Here are some iPhone photos I took of the progress on the Adventure Trails yesterday, they seem to be moving along well. First time posting so here http://imgur.com/a/iifDc is the album link if they don't show up correctly
I'm going on the 17th for the first time in maybe 10 years (whenever the Hubbard was under construction). The place will seem about 50% new to me, so I better pace myself walking around.
nebraska wrote:
I'm going on the 17th for the first time in maybe 10 years (whenever the Hubbard was under construction). The place will seem about 50% new to me, so I better pace myself walking around.
LOL, it will seem way more new that that! Even areas that aren't new have really been spruced up in the past few years. I think you will be amazed at the transformation.
By Chris Peters / World-Herald staff writer wrote:In the year since elephants arrived at Omaha’s zoo, they have grown into a unified social group, and each elephant is further along in training than zoo officials expected them to be at this point.
Looks like the Zoo is moving ahead with the Asian Highlands exhibit. The site plan review was approved last fall (although the city permits site does not show it as done). A World Hearld article from Feb. 26 noted "Construction of the next big exhibit of the master plan, the Asian Highlans, is scheduled to start this spring."
The other big clue is that the Zoofari 2017 scheduled for September 15, 2017, is titled "Night of the Tiger".
"Prediction is very difficult, especially about the future." -- Niels Bohr
And so it begins: Plumbing permit pulled last Wednesday for storm sewers. First inspection done today "3/20/2017 40 foot of 18 inch SDR sleeved under track of Asian adventures. 40 foot of 8 inch PVC for panda enclosure from manhole tap." By the way the "panda" would be Red Panda (Ailurus fulgens), not the iconic Giant Panda.
"Prediction is very difficult, especially about the future." -- Niels Bohr
How do you see current voting numbers on the poll? I do not see anything and it was noted the Omaha zoo was down to #2 and I was looking for current live ranking
For the record NEBUGEATER does not equal BUGEATER !!!!!!!
nebugeater wrote:How do you see current voting numbers on the poll? I do not see anything and it was noted the Omaha zoo was down to #2 and I was looking for current live ranking
I haven't voted for a few days but it used to show the ranking after you voted. Now it just states to check back on March 31st to see who won.
Buildiding Permit pulled today for the solar pannel project by the safari camp area. Also, a certified of occupancy permit for the north entrance was applied for.
"Prediction is very difficult, especially about the future." -- Niels Bohr
Henry Doorly came in #2 for the USA Today’s 10Best Readers’ Choice awards. The fact that the San Diego Zoo came in so low makes me think that this poll was brigaded and not very accurate (I mean I kind of encouraged that as well, so...).
The poll is an Internet poll based on multiple votes by mostly a local population base. It is a popularity contest, not a reflection of the subjective qualities that make a great zoo. It has been a bunch of years since I have been to the St. Louis zoo, and it was an outstanding zoo when I was there... probably still is. How many people who voted in the poll have been to the other zoos in the running? I am guessing not that many. Ultimately this poll is just a popularity contest of how many people got on line to vote for "the home team".
On another note: the Zoofari fund raising event in September is sold out! I guess the folks who didn't get tickets to the event will have to figure out other ways to give their money to HDZ. Not a bad problem to have!
"Prediction is very difficult, especially about the future." -- Niels Bohr
Spatial77 wrote:The poll is an Internet poll based on multiple votes by mostly a local population base. It is a popularity contest, not a reflection of the subjective qualities that make a great zoo. It has been a bunch of years since I have been to the St. Louis zoo, and it was an outstanding zoo when I was there... probably still is. How many people who voted in the poll have been to the other zoos in the running? I am guessing not that many. Ultimately this poll is just a popularity contest of how many people got on line to vote for "the home team".
On another note: the Zoofari fund raising event in September is sold out! I guess the folks who didn't get tickets to the event will have to figure out other ways to give their money to HDZ. Not a bad problem to have!
My wife and I were able to go to Zoofari in 2013. We clearly didn't belong, but scored an invite due to a friend in the fundraising office. It was incredible seeing people and organizations forking over tens and hundreds of thousands of dollars. Unfortunately for us, we lack the necessary skills to become wealthy, so that was probably our last Zoofari experience.
Spatial77 wrote:The poll is an Internet poll based on multiple votes by mostly a local population base. It is a popularity contest, not a reflection of the subjective qualities that make a great zoo. It has been a bunch of years since I have been to the St. Louis zoo, and it was an outstanding zoo when I was there... probably still is. How many people who voted in the poll have been to the other zoos in the running? I am guessing not that many. Ultimately this poll is just a popularity contest of how many people got on line to vote for "the home team".
On another note: the Zoofari fund raising event in September is sold out! I guess the folks who didn't get tickets to the event will have to figure out other ways to give their money to HDZ. Not a bad problem to have!
The type of people that are so bored or spaced out or what ever that they are sitting on the net stuffing the ballot box to rig some bogus poll or like the American Idol geeks who waste time calling in to vote for their favorite contestant These kind of people live on another planet then me. I have never once wasted my time participating in any of that nonsense. Yes I need a life but not quite that bad!
By Chris Peters / World-Herald staff writer wrote:The Lied Jungle gave Omahans and tourists another reason to visit the Henry Doorly Zoo & Aquarium year-round, and it provided national exposure unlike any exhibit before. Once rated in the periphery of the top 20 by those who compile zoo rankings, the zoo was catapulted by the jungle exhibit toward the top five, where it remains today.
After we left the gardens yesterday we went over to the Zoo. Place was packed but it was about 2pm so we snagged a spot right by the door from someone that was leaving. Looked like most of the trees have been removed for the new Asian Highlands exhibit. Trail along the east side of the Aviary is now all closed off too.
Brad wrote:After we left the gardens yesterday we went over to the Zoo. Place was packed but it was about 2pm so we snagged a spot right by the door from someone that was leaving. Looked like most of the trees have been removed for the new Asian Highlands exhibit. Trail along the east side of the Aviary is now all closed off too.
I saw that as well when I was there this week, looks like they strategically kept some trees as well, they are definitely not wasting time on this project though.
The eight-acre, $20 million exhibit is being built in an area in the northeast corner of the zoo on a previously undeveloped hillside beyond the Simmons Aviary.
The zoo expects to open the exhibit in two parts. Red panda, Indian rhino, Père David’s Deer, crane and tufted deer habitats are scheduled to open in summer 2018. New displays for sloth bear, Amur tiger, snow leopard and takin, as well as a children’s trail with concessions and a rest area, will be completed by summer 2019.
Between this and the new African part, the zoo really seems to be either or both influenced by and resembling Animal Kingdom at Disney. And that's a very good thing in my book.
Greg S wrote:Between this and the new African part, the zoo really seems to be either or both influenced by and resembling Animal Kingdom at Disney. And that's a very good thing in my book.
Greg
I was thinking it is starting to look just like the Taipei Zoo (which is a good thing in my book).
I think this is great for the Omaha Zoo! I can't wait to see it completed. Truly amazing what they are doing with the zoo! Would be nice if they could give the zoo more land to expand on. I bet if you gave them a bigger land piece they could way more thing's with it!
OmahaFan wrote:I think this is great for the Omaha Zoo! I can't wait to see it completed. Truly amazing what they are doing with the zoo! Would be nice if they could give the zoo more land to expand on. I bet if you gave them a bigger land piece they could way more thing's with it!
It's funny because they got more land and turned it into a parking lot, yet they had to destroy part of their existing parking lot to build adventure education.
They own more houses and vacant lots in the adjoining neighborhood than many realise. Over time as the Tetris pieces fill in with their purchase they will have more room.
For the record NEBUGEATER does not equal BUGEATER !!!!!!!
TourismLover wrote:It's funny because they got more land and turned it into a parking lot, yet they had to destroy part of their existing parking lot to build adventure education.
Don't forget they took over the Nebraska Tourism lot and also made more parking there.
nebugeater wrote:They own more houses and vacant lots in the adjoining neighborhood than many realise. Over time as the Tetris pieces fill in with their purchase they will have more room.
HDZ has many visiting post grad education students who live in quite a few of those houses. HDZ is going to incorporate more education opportunities in the near future. All these new exhibit developments are great... But wait until these education components come to fruition. It will make more of a national impression than the exhibits... Not to mention the possibility of a HS there...
Regarding the land I understand that they did get the land where the Old ballpark was at and made it into a parking lot which they needed to do Kinda wish they invested that land into a Parking garage so you would have more land to expand on. Heck they could have built a 7 to 5 story car garage.
If only people would take buses, trolley's, streetcars, and high speed rail to the zoo, we wouldn't need parking lots...blah, blah, blah. Seriously, when you get over 2 million visitors a year, you're going to need big parking lots. To those of you who want a big parking garage instead, I suggest you open up your check book and write a check out to the zoo for millions of dollars and maybe they will build one for you. Make the check big enough and they may even name the parking structure after you. Problem solved.
Coyote wrote:Rhino Building plans being submitted.
I saw that too. $9 million building. I don't know if you caught it when they announced the Asian Highlands project that the Zoo project manager said that the Master Plan is 100% funded and that they would be opening a new exhibit, or portion of a new exhibit form now through 2024. He said the Master Plan would be totally completed in 2025.
I talked with someone at the Zoo a few years ago and they said they were already putting together ideas for the next master plan.
"Prediction is very difficult, especially about the future." -- Niels Bohr