Finally, I have uploaded World of the Bhalu! Last will be Wild Lorain County.
Horns honking, rickshaws rumbling, birds singing and Bollywood music blaring set the scene as you enter World of the Bhalu, a unique Indian-themed exhibit that starts in an Indian market! Complete with recordings of the sounds of an Indian market and tables piled high with (fake) fruit and vegetables, the first part- The Market- is home to several animal exhibits, but you have to know where to look! Rose-ringed parakeets- complete with signage about their wide range, including India, and ability to live in disturbed areas- live in a netted aviary that encompasses several of the market tables. Common mynas live in a smaller, slightly wooded area off to the side- but still within the market- and a third aviary is home to laughing doves and red-whiskered bulbuls flying among a mockup of an Indian vegetable stall.
Looking at the tables and other structures- small huts and rickshaws, for example- themselves, you start noticing that some of them have lush terraria on top of or inside them! Complete with interpretive signage about their range and Hindi names, you see that these terraria are home to several small animals common in India- Indian chameleon, leopard gecko, house gecko, Indian smooth snake, common vine snake, common wolfsnake, common Indian toad, common skittering frog, the (quite large!) Indian bullfrog, painted frog, Indian burrowing frog, Indian tree frog, ornate narrow-mouthed frog and, in a glass-fronted mockup of an Indian kitchen, complete with plenty of food waste, little Indian field mice and house mice!
A path planted with palm trees and several other plants native to the Indian subcontinent takes you past a larger cement-block building with a wooden sign nailed to it- BHALU TOURS- SEE SLOTH BEAR AND SO MUCH MORE! CALL VEER, +91 258 953 9752. The focus on detail in this exhibit- and the rest of the ZPLC- is even apparent in the phone number, arranged like a traditional Indian phone number, with 258 953 9752 corresponding to BLU WLD ZPLC (“bhalu,” “world,” “ZPLC”). Just past this building, you round a bend and see a large paddock with varied terrain- a large pool, mud wallows, a grove of trees and a drier, sandy area. Interpretive signage around the bend in the lush trail tells you that this paddock is home to Indian rhinos! The trail takes you around the south and east boundary of the paddock, which is separated from another similar, but smaller and less muddy, paddock with bamboo fences.
This paddock, with a bamboo fence and a low rock wall reminiscent of a Hindu temple, is mostly flat and swampy, but has a forested section, a drier, sandier section on the ground and a reed-filled marsh on one end. Interpretive signage is displayed along the rock wall, telling visitors exactly what is in here- barasingha deer, nilgai, blackbuck, Indian hog deer, bar-headed goose, ruddy shelduck and Indian peafowl.
You can get close to the animals from the path, but the best way to view this paddock is through an elevated boardwalk just past the rock wall. Separated from the paddock by netting, the elevated boardwalk goes right through- and- above- the paddock, giving you supreme views of the various ungulates and birds calling this exhibit home. For those who choose not to take the boardwalk through the paddock, the path curves around it to the end of the boardwalk, continuing on past three netted wetland aviaries with a pond, muddy shore, reed-filled bank and a drier, sandy area on land- home to painted storks, lesser adjutants and spot-billed pelicans, respectively. A fourth aviary with less water and more places to perch is home to Brahminy kites. After the Brahminy kite aviary- and more interpretive signage about Indian wetlands- the path goes toward the centerpiece of World of the Bhalu- a large Hindu temple.
As you get closer to the temple, you realized that it is separated from grassy, outdoor exhibits by a rock wall. The path gives you a choice- you can either walk under a decorated stone arch right into the temple or go around- but what is in here?
Interpretive signage tells you that the temple and the exhibits around it are home to the bhalu- the Hindi word for sloth bear!!! More interpretive signage explains why the outdoor exhibits are built the way they are- with several trees (as sloth bears are good climbers), grassy areas but uneven terrain with fallen logs and rock piles for the bears to explore and a wide, slow-moving stream with grassy, rocky and sandy banks (as sloth bears are very good swimmers!). This stream becomes a large pond, with the path taking you past an underwater viewing window for the sloth bears, more views of their exhibit and through one of the two entrances of the Hindu temple. Inside the temple is a dark glass “cave” for Indian flying foxes and glass-fronted indoor exhibits for the sloth bears, as well as interpretive signage telling you even more about sloth bears- their range, diet, anatomy, breeding and cubs- everything you would want to know about sloth bears!
The temple’s exit is right next to the entrance going straight to the temple instead of around the outdoor exhibit. Taking the path back, you find yourself among the hustle and bustle of the Indian market again- complete with birds chirping, horns honking and Bollywood music blaring- but, as you leave the World of the Bhalu and enter the last part of the ZPLC- Wild Lorain County- that soundtrack gives way to that of baas, moos and clucks!
Horns honking, rickshaws rumbling, birds singing and Bollywood music blaring set the scene as you enter World of the Bhalu, a unique Indian-themed exhibit that starts in an Indian market! Complete with recordings of the sounds of an Indian market and tables piled high with (fake) fruit and vegetables, the first part- The Market- is home to several animal exhibits, but you have to know where to look! Rose-ringed parakeets- complete with signage about their wide range, including India, and ability to live in disturbed areas- live in a netted aviary that encompasses several of the market tables. Common mynas live in a smaller, slightly wooded area off to the side- but still within the market- and a third aviary is home to laughing doves and red-whiskered bulbuls flying among a mockup of an Indian vegetable stall.
Looking at the tables and other structures- small huts and rickshaws, for example- themselves, you start noticing that some of them have lush terraria on top of or inside them! Complete with interpretive signage about their range and Hindi names, you see that these terraria are home to several small animals common in India- Indian chameleon, leopard gecko, house gecko, Indian smooth snake, common vine snake, common wolfsnake, common Indian toad, common skittering frog, the (quite large!) Indian bullfrog, painted frog, Indian burrowing frog, Indian tree frog, ornate narrow-mouthed frog and, in a glass-fronted mockup of an Indian kitchen, complete with plenty of food waste, little Indian field mice and house mice!
A path planted with palm trees and several other plants native to the Indian subcontinent takes you past a larger cement-block building with a wooden sign nailed to it- BHALU TOURS- SEE SLOTH BEAR AND SO MUCH MORE! CALL VEER, +91 258 953 9752. The focus on detail in this exhibit- and the rest of the ZPLC- is even apparent in the phone number, arranged like a traditional Indian phone number, with 258 953 9752 corresponding to BLU WLD ZPLC (“bhalu,” “world,” “ZPLC”). Just past this building, you round a bend and see a large paddock with varied terrain- a large pool, mud wallows, a grove of trees and a drier, sandy area. Interpretive signage around the bend in the lush trail tells you that this paddock is home to Indian rhinos! The trail takes you around the south and east boundary of the paddock, which is separated from another similar, but smaller and less muddy, paddock with bamboo fences.
This paddock, with a bamboo fence and a low rock wall reminiscent of a Hindu temple, is mostly flat and swampy, but has a forested section, a drier, sandier section on the ground and a reed-filled marsh on one end. Interpretive signage is displayed along the rock wall, telling visitors exactly what is in here- barasingha deer, nilgai, blackbuck, Indian hog deer, bar-headed goose, ruddy shelduck and Indian peafowl.
You can get close to the animals from the path, but the best way to view this paddock is through an elevated boardwalk just past the rock wall. Separated from the paddock by netting, the elevated boardwalk goes right through- and- above- the paddock, giving you supreme views of the various ungulates and birds calling this exhibit home. For those who choose not to take the boardwalk through the paddock, the path curves around it to the end of the boardwalk, continuing on past three netted wetland aviaries with a pond, muddy shore, reed-filled bank and a drier, sandy area on land- home to painted storks, lesser adjutants and spot-billed pelicans, respectively. A fourth aviary with less water and more places to perch is home to Brahminy kites. After the Brahminy kite aviary- and more interpretive signage about Indian wetlands- the path goes toward the centerpiece of World of the Bhalu- a large Hindu temple.
As you get closer to the temple, you realized that it is separated from grassy, outdoor exhibits by a rock wall. The path gives you a choice- you can either walk under a decorated stone arch right into the temple or go around- but what is in here?
Interpretive signage tells you that the temple and the exhibits around it are home to the bhalu- the Hindi word for sloth bear!!! More interpretive signage explains why the outdoor exhibits are built the way they are- with several trees (as sloth bears are good climbers), grassy areas but uneven terrain with fallen logs and rock piles for the bears to explore and a wide, slow-moving stream with grassy, rocky and sandy banks (as sloth bears are very good swimmers!). This stream becomes a large pond, with the path taking you past an underwater viewing window for the sloth bears, more views of their exhibit and through one of the two entrances of the Hindu temple. Inside the temple is a dark glass “cave” for Indian flying foxes and glass-fronted indoor exhibits for the sloth bears, as well as interpretive signage telling you even more about sloth bears- their range, diet, anatomy, breeding and cubs- everything you would want to know about sloth bears!
The temple’s exit is right next to the entrance going straight to the temple instead of around the outdoor exhibit. Taking the path back, you find yourself among the hustle and bustle of the Indian market again- complete with birds chirping, horns honking and Bollywood music blaring- but, as you leave the World of the Bhalu and enter the last part of the ZPLC- Wild Lorain County- that soundtrack gives way to that of baas, moos and clucks!