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Wednesday, August 21, 2019

Zoo Review: OdySea Aquarium, Part I

When I visited Denver’s Downtown Aquarium last year, some of the literature that I read boasted that it was the biggest aquarium between the Mississippi River and the West Coast.  I suspect that the literature might have been a little out of date.  In 2016, Scottsdale, Arizona (just outside of Phoenix) made a splash with the opening of OdySea, an enormous new aquarium.  With over 2 MILLION gallons of water in its exhibits, it is the largest aquarium in the very arid southwest.  For visitors hailing from the desert regions around Phoenix, OdySea is a transport to an entirely new world.



Before we begin the tour, however, a moment to address the cetacean in the room.  The quickest way to annoy a staff member at OdySea?  Ask about the dolphins.  You see, OdySea is a part of an entertainment complex which also, until recently, featured a dolphin facility.  The dolphins were sent away and the facility shuttered after a series of deaths.  The dolphins were not a part of OdySea, which hasn’t stopped the aquarium from getting a lot of flak from people about them.  I don’t know, but to me it feels like going to a mall food court and complaining to the staff at Taco Bell that your Whopper (purchased at the Burger King next door) was awful.  So, in conclusion, no matter how you feel about dolphins in aquariums, there are not and never were any at OdySea (I’m only emphasizing this because I feel a great swell of sympathy for whoever manages their facebook page and has to politely and patiently answer this question several times a day).

Even compared to zoos, aquariums tend to be somewhat formulaic – the same animals in the same types of exhibits.  I think the reason that I’ve always loved the Shedd Aquarium is that it felt so different from other aquariums to me.  Well, OdySea is in a different class as well.  Open entering the building, you are greeted by a series of massive, globular aquariums hanging from the ceiling.  It’s as close to being immersed in water with water as you can get without getting wet.  Oh, and make sure you use the bathroom before you start your tour.

At most aquariums, I wouldn’t think to mention the bathroom.  Here at OdySea, they are spectacular, officially ranked “America’s Best Restroom”.  Both restrooms on the first floor have windows into the main shark tank, which means that if you glance up while washing your hands, you could find yourself eye-to-eye with a sand tiger shark cruising silently past you.  Of course, if you were in a bathroom and suddenly confronted with a shark, maybe a toilet would be a safer place to be stationed.  Side note: I’ve never been so not-weirded out to be in the bathroom and suddenly have everyone else in the room pull out their cameras.
Heading up the escalator, you will find yourself in the freshwater section of the aquarium.  Here you can admire endangered native trout in an exhibit by the Arizona Game and Fish Department, meet the sturgeons in a touch tank, and watch small crocodilians and turtles above water and below.   The collection is an impressive selection of river fish from around the world, including piranhas from South America, blind cavefish, and paddlefish swimming beneath the wheel of a recreated millpond.  Terrestrial side exhibits feature toucans, parrots, and sloths, who double-function as ambassador animals – if the exhibit seems empty, just keep strolling, because you might suddenly find yourself meeting the animal elsewhere in the building.  The freshwater section cumulates in an exhibit of Asian small-clawed otters, which can be observed swimming below the surface, frolicking on land, or snoozing inside their den.

Continuing along the hallway, there is a stingray touch pool.  Past that is the exhibit for African penguins, with a small seating area providing a theater-like view of the birds swimming underwater.  Like an increasing number of zoos and aquariums, OdySea offers penguin encounters as an educational feature and revenue generator.  Small groups can arrange to have access to the penguin exhibit, accompanied by a staff interpreter to learn more about the black-and-white birds.   Having worked with penguins many times I passed the opportunity by, but there happened to be a group in session when I was passing the exhibit, and I have to admit, watching them briefly made me smile.  I’ve spent so much of my life with zoo animals that sometimes, to my embarrassment, the encounters seem almost commonplace to me.  It’s good to see someone else from outside the field experience moments like this sometimes and recapture a little bit of that wonder and magic.  For a keeper or an aquarist, meeting a penguin or touching a stingray is… well, Tuesday.  For a visitor, it can be an experience that they remember for the rest of their lives.
Past the penguins, an escalator descends back to the ground floor of the aquarium – but not the exit.  Here, there is an entirely separate floor of animals and exhibits to explore – including one of the most innovative aquarium experiences I’ve ever seen.  To be continued...

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