I paid a visit to the Woodland Park Zoo again today, one day after the $6.5 million Humboldt penguin exhibit opened. As to be expected the zoo has pulled off another exhibit masterpiece, as the penguin habitat is perhaps the BEST that I've ever seen. I admit that I've never been to the St. Louis Zoo, which supposedly has the #1 penguin enclosure in the U.S., but I've seen countless penguin exhibits over the past 33 years in North America and Australia. I love the fact that the enclosure in Seattle is entirely outdoors, and it is HUGE in size!
Woodland Park, home to a large number of exhibit awards over the years, has a new penguin enclosure that is enormous. The total area is 17,000 sq. ft., which is quadruple the size of the award-winning jaguar enclosure that everyone always raves about. I have at least 60 photos just of the penguin enclosure that I'll upload on Tuesday, but for now I'll say that I'm hugely impressed with the zoo's accomplishment. Including two round glass windows that are mainly for kids there are EIGHT viewing windows to see the penguins underwater, and numerous opportunities to wander around the extremely large visitor area. The massive rocky background makes the area seem even larger than it already is, and there is a small boat, an anchor, a large sandy area, and a visitor pathway that winds around several rock formations and allows for quite a few unique viewing opportunities. Most of the signs are half in Spanish and half in English (Humboldts are from Peru) and the 20 birds were active and darting throughout the water, their rocky beach, and the nesting holes in the background.
The one black mark against the brand new exhibit is an ugly-as-hell beige wall that separates it from the rest of the zoo. At each end of the long visitor walkway there are large gates that begin and end the journey and the wall is used to distinguish the penguins apart from other zoo exhibits. On the inside of the wall it looks terrific, with a research station, realistic looking moulds of rocks and various beach debris...and it all works brilliantly. However, looking at the exhibit from the outside the blank wall comes across as a total eyesore. Maybe there are plans to carve figures into it, or at the very least do something eyecatching, but time will tell. I thought that it could have been eliminated completely, but once inside the "penguin experience" it became an afterthought.
Other zoo news:
- a Matschie's tree kangaroo has been added to the Day & Night building, where there were tree kangaroos many years ago. The all-indoor enclosure previously held golden lion tamarins.
- there are no more slow loris or pygmy loris in the nocturnal house, and instead are 3 different enclosures with galagos hopping all over the place.
- the colobus troop is up to 5 now, and there is a male silverback gorilla expected to arrive soon. I have no idea where he is coming from.