Moonlit Sanctuary, 27 May
One of the Melbourne zoo collections I really wanted to visit while in town was Moonlit Sanctuary which lies just south of the city on the Mornington Peninsula. I had never been there before but the owner is a Zoochat member (MRJ) and his posts had made me eager to go with their talk of such delightful critters as yellow-bellied gliders and spot-tailed quolls. I am of course a big fan of small mammals, and to see them at night rather than in a nocturnal house was something I was really looking forward to.
First I took the train to Frankston, end of the line, but from which there is a bus (number 776) to Pearcedale, the town outside of which Moonlit lies. I had been fore-warned that Frankston was the Bogan capital of Melbourne but I don't think I was fully prepared for quite how, er, “regional” it was. Almost all the people sitting round the bus terminus looked like they had just taken a break from tending their stills out the back of their deep-woods cabins, a couple of glaze-eyed stoners wandered blithely through traffic, while on the other side of the road a twenty-something couple were having a blazing row in the street for the entire half an hour I was sitting there.
It is about 25 minutes by bus between Frankston and Pearcedale, apparently a large enough gap to discourage the lower-living set, sort of a Bogan-break (like a fire-break but for Bogans). From Pearcedale to Moonlit Sanctuary there's no public transport but it is less than three kilometres so that's not an issue unless you only have one leg.
I was really impressed with Moonlit, partly I think because the night tour is, well, a tour so it is more personal and also very hands-on with the cuddly animals (I was on the tour with a group of about eight uni students doing a conservation course). I think another reason is simply that small animals appeal to me much more than lions and elephants. It is a difficult comparison because they are very different organisations, but I think I probably enjoyed my visit to Moonlit more than my visit to Melbourne Zoo. My review is here:
http://www.zoochat.com/24/first-visit-moonlit-sanctuary-27-may-366452/
It is definitely somewhere I would recommend to everybody, and especially to, say, nanoboy
On the wild animal front, at Moonlit I added Cape Barren geese and common bronzewing pigeons to the year list during the day, and at night I added tawny frogmouth and common ringtail possum (mammal number 70 for the year!!). Sadly no sugar gliders were seen although they do occur in the wild in the park.
Visiting Moonlit got me thinking about night zoos. If you've been keeping up with my travels and reviews you will know that I thought little of Singapore's Night Safari (or, at least, the way they keep their large animals). Moonlit was very different because it focuses on smaller animals, and it has the benefit of being able to have the larger animals (i.e. macropods) free-roaming. I of course wondered if it would be possible to have a night zoo in NZ, and I think the answer is no. In winter it gets dark before 6pm so that is good, but it is too cold so your visitor numbers would plummet. In summer it is warm enough for most people, but it doesn't get dark until about 9pm! It just wouldn't work as a stand-alone idea.