| CAVE
TUBING combined with the BELIZE ZOO
CAVE TUBING combined with the Belize Zoo.
Includes: Breakfast, lunch, water, sodas, rum punch and snacks. All equipment and entrance fees are provided. |
$170US per person |
After
a morning of cave tubing and lunch, the trip to the Belize Zoo is
the highlight of the afternoon. This zoo is unusual as none of these
animals were taken from the wild. They were either sick, or too
young to fend for themselves and adopted by the zoo, or showed up
on their own. You will see them in their natural habitat. As you
walk amongst the paths, you may suddenly hear the howler monkey
welcome you with it's deep guteral sounds.
The
picture to the right is a mother Crocodile with babies on her back.
What great moms!
Belize
has approximately 145 mammal species living within its boundaries.
Mammals exist within all the different habitats of Belize, from
the manatee and dolphins of the coastal zone, to the 5 different
species of wildcat which live deep within the rainforests of the
Maya Mountains.
The
rainforest mammals of Belize tend to be very secretive and mostly
nocturnal. This makes them extremely difficult to see. They usually
see, hear, smell, or feel you long before you them. Rainforest mammals
do not stand out in the open for easy viewing, but instead climb
through the canopy or scurry over the forest floor well ahead of
you. That is one reason the Belize Zoo is such a special place.
Here you can see many of the rainforest species of Belize easily.
The picture to the left is the Tapir or Mountain Cow as locals call
it.
The
Belize Zoo has always had a strong collection of bird species,
from parrots and macaws, to vultures and hawks, to wading birds,
including the endangered Jabiru Stork. But besides the caged birds,
the habitat around the zoo supports a variety of "free" birds thriving
within the savanna habitat. The picture to the right is our national
bird, the keel billed toucan.
The
Belize Zoo supports a small display of the more common snakes
of Belize including the most dangerous of Belizean snakes, the Fer-
de -lance. The Zoo also makes frequent use of the harmless Boa Constrictor
in its many environmental education programs.
Humans
tend to have an irrational fear of snakes, while in reality, poisonous
snakes are not frequently sighted. they tend to be secretive and
nocturnal. The Belize Zoo education programs tend to focus on the
positive aspects of snakes - they help to keep the population of
far more prolific creatures which are harmful to humans like rats,
mice and insects of the tropics.
The
Jungle Canopy Zip Line is combined with the Cave Tubing experience
on Caves Branch River at the same Location.
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