Day 4 Tuesday January 17
After getting such
good reactions from the girls at the Sydney Aquarium (see Day 5 of Sydney - 6 Days), we go looking for more
animals to show them and head for the nearby zoo at Mogo. The zookeepers feed a Sumatran Tiger about 2
meters away from where I'm holding Rusty.
They're feeding her a bucket of chicken necks one by one. The keeper holds one up high on the chain
link fence and the tiger has to stand up and reach for it. Her paws are enormous and Rusty and I crane
our necks to take in her full height.
Sumatrans are the smallest of the world's six remaining species, but you
wouldn't guess it from that view. The
thought of a Siberian Tiger being up to 3x that size is hard to get my head
around. Rusty holds on to me very
tightly and stares very quietly - similar to her reaction to the shark. "Wowww," she says. Well said, I think.
Other big cats at
Mogo are some White Lions, some African Lions, Snow Leopards from the
Himalayas, and Servals which I had never heard of before, but which look a
little like bobcats. Most of them are
lying around in the shady bits of their big yards, but the Tiger and the
African Lion put on good shows for us at feeding time.
We brought over our
two-seater chariot stroller and are learning that there are good times to use
it and bad times. Walking down the
street to go grocery shopping is a good time.
It glides over any curb or root or rock in its way and fits groceries
for the trip home. The Mogo Zoo, with
its narrow walkways and slow-moving crowds is a bad time. It's so bad it's almost funny. The chariot takes up most of the path that
leads into the reptile house, so Ellen has to back out two or three times to
let people out. She makes it to the
corner, and a lady with a normal-sized umbrella stroller appears from the other
side. Ellen gives her a look like,
"um, would you mind backing up your tiny, non-ridiculous stroller, so I
can get past with my gigantic, obnoxious one?" If Borat went to the zoo, he would have a
stroller like this. We push it through a
couple more exhibits, squeegeeing the crowds clear of the path as we go, before
we can't take it anymore and I run it back to the car.
The primates are
hilarious and fascinating. The zoo
specializes in endangered species, so there are lots that I've never heard
of. Rusty's not sure what's best to look
at. "Oh!" she says and points
at the Marmoset. "Oh!" she
says and points to the lemurs who are pouncing all over their enclosure. "Oh!" she says and is toddles off
towards the Golden Tamarins, who have such vivid colouring and wild
hair-styling that we can barely believe they're real.
A pony-ride station
and a petting zoo provide Rusty with some close encounters that have her
wide-eyed and smiling. We get her to
feed some little bambi-type deer from her hand and there is lots of yelling for
"More! More!". It is all very exciting for her and by 1
o'clock she is putting her hands up to be carried. Five minutes after the car starts, both tots
are asleep.
| Clark, Rusty, and Puppy checking out the lemurs |
| Rusty pointing to the Dingos (she told us to 'shhh' when she saw them sleeping) |
| Waiting patiently for a pony ride |
| Rusty taking her first pony ride |
| Feeding 'Bambi' |
I found out today, much to my dismay, that our Chariot doesn't fit in the Strathcona Library's elevator. After much buzzing, gnashing of teeth and wailing, I managed to remove the handle and limp along. sigh... Otherwise we LOVE our "obnoxious stroller!"
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