website advertising a wide variety of rare hoofstock (Barbary Sheep, West Caucasian Tur, Indian Hog Deer, European Wild Boar) they place is almost entirely domestics. American Bison, European Fallow Deer, generic elk, generic red deer, a single zebra, and a single oryx made up pretty much the entire exotic collection. They do have hybrid boarXpig, though, which they pass off as pure boar. The place also isn't drive-through, it's drive around. Basically there are no paths, just dirt roads winding around the outside of the pens. You can park on the side and get out if you'd like, but there's not much reason to. There is an additional section of the zoo specifically labeled as their "drive-thru", but that is also just a long loop that goes around the outside of a large track of fenced in forest filled with White-Tailed Deer and maybe Japanese Sika. They also have a small museum filled with dozens upon dozens of taxidermy animals which are all way more interesting a collection than the zoo itself. Here you can find a single live display featuring a boa and a couple of tortoises in a surprisingly large enclosure.

SeaQuest Trumbull is the one I forgot to add last night and it is probably at the bottom of my list because it is awful. It is an aquarium in a mall, which insists on keeping rather larger animals like goats, wallabies, full frown suclata tortoise, sloths, coatis, otters, lorikeets, caimans, and rays in absolutely tiny half-assed "enclosures". They even keep a kookaburra in a pet store Cockatiel cage. They also promote themselves as a "hands-on experience" and "better than zoos" because they allow pretty much all of their non-aquatic animals to be played with (either supervised or unsupervised by staff) by all members of the public upon request. This is apparently better for the animals somehow (but we won't get into that again ;)). I have some photos to post soon, but not many because upon being spotted taking photos by staff, I was jumped on by the "mammal and bird manager" and followed around the entire rest of my visit to ensure I didn't take any photos of anything other than the animals themselves (most of which are unlabeled). The place has many small and overstocked tanks featuring animals way too large for them in the first place. They claim they rescued all of their animals but this is almost certainly a lie and, if true, they need to be rescued again.

~Thylo
 
I definitely need to try to get down to CT to do their facilities and maybe Trevor too since it’s literally right across the boarder. Were you ever able to go to LEO while it was still open? They had so many cool species not normally seen in the area!
 
I definitely need to try to get down to CT to do their facilities and maybe Trevor too since it’s literally right across the boarder. Were you ever able to go to LEO while it was still open? They had so many cool species not normally seen in the area!

I've paired up Trevor and Ripley before, though they're about an hour apart. Also done Beardsley and Maritime together. One could theoretically pair Mystic and RWPZ, too.

Thing about LEO is it was never actually open. It was a private breeding center and as such I was never allowed to visit unfortunately. I'd have liked to, though. You'd think Greenwich of all places would be able to support a proper zoo, but I suppose being so close to NYC and also having Beardsley not terribly far away makes that difficult.

~Thylo
 
Yeah rip to the only orangutans in New England. I wish we could get some more but I honestly don’t know who would take them
 
I think this is something that was lost in last nights "conversation". Southwicks was a better zoo than I was expecting it to be when I visited, and it's probably the best non-accredited 'standard zoo' I've visited in the US. That doesn't mean there still aren't many areas to improve upon, however.



FPZ is a zoo I really need to revisit to get a feel on. I remember visiting and feeling disappointed in my visit, but I'm not quite sure why. I don't remember hating the bird house, it just felt a little dated and smaller than expected but not bad. The condor aviary is cool, though. I was hoping to visit all the Boston collections some time this year but..




As @nczoofan noted, Mystic is great. They have one of the largest and best Beluga Whale exhibits around, and they have a superb pinniped collection. I'd disagree that they're less fish focused, however, because despite the fact that their indoor gallery is a lot smaller than most major aquariums, they still have a lot of odd fish and I've seen a lot of cool species I've never seen before (and sometimes since) on my visits. In recent years they've clearly been working on updating the indoor galleries with further species from around the world, and in particular have added a lot of unique invertebrates. They also have a permanent amphibian exhibit now which is nice to see.

Maritime is definitely more fish-focused with an eye on the Northwest Atlantic but they do it very well. I think it's a pretty underrated aquarium tbh, though they don't have any massive draws like many other well-known aquariums do. The aquarium actually does a lot of jellyfish breeding for institutions around the country, and part of their breeding set-up is on-show which is unique. They had a really great amphibian room for a long time, but unfortunately they've gotten rid of it in favor of an awful new exhibit with tiny basic enclosure filled with more ABC animals for public enjoyment (skunks, owls, parrots, etc.). I believe they're working on a new Meerkat enclosure, at which point it'll be interesting to see what happens to the current enclosure. I'd like to see them stick with the overall reptile-centric theme of that room.

Beardsley is tiny but solid. They don't have the best exhibits out there but they're slowly but surely improving one step at a time. My biggest problem with them is the horrible raptor cages and the supposed permanent destruction of their native reptile house/the phasing out of their reptile collection in general. That said, they do still have a pretty solid collection: Mexican Wolf, Red Wolf, Maned Wolf, Grey Fox, Amur Leopard, Amur Tiger (only pure ssp tigers in New England I believe), Brazilian Ocelot, Nepali Red Panda, Black Howler, White-Faced Saki, Geoffroy's Spider Monkey, Golden Lion Tamarin, Goeldi's Monkey, Common Vampire Bat, Giant Anteater, Hoffmann's Two-Toed Sloth, Chacoan Peccary, Greater Rhea, Andean Condor, Sandhill Crane, White-Naped Crane, four native owl species, American Alligator, Yacare Caiman, Hispaniolan Slider, Amazon Tree Boa, and Eastern Hellbender among others. They sometimes bring in giant tortoises as a seasonal display, and I do hope they one day make them permanent residents. I do miss their Pronghorn and Canada Lynx, but I do look forward to seeing them expand their currently very small Asian complex and especially the tiger exhibit. A new aviary for condor and Andean Bears are upcoming projects as well. Should everything continue to come together as it has been, the zoo will undoubtedly become a bigger contender for NE's best as they update the handful of poorer areas and expand both their collection and the zoo as a whole.

(Livingstone) Ripley Waterfowl Conservatory is a mainly bird zoo with a waterfowl focus, but it's still one of my favorite zoos in New England. It's small and privately run, but it also breeds a lot of waterfowl and cranes for AZA zoos. The place also boasts six first breeding records which are displayed proudly in their nursery barn. These include rarities like New Zealand Scaup and well-known endangered birds such as Hawaiian Goose. The place also has a couple of sea duck aviaries, where they keep scoters, eiders, mergansers, Harlequin Duck, and Long-Tailed Duck. While the focus is mainly ducks, I know the center has been expanding their sights on birds in general in the past couple years. A handful of exotic raptors now call the center home, as well as a few lapwing and dove/pigeon species. I know 2020 was supposed to be the years they built a brand new row of aviaries to be used as a pheasantry but I don't know if that ever happened for obvious reasons.

Action Wildlife is "drive-through" zoo in the middle of nowhere, CT. Despite their website advertising a wide variety of rare hoofstock (Barbary Sheep, West Caucasian Tur, Indian Hog Deer, European Wild Boar) they place is almost entirely domestics. American Bison, European Fallow Deer, generic elk, generic red deer, a single zebra, and a single oryx made up pretty much the entire exotic collection. They do have hybrid boarXpig, though, which they pass off as pure boar. The place also isn't drive-through, it's drive around. Basically there are no paths, just dirt roads winding around the outside of the pens. You can park on the side and get out if you'd like, but there's not much reason to. There is an additional section of the zoo specifically labeled as their "drive-thru", but that is also just a long loop that goes around the outside of a large track of fenced in forest filled with White-Tailed Deer and maybe Japanese Sika. They also have a small museum filled with dozens upon dozens of taxidermy animals which are all way more interesting a collection than the zoo itself. Here you can find a single live display featuring a boa and a couple of tortoises in a surprisingly large enclosure.

SeaQuest Trumbull is the one I forgot to add last night and it is probably at the bottom of my list because it is awful. It is an aquarium in a mall, which insists on keeping rather larger animals like goats, wallabies, full frown suclata tortoise, sloths, coatis, otters, lorikeets, caimans, and rays in absolutely tiny half-assed "enclosures". They even keep a kookaburra in a pet store Cockatiel cage. They also promote themselves as a "hands-on experience" and "better than zoos" because they allow pretty much all of their non-aquatic animals to be played with (either supervised or unsupervised by staff) by all members of the public upon request. This is apparently better for the animals somehow (but we won't get into that again ;)). I have some photos to post soon, but not many because upon being spotted taking photos by staff, I was jumped on by the "mammal and bird manager" and followed around the entire rest of my visit to ensure I didn't take any photos of anything other than the animals themselves (most of which are unlabeled). The place has many small and overstocked tanks featuring animals way too large for them in the first place. They claim they rescued all of their animals but this is almost certainly a lie and, if true, they need to be rescued again.

~Thylo

I noticed that you did not include the New England Aquarium, Buttonwood Park, or Capron Park in your rankings. Have you visited those collections, and if so, where would they fall?
 
I noticed that you did not include the New England Aquarium, Buttonwood Park, or Capron Park in your rankings. Have you visited those collections, and if so, where would they fall?

The collections I left out were simply because I've not visited them yet, though I've been due a visit to them all for some time now. The aquarium I planned to visit back in January but didn't due to personal things getting in the way and then I've obviously not had time to since. As far as Buttonwood and Capron go, I've owed them a visit with @Bird Lover for some time now. Once things start fully opening up again, I think I'll have to go for a jaunt around that region and mop up those zoos as well as revisit Southwicks and RWPZ to see where they still stand. I need to visit the Forest Park Zoo some time as well, just to see. Pretty sure there's one more place in CT I need to visit as well. Earth Place or something like that. Then I'll move onto mopping up the more central and northern Massachusetts collections, including NEAQ and hopefully revisits to the Zoo New England parks. Anyone have any info. on that insect place that was mentioned upthread?

~Thylo
 
Ok so basically it’s a museum that has a decent animal collection which apparently has one of the biggest puma enclosures in the Nation. They’ve got mostly native stuff but up until 2011 they had a polar bear! It’s definitely not a full day thing but I’d say it’s worth a visit. I haven’t gone in about 2 years so I haven’t seen the pumas yet but I think I’m gonna try to go sometime soon.
 
Ok so basically it’s a museum that has a decent animal collection which apparently has one of the biggest puma enclosures in the Nation. They’ve got mostly native stuff but up until 2011 they had a polar bear! It’s definitely not a full day thing but I’d say it’s worth a visit. I haven’t gone in about 2 years so I haven’t seen the pumas yet but I think I’m gonna try to go sometime soon.

I'd be very interested in a species list if you do go again :)

~Thylo
 
I do remember going/sleeping over at the Ecotarium like 10 years ago. My memory is hazy but I do remember it being a snowy day when we went down to see the wildlife section and I believe I saw Kenda but I don’t entirely know
 
I do remember going/sleeping over at the Ecotarium like 10 years ago. My memory is hazy but I do remember it being a snowy day when we went down to see the wildlife section and I believe I saw Kenda but I don’t entirely know

Kenda? Is this the bear?

~Thylo
 
Looks like I’ll be heading to Stone on Friday! Any tips for visiting because I haven’t visited for about 10 years lol
 
Looks like I’ll be heading to Stone on Friday! Any tips for visiting because I haven’t visited for about 10 years lol

Photograph the new Caribbean area if you can! Also a species list of what's on-show would be helpful, thanks!

~Thylo
 
Photograph the new Caribbean area if you can! Also a species list of what's on-show would be helpful, thanks!

~Thylo

This species list contains any species I've seen at Stone over the past year or so and isn't organized by zone or anything like that, but hopefully is helpful:
  1. Marbled Salamander Ambystoma opacum
  2. Panamanian Golden Frog Atelopus zeteki
  3. Green and Black Poison Dart Frog Dendrobates auratus
  4. Dying Poison Dart Frog Dendrobates tinctorius
  5. Splendid Tree Frog Littoria splendida
  6. Mossy Frog Theloderma corticale
  7. Emperor Newt Tylototriton shanjing
  8. Hyacinth Macaw Anodorhynchus hyacinthinus
  9. Blue and Gold Macaw Ara ararauna
  10. Scarlet Macaw Ara macao
  11. Barrow's Goldeneye Bucephala islandica
  12. Rhinoceros Hornbill Buceros rhinoceros
  13. Silvery Cheeked Hornbill Bycanistes brevis
  14. Mute Swan Cygnus olor
  15. Laughing Kookaburra Dacelo novaeguineae
  16. Scarlet Ibis Eudocimus ruber
  17. Peregrine Falcon Falco peregrinus
  18. Chicken Gallus domesticus
  19. Roadrunner Geococcyx californianus
  20. Whooping Crane Grus americana
  21. Sandhill Crane Grus canadensis
  22. Black Necked Crane Grus nigricollis
  23. Bald Eagle Haliaeetus leucocephalus
  24. Inca Tern Larosterna inca
  25. Bali Mynah Leucopsar rothschildi
  26. Hooded Merganser Lophodytes cucullatus
  27. Caribbean Flamingo Phoenicopterus ruber
  28. Barn Owl Tyto alba
  29. Desert Tarantula Aphonopelma chalcodes
  30. Western Honey Bee Apis mellifera
  31. Chilean Rose Tarantula Grammostola rosea
  32. Vinegaroon Mastigoproctus giganteus
  33. Spider Monkey Ateles geoffroyi
  34. Ring Tailed Cat Bassariscus astutus
  35. Yak Bos grunniens
  36. Caucasian Zebu Bos Indicus
  37. Mexican Gray Wolf Canis lupus baileyi
  38. Nigerian Dwarf Goat Capra aegagrus hircus
  39. Markhor Capra falconeri
  40. Seba's Short Tailed Bat Carollia perspicillata
  41. Chacoan Peccary Catagonus wagneri
  42. Linne's Two Toed Sloth Choloepus didactylus
  43. Prehensile Tailed Porcupine Coendou prehensilis
  44. Black and White Colobus Monkey Colobus guereza
  45. Red Rumped Agouti Dasyprocta leporina
  46. North American Porcupine Erethizon dorsatum
  47. Puma / Cougar Felis concolor
  48. North American River Otter Lontra canadensis
  49. Canada Lynx Lynx canadensis
  50. White Nosed Coati Nasua narica
  51. White Cheeked Gibbon Nomascus leucogenys
  52. Jaguar Panthera onca
  53. Snow Leopard Panthera uncia
  54. Rock Hyrax Procavia capensis
  55. Reindeer / Caribou Rangifer tarandus
  56. Cotton Top Tamarin Saguinus oedipus
  57. Bush Dog Speothos venatious
  58. Pig Sus scrofa
  59. Black Bear Ursus americanus
  60. Arctic Fox Vulpes lagopus
  61. American Alligator Alligator mississippiensis
  62. Boa Constrictor Boa constrictor
  63. African Spurred Tortoise Centrochelys sulcata
  64. Yellow Footed Tortoise Chelonoidis denticulata
  65. Jamaican Iguana Cyclura collei
  66. Blanding's Turtle Emydoidea blandingii
  67. Leopard Gecko Eublepharis macularius
  68. Gila Monster Heloderma suspectum
  69. California King Snake Lampropeltis getula californiae
  70. Milk Snake Lampropeltis triangulum
  71. Rosy Boa Lichanura trivirgata
  72. Corn Snake Pantherophis guttatus
  73. Box Turtle Terrapene carolina
 
I went to Stone Today:
Although the Bush dogs were a no show, the Zoo was great! It had one of the best collections in New England and the Exhibits IMO looked really nice. Their was one area that was an exception to this which was the "Windows to the Wild". Most of the exhibits in this area looked very empty and the floors were made of Concrete with nothing covering it which wasn't very ascetically pleasing. Overall though I think I'd say Stone is the Second best zoo in New England. I'll post pictures later
 
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