San Diego Zoo for Families

We are a family of animal lovers so it was a no-brainer for us to visit the San Diego Zoo, listed in Frommer’s 500 Places to Take Your Kids Before They Grow Up, while we were vacationing in southern California.

Otters at the San Diego Zoo

We began our day along the Lost Forest, an area with shaded winding paths to see one of our favorite animals, the tiger, before following the Hippo Trail to visit another animal that always brings a smile to our faces – the otter.

Although the more traditional San Diego Zoo doesn’t have the wide-open spaces and natural landscapes like its sister zoo, the San Diego Zoo Safari Park, the San Diego Zoo does have one major edge over the Safari Park – Giant Pandas.

The line was already long for the Giant Panda Research Station when we arrived in the late morning, but it moved at a steady slow pace, giving everyone a chance to see these gentle giants.

Giant Pandas at the San Diego Zoo

The zookeepers don’t encourage dawdling after you’ve taken your pictures, so we moved onto the Northern Frontier to visit the hot and sleepy polar bear.

By now it was time for lunch and rather than hike uphill with hungry kids, we hopped on the Skyfari aerial tram, which deposited us back at the main entrance. The San Diego Zoo’s kids’ meals came in a fun souvenir bucket (perfect for playing at the beach) and with our bellies full, we headed to the Outback to catch a glimpse of an animal we hadn’t seen much in our previous zoo experiences – the koala bear.

A sleepy koala at San Diego Zoo

Apparently the Koala, which isn’t a “bear” but a rather cranky marsupial, spends most of its day asleep in its eucalyptus tree. We were lucky, however, and saw the little guy when he woke from his nap, stared at the onlookers for about 2 minutes, and then went back to sleep!

We wound our way back along Center Street to the Asian Passage, a neat one-way escalator that connects to the Elephant Odyssey. I really like this area and how it linked prehistoric animals to their modern counterparts with statues of prehistoric animals like the Columbian mammoth placed next to live exhibits of elephants, as well as the Fossil Portal, with its pit of fake animal bones that filled with gooey tar (or at least something that looked like tar) since we had plans to visit the La Brea Tar Pits later in our vacation. We finished the day in the gift shop with the purchase of yet another stuffed animal for my youngest – “Mick” Jaguar – before heading back to our hotel and the beach at Coronado.

77 Places visited, 423 to go.

“Cool” Spots in the Bronx Zoo

With the Northeast in the middle of another heat wave, I thought I’d comment on a recent field trip my son’s class took to New York City’s Bronx Zoo – when the “real feel” temperature was around 100 degrees!

The Bronx Zoo is one of our family’s favorites and listed in Frommer’s 500 Places To Take Your Kids Before They Grow Up. It’s a big zoo and great for kids, but when it’s hot, the last thing you want is to be miserable. You need shade – and preferable air conditioning . . . so where are the “cool” spots in the Bronx Zoo?

One top pick is a visit to Madagascar!

Madagascar! at the Bronx Zoo

Besides being indoors (and therefore, air-conditioned), there are plenty of dark areas where you can wait out the worst of the heat and the lemurs are really cute.

A new 4-D experience entitled Dora and Diego’s 4D Adventure is another “cool” way to beat the heat.
If you have an urge to be outdoors, consider the Congo Gorilla Forest. It’s an extra fee if you don’t get the Total Experience Package, but well worth the money when you walk through shaded paths and a water-misted trail on the hunt for gorillas and monkeys.
Gorilla in the Congo Gorilla Forest

Last, but not least, if the shaded paths along the Children’s Zoo and the darkness of the Mouse House are still too hot for you, try visiting the one place in the Bronx Zoo where the air-conditioning is always blasting . . .

Gift shop at the Bronx Zoo

. . . the gift shop!

Loving the Lions at the National Zoo

Lions at the National Zoo

Lions at the National Zoo

You have to love the lions at Washington DC’s National Zoo.  They tell you exactly what they think about all the people ogling them!

For more information about the National Zoo check out a recent posting at The Mother of All Trips.

And for us – it’s 51 down, 449 to go!

Photo Friday is hosted by DeliciousBaby.com

 

Panda-monium at the National Zoo

Panda Bears at the National Zoo

The giant panda bears are the premier attraction at Washington DC’s National Zoo and it’s easy to see why.  These black and white bears from China, named Mei Xiang and Tian Tian (and sorry, I don’t know which one is in the photo . . .), look cuddly and act like hams.

Even on a muggy day, one rolled around in their cave, putting its paw over its face just like a grumbly teen who’s been woken up entirely too early  . . .

A Giant Panda Bear passed out in its cave

. . . while the other one wandered around begging the zookeepers to let it back into the air-conditioned section of the Panda House!

Giant Pandas at the National Zoo

Similar to the National Zoo’s Asia Trail, there are plenty of kid-friendly and hands-on information kiosks scattered throughout the Giant Panda Conservation Plaza.

Love the tabs that hold factoids about Giant Pandas

And just in case you were wondering . . . otter fur is MUCH softer than panda fur!

Talking to the Animals at Washington DC’s National Zoo

National Zoo in Washington DC

Our family loves zoos and my youngest ADORES panda bears.  So even if Washington DC’s National Zoo wasn’t on Frommer’s 500 Places to Take Your Kids Before They Grow Up (which it was in the first edition of the book, but not the second), we’d still make time to see the animals. So on Easter Sunday, we headed to the National Zoo to get up close and personal with the pandas.

Since we didn’t have a car, we took the DC Metro, thinking it wouldn’t be a far walk to the National Zoo from the Red Line’s Woodley Park-Zoo/Adams Morgan station.

Descending into the DC Metro

Be forewarned! Although on a map, the National Zoo looks close to its Metro station, it’s several uphill blocks before you get to the zoo – not a bad workout on a slightly warm spring day – but I can imagine it would be something totally different on one of those muggy humid days Washington DC is so famous for.

Asian Otter at the National Zoo

Needless to say, we headed straight for the shaded Asia Trail where the Sloth Bears, Fishing Cats, and Asian Otters were located.  The animals were a little lethargic in the heat of the day so I’d recommend going as early as possible since the afternoon seems to be naptime.  The lack of animal activity didn’t bug my guys, though, because they were fascinated with the kid-friendly, hands-on displays that included fascinating facts about the animals.

Learning about Asian otters at the National Zoo

Scattered throughout the Asia Trail, my guys loved reading the factoids as well as touching the fur and skin samples of animals in nearby exhibits.  Ever wondered how soft otter fur feels or how sharp the claws of a sloth bear are?  You can find out at the National Zoo’s Asia Trail.  A couple more stops along the winding trail to chuckle at the antics of the Fishing Cat . . .

A very wet Fishing Cat

. . . and watch the elephants wander around (as they patiently wait for a new exhibition space to be completed) . . .

Elephants at the National Zoo

. . . before we headed to main attraction at the National Zoo - the pandas!!!!!