As
members of the Denver Zoo, we were allowed to enter a half hour before opening.
Sadly the trip, lake walk and time shift wiped out Anabelle and me. We slept a bit more while Rosa had breakfast
with her relatives. Our arrival was before
New York opening time, but at twenty to ten, we missed the Extra Time and the
Rope Drop.
This
was a Disney World summer; references will be more frequent than usual. As evidence of this, Anabelle updated her
online Disney Shirt Grid remotely using her phone based on text messages from
her cousins after my sister’s family upgraded their Disney wardrobes.
The
beginning of the day was at the large African carnivore area, currently hosting
hyenas. As always in Denver, friendly
zoo volunteers were near most of the exhibits.
He told us about the keeper chat times, and also a trick they use to keep
the animals exploring. Besides the fact
that the shared exhibit has multiple animal scents naturally occurring, they
spray perfume around before letting each group out because the unfamiliar
scents encourages exploration and interaction of the animals.
Neato!
We
began with our usual path. Anabelle is a
fan of the tree bound versions of the large beaked birds, and stopped a while
to take in the ground hornbills walking around their enclosure. I pointed out that since they were ground
hornbills they must make excellent burgers.
I’m still very educational to have around.
Our
musical greeting of the Water Bufalooo-oooooooo! returned at the next exhibit,
because we’re also hysterical to have around.
Done
frightening the locals with our singing, Anabelle stated “I want to live here”
by the kangaroos and emus. We kept
going, however, and I was embarrassed as we passed the pachyderm house that I’d
never introduced her to the Abbot and Costello classic:
“Your
face reminds me of a rose.”
“Ooh!
An American beauty rose?”
“No…a
rhinoce-rose!”
See?
Hysterical.
There
was construction where the bighorn sheep used to be, so they were moved where
the dall sheep were. I know they’re the
state animal, but it was kind of a bummer since the large male bighorn died, and
I hadn’t heard anything about the other sheep being transferred. Still…nice sheep.
Possibly
because I was leaving ahead of them, and it was already mostly closed on our final trip last
time, we hit the Primate Panorama early, because Daddy loves monkeys!
We
spent some time with the “Monkeys from Home.”
(Translation- New World monkeys that match the species that used to be
in the Bronx Zoo Monkey House. Yes, for
those of you new to these adventures, the Bronx Zoo will always be home, and seven years later I'm still sad about the monkey house closing.)
The
nocturnal exhibit in there was a little rough, until a passing small child
provided some profound advice.
“See
the blackness moving? That’s the aye aye.”
Over
at the ape section, the baby orangutan was playing with his family, and the
baby gorilla was also goofing around on display. The bachelor group of gorillas was pretty
active as well.
WOO!
Daddy
loves apes too!
Possibly
due to rain timing, or the fact that it was early, there were no red river hogs
out. Anabelle, having been slowly
promoting them up her favorite animals list, was let down.
Spending
time viewing the mandrill mother proved that helicopter parenting is in no way
exclusive to human kind and proved a brief diversion before exiting back out
into the main part of the zoo.
We
took a walk down the quiet and peaceful, tree filled nurture trail. It had a couple of storks, but mostly a flock
of nesting vultures. I guess even large,
scary carrion feeders can be caring parents.
Coming
out we heard the loud “toot” of the zoo train.
Except
the train was closed for refurbishment.
Coming
out we heard the loud “toot” of some odd and random bird.
Hey,
their names are Fernando and Jorge. I was not only quoting masterful British comedy, I
was being culturally sensitive.
Hysterical
and Educational.
We
waved to the Indian rhino, but made a bee line to the tapir area since it
wandered over to say, “Hi” to Anabelle, as it maintained its place way up on
her favorites list.
A
little boy saw the model tapir skull on the information plaque and exclaimed in
an impressed voice,
“Tapirs
eat dinosaurs!!!”
Winning
the most awesome child in Denver award.
We
were in range of the hippo, who stuck his HUGE face out of the water to greet
members of his zoo. The reason we were in that area by was Anabelle suddenly added vultures to her “gotta see em” list and there
were more nearby.
They
were doing yoga and pooping simultaneously.
The
wonders of nature never cease.
We
circled around the front again to grab an always excellent Western Home Zoo
lunch at 11:30 in the empty cafeteria.
Emerging, we saw some of the big lions had moved into part of African
Carnivore Central. Across the way a
mongoose butt cameod, while the tiny dik dik hid in the shade.
Yeah,
it was a dull section, but with a funny name like that I had to mention it.
There
were more hyenas in another section, or maybe the same hyenas. Either way, woo!
Hyenas!
Approaching the zebra’s we had a family discussion on the reasoning of their stripes. Blending in with the fence, and “because
they’re criminals” both came up. We’re all very educational to have around.
We
saw Dobby, the baby giraffe!
Even
when you know the animals names, sometimes it’s hard to tell who’s who when the
baby is eight feet tall.
The
polar bears moved on to new zoos, making room for a more modern enclosure for
the grizzlies. The area around it was
set up like a campground to highlight safety measures to take in the local
area. I should probably point out I was
in full realization of this when I noticed someone forgot their backpack…in the
camping scene. Maybe the jet lag was
still in effect.
The
keeper explaining the zoos the polar bears moved too made a “leaving a bear
behind” joke about the remaining animals. Is it any wonder why I fit in there?
The
sea lions were mostly hiding, and we went straight into the Tropical Paradise
aquarium building. I made sure to sing
“The Batty Bat” in the cave area. Rosa
pointed out the capybaras were giant cuy and figured she could feed her whole
family with one for quite a while. I was
thrilled to be able to see a giant anaconda without having to avoid finding the
big ugly toad. (Bronx zoo, it’s been decades, can you please split that
exhibit?)
Anabelle,
never comfortable in tank zones, keyed in on unicorn fish (woo!) and upside
down and regular jellyfish. Somehow in
her transition to hating aquariums in general, the thing that terrified her
when she was little, the jellies, are now her favorite.
Because
parenthood is never predictable.
It
was fun seeing the Up the Lake salamanders (“eastern newt”) proudly on display
in a zoo, since they aren’t local residents there.
In
the “cool thing I didn’t know department” while watching the baby komodo
dragons perform death defying leaps, we learned they were all male. We also learned that the zoo only has adult
females. We also also learned what no
one knew until zoos began keeping female komodo dragons:
When
they are alone, they can fertilize their own eggs, and all the babies are
male. This allows them to swim to a new
island, and populate it all by themselves.
Good
luck sleeping from now on.
Outside
again, we went over to the tiger exhibit and met Nikita. She’s the potential
mate of Yuri, the tiger who moved out there from the Bronx Zoo. It probably says something about my
socializing skills that I’m much better at connecting with animals that moved
to Denver than actual people.
Ooh
a Bunny!
Sorry
we’re easily distracted as well as being educational and hysterical. The okapi was in a good viewing area for a
change, but there was a drizzle preventing any kind of quality camera focus. Instead we ducked under the Asia exhibit
cafeteria for an ice cream and pretzel rest stop. We refilled the souvenir soda cup, our second
since we forgot the one from last year, proving again this place was exactly
like our home zoo in the Bronx. Rosa
rested her foot a bit while I made a run through the -much chillier than it
should have been even without the rain- air to get the coats from the car. Once
again I was thankful for the density of the zoo making it much smaller than it
seemed.
They
took multiple selfies while I wandered and checked off a couple more license
plates in the parking lot. While
waiting, and being visited by the creatures that hang around all zoo
cafeterias, Anabelle decided the blue and teal added to her hair to celebrate
the end of the school year made her “Alpha Male of all the Peacocks.”
We
could hear the lions bellowing with unhappiness at being out in the rain, but
the okapi were enjoying it and had a stripey butted party.
The
rain didn’t affect us much, as Anabelle was still distracted by artsy flower
photo moments. I tried to point out the
Somali wild asses, but given the rare occasion of their facing and location in
the enclosure my daughter corrected me. “No Daddy, wild heads.”
Hysterical
and Educational.
The
rain kept a potbellied resident in his little house, and we believed we would
be having a pigless day as we turned into the elephant area.
In
that we saw an elephant (ooh, shocker!) as well as (anyone?) another
elephant. Plus inside the house was
Chuck… (Wait for it) the big male elephant!
Woo!
Within
one of the buildings, Anabelle was trying to get a photo of a hornbill, and
sent me away when my innate ability to make animals moon me manifested. I did manage to get a good picture of the
fisher cat while she stayed with the bird.
Before
leaving the house we spent some time with the ooters playing in the
wooter. You’ll have to ask my child and
her cousins about that pronunciation, I'm not getting blamed for this one.
Outside
were more elephants!!!! They posed! We
were trying to figure out if we brought the umbrella when it dropped out the
pack like a turd out of an elephant, to make an unfortunately apropos simile.
We
sprinted through the rain to Bird World, waving to the excessively happy and
frolicking hippo and penguins. In
another show of being an awesome zoo that cares about its charges, Bird World
was deemed not up to current standards and closed after we went on October
first. I hope the sloths got a nice new home in Tropical Discovery.
Showing
our utter consistency and fascination with shiny objects, we all stopped and
took a picture of the bright blue spangled cotinga…like we did every single
time we entered this building.
Then,
to continue our traditions, Anabelle yelled “BOOBY FEET” when we encountered a
picture of that bird.
The sloths were less active than usual, which for sloths is one heck of a statement, and we left pretty quickly. Anabelle made my flaming-wents joke as we left the flamingos to maintain our hysterical educationalness. I'm so proud.
The sloths were less active than usual, which for sloths is one heck of a statement, and we left pretty quickly. Anabelle made my flaming-wents joke as we left the flamingos to maintain our hysterical educationalness. I'm so proud.
Our
progress slowed a bit as wet flowers produced even more opportunities for artsy
photos than dry ones do, or so I’ve been told.
The
lorikeets had been allowed to go in and hide from the storm. Only two were out
in the feeding area, but one stood on me again. Woo! And it didn't try to consume a chunk of my
flesh. Double Woo!
Since
we were on that end of the zoo, we wandered over to the back of primate ridge
where the red river hogs lived.
SUCCESS! First one was out, but
then it was a veritable hog fiesta!
Anabelle grunted at them and had a wonderful time. Then she and Rosa celebrated by taking goofy
filtered selfies.
I
celebrated by leading us back through the ape house again. We learned Jim the silverback was very
protective of the new baby. He came over to see us and send a hello to the gorillas
in the Bronx Zoo.
I
have moments with gorillas. Don't judge me.
We
greeted the orangutan family again and then worked our way back through the
monkey house.
Daddy
loves monkeys!
The
titi monkey was sitting out in the open to greet Rosa. Then it turned around to moon us to greet me.
We
saw more flamingos and Rosa asked why they stand on one leg, which she does
all the time to humor me. We took a
slight wrong turn and detoured through the pachyderm house. It was a good
decision as the African rhino was inside.
Or as my daughter said, “CLOSE UP VIEWING OF THE CHUBBY UNICORN!”
We’re
very educational to have around.
A
sun shower allowed us to see a last bit of hippo frolic as we targeted the
exit. The elusive roof cheetah finally made an appearance for the day. Animal reactions to rain are usually
interesting, the gazelles were mostly under a tree but still outside.
The
inadequately named water buffalo all hid in the little barn.
We
took one last shot and did see the wild dogs, but there were hyenas in most of the
sections.
Still,
hyenas! Woo!
The
bathroom near the exit has animal butts on the stall doors, and “waste trivia”
on the walls. Educational that we are,
we always try to stop at that one.
In
a major turn of events from most of our Denver outings, Anabelle did not buy a
stuffed sloth, but a red river hog. She claimed the Bronx Zoo let her down in
this area. We also picked up a stuffed
orangutan for Abuelita, so she wouldn’t forget me. She named it Pinocchio, for reasons that are likely lost in translation.
Speaking of random Disney references- The
store played a bunch of Disney music, for us I assume. I picked up the required zoo gummies, and a
highly appropriate for the local herbs Rasta lion shirt. The zoo guy at the counter rang everything up
by calling it out in a sing song way, complete with rhymes.
Awesome!
You
might think a stuffed sloth, with its extended limbs would put on a much better
dance demonstration than a stumpy legged red river hog. If you did, you clearly have not met my
daughter, who began a series of performances with the newly christened “Pigeon”
extending far beyond our Denver trip to whatever was on the playlist. His performance during “Help!” by the Beatles
nearly caused us to end up in a ditch, but I quickly got used to his hysterical
antics.
We
had to make a couple supply stops on the way home in “HI Ho Silver
Hooray.” The first was King Soopers,
where we finally found Denver’s only hidden supply of fat free cold cuts, under
some other selections.
We
also stopped at Walmart for some necessities:
Towels
A
Jump Rope
The
1954 Godzilla Figure.
Educational
to have around.
We
got home for some salmon burgers, (Yum!) showers, chatting and the resting of
Rosa’s foot.
After
trying multiple other ones at home, we figured out the giant monkey movie
Abuelita remembered liking was the most recent Kong of Skull Island. Titi liked that one too, and no one related
to me had a problem watching it again.
It
does illustrate an issue that most families probably don't have to deal with.
Figuring
out which one of the many giant monkey movies someone remembers watching with
you.
3 comments:
I love your zoo posts.
I also should add that I was reading with Tim in the room. And then I gave him a long monologue about how awesome you guys are.
Many thanx! Denver's the closest I've come to the "at home" feeling I get at the Bronx Zoo. That'one is a little stronger than Disney, likely because I'm less exhausted. The only greater feeling was Up the Lake while it lasted.
Thanx again for reading. My family has done from confused looks when I started with, "Hey, Dina said..." to understanding now as well.
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