More pachyderms can be seen in the nearby pachyderm house, now home only to black rhinos (in a yard that I assume used to be for elephants, as it is huge) and Nile hippos (in what is actually one of the less impressive exhibits at Denver). Both species can also be seen indoors, while a herd of alpacas is stationed outside in the Be A Zookeeper Zone, a neat little play area that every zoo should consider a version of. Across from the rhinos are two towering mountains for wild sheep - one for Dall's sheep from Alaska, another for the bighorn sheep of Colorado. Next door is the exhibit that first put Denver Zoo on the map - Bear Mountain, perhaps the first naturalistic zoo exhibit in the United States, built in the style of Carl Hagenbeck's German exhibits. At the time of my visit (not right now, I believe) it was home to grizzly bears. A Mesa Verde styled enclosure by the bears, resembling Anasazi cliff dwellings, houses a pack of coatis.
Most of Denver's excellent collection of monkeys, apes, and lemurs can be seen in Primate Panorama, a sprawling compound of primates from around the globe in handsome mesh-enclosed habitats. Smaller primates, such as golden lion tamarins, lemurs, and aye-ayes (in a nocturnal display, where, to be honest, viewing is very difficult) are housed in the grandiosely named Emerald Forest building, which didn't really live up to the hype of its name. Far more impressive are the habitats of gibbons, mandrills, orangutans, and gorillas (babies of the last two species were present during my visit). The great apes can be viewed from inside their holding buildings as well as outside in their grassy enclosures. Non-primates in the exhibit are included as well in the form of red-river hogs, duikers, and the occupants of the Forest Aviary. The exhibit ends in the Congo Basin-themed marketplace, home to many visitor services. Outside of Primate Panorama is Monkey Island, where a troop of capuchins clambers about on a lushly-planted island, while pelicans patrol the moat.
Bird World is the nucleus of the Denver Zoo's bird collection. Outdoor displays house bald and Steller's sea eagles, American flamingos, cinereous vultures, and mischievous kea parrots from New Zealand, as well as imposing cassowaries. Directly outside of the building is a small habitat of African penguins; like many zoos, Denver Zoo now offers penguin encounters for visitors. The building itself largely consists of spacious free-flight aviaries, with a few smaller single-species exhibits thrown in for good luck. Like many zoo aviaries, the bird keepers here apparently are forced to cope with the fact that a lot of visitors aren't that into birds by tossing sloths into one of their exhibits. Not featured in the viewing experience is the extensive Avian Propagation Center, the center of the Zoo's impressive breeding program. Between Bird World and Primate Panorama is a lorikeet feeding aviary.
I expected Denver Zoo to knock my socks off, and in many ways it did. Outside of guided tours or zoo conferences, I don't think I've ever been to a zoo and seen so many training and enrichment demonstrations - without even trying, I wound up seeing demos for lion, tiger, sea lion, and elephant... and all of this on a slow week day in the off season. Many of the exhibits were spectacular, and even those that were more on the blah end of the spectrum - hippos, smaller primates, (at the time) polar bears - still compared favorable to the average exhibit of that type I'd seen at many zoos. Many of the old, less-suitable habitats - the Monkey House, the Feline House - have recently been shuttered.
The commitment to field conservation here is also extraordinary. The Lake Titicaca water frogs in Tropical Discovery are one, representing the Zoo's field work in Lake Titicaca. In previous posts, I've mentioned Denver's work in Mongolia, home to many imperiled (but ignored) endangered species. The Zoo also walks the walk with its commitment to sustainability, especially waste management. Its wellness-based approach to animal care is hard to beat.
I would highly recommend Denver Zoo to anyone visiting the area. For those already living in the Mile High City, take pride in the fact that your city can boast of one of the best zoos in the country, and it's only getting better.
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