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Small Private Zoo

Discussion in 'Speculative Zoo Design and Planning' started by Anmltrnr98, 14 Aug 2022.

  1. Aardwolf

    Aardwolf Well-Known Member

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    Trust me, no one saw. I only advocate irresponsibility when only I’m going to be impacted. Never jeopardize the safety of staff, visitors, or animals
     
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  2. TinoPup

    TinoPup Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    Emus were two enclosures over from one cassowary petting incident, and a kid got bit by one while I was there. I don't go near ratites and roll my windows up if they're approaching on a drive-through safari :D But they at least probably aren't going to severely injure or kill you, like a cassowary might. I've seen one charge a kid it didn't like and the family had no idea how fortunate they were that a fence stopped it.
     
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  3. birdsandbats

    birdsandbats Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    I've actually seen visitors get bit by Emus they were trying to pet through a shoddy fence (at Timbavati Wildlife Park). The person I saw reached through the fence to try to pet the Emu and it bit them. They said: "Ow! I wonder if it would do it again?" and the exact same scene played out a second time. :p

    Also, this gem of a scene at Doc's Harley-Davidson Zoo (yes, that's a real zoo):
    [​IMG]
     
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  4. Chlidonias

    Chlidonias Moderator Staff Member 15+ year member

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    It's always funny to me that Americans think Emus are dangerous when in Australasia they are commonly just kept in walk-through enclosures because they are so harmless.

    Anyway, here are a couple of cassowary enclosures I've seen which are a bit worrisome. The first is at Songkhla Zoo in Thailand (the fence is at the cassowary's chest-height when it is standing upright), and the second is at Taiping Zoo in Malaysia (the fence is inward-facing, but I reckon a cassowary could clear it easily if it wanted).

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]
     
  5. birdsandbats

    birdsandbats Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    American zoos specifically avoid putting Emus in walk-throughs because they are too dangerous. Do with that what you will.
     
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  6. Ursus

    Ursus Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    [​IMG]
     
  7. Neil chace

    Neil chace Well-Known Member 5+ year member

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    Yeah, I'm aware of quite a few walk-through exhibits with a separate exhibit for emus right next to it.
     
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  8. Batto

    Batto Well-Known Member 10+ year member

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    One of the emus at Zoo Stralsund's walkthrough exhibit clearly didn't like me. I had no problem dealing with it, but I'm not so sure about Joe Average zoo visitors...

    Regarding the original topic: that’s quite a lot of cost-intensive species for such a small zoo...
     
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  9. Haliaeetus

    Haliaeetus Well-Known Member

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    I've already seen Emus in large (but not very interesting, in zoological terms) walkthrough exhibits in France.
    They were mixed with domesticated or common animals like Goats, Sheep, Llamas, Alpacas or Red-necked Wallabies.
    Nonetheless the birds had enough space to flee if they felt too much disturbed by the visitors or by the other animals.