This exhibit blew me away, I have never seen an aquarium so big! It is larger than a football field
Has an underwater viewing tunnel at one end
and a large viewing window at the other end...
Here are some photos we took...
We did go and see other exhibits...
The Beluga whales
The dolphins
The cold water creatures...
The warm water creatures...
The Jelly fish..
The Penguins..
There was a Mola Mola, or sunfish
A manta ray
A thresher shark giving birth...
And pups still in the womb...
A sand tiger...or as we know it...a grey nurse shark
And a whale shark
There were many more which included fish and crabs of all kinds.
The highlight of our day was a dive with the Georgia Aquarium dive team in the Ocean Voyager exhibit with whale sharks and manta rays.
Art showed us the genetic and blood testing laboratory with all the state of the art equipment.
The feeding preparation room...where the two second rule does not apply! If food is dropped on the ground it is discarded.
We were also shown the pumping and filtration room...it was enormous!!!! They turn over 6.3 million gallons of water every hour, which is the entire volume of the Ocean Voyager display.
There is 10 miles of tubing carrying the water through these 18-20 pumping stations. These pumps are dedicated to the one exhibit. Each exhibit has its own pumping stations.
Which are all monitored electronically
Then we went went up on the top deck at the surface of the Ocean Voyager pool
To watch the whale sharks be fed.
They use a mixture of shrimp and small fish
And use what is called a targeted feeding approach. The feeders get into rafts and move up and down the lines over the pool and dribble the food into the mouths of the whale sharks as they follow the rafts up and down the pool.
We then went to get ready to go hop in the water with them
The dive platform
There were only six divers, a lead dive master, a safety diver and a videographer so we had plenty of one on one time with the big fish and the other animals from four oceans. The only place you can find this mix is in an aquarium.
It was a truly amazing experience, definitely one of my top ten dives.
Overall I was impressed with the Aquarium. The displays were very well done and husbandry looked second to none. Most exhibits had excellent educational information and made the most of getting good conservation messages across to the captive audience.
The only disappointment was the dolphin show. The show was extraordinary with six dolphins doing amazing tricks as well as special effects and singing, lighting and dancing. There were probably close to 2000 people watching the show and there was not one conservation message delivered, not even something simple and quick about plastic bags or dolphin free tuna. That was a real let down for me.
Thank goodness the rest of the exhibits did the educational job so well!
I had an absolute fantastic time and didn't want to leave! At 8pm Paul dragged me away from the big screen and took me home. (She was lying in front of it - Paul)
No comments:
Post a Comment