A NOTE TO OUR READERS:
"Down Under in Baltimore" is from the November 2007 issue of Southern Living.
Because prices, dates, and other specifics are subject to change, please check all
information to make sure it's still current before making your travel plans.
My favorite creatures at the National Aquarium in Baltimore don't
swim, crawl, or slither. They fly, and you might very well miss them if
you don't turn your eyes toward the rafters.
They're gray-headed flying foxes, or more accurately, giant fruit bats.
Just as their name suggests, they look a bit like foxes, with pointy
puppy dog noses, narrow eyes, and red fur. But that's where the
similarities end. These foxes have huge black wings that can stretch up
to 4 feet, and they hang upside down most of the day. They're the
largest bats in Australia.
It's Weird Down Under
These flying foxes came to the city as
part of the aquarium's newest permanent exhibit, Animal Planet
Australia: Wild Extremes. They live inside a soaring 64,000-square-foot
glass house where curators have re-created a wild river gorge, much like
one you might find in remote northern Australia.
Waterfalls tumble down great expanses of red rock. Banana palms and
eucalyptus grow from the crevices. Lizards hide in grottoes and holes,
uninhibited by cages. Parrots, lorikeets, and finches flitter about.
The more dangerous animals—poisonous adders and fresh water crocs—are
confined by glass. Still, the barriers that would normally keep visitors
from getting too close have been omitted. Many of the exhibits are
positioned at kid's-eye level. You see the shorter set pulling mom and
dad down to view something thrilling, such as a pig-nosed turtle or a
giant barramundi chasing a smaller fish.
Wild About Australia
"This exhibit has taken the aquarium
into the future," says curator John Seyjagat. "You have birds flying on
top. You have crocodiles, turtles, and fish living in the water. We have
taken all the elements of nature and packaged them together under one
roof.
"We were trying to bring something totally new to the public," John
explains. "Australia is a very water-challenged country. At some points,
you have too much. At others, you have too little. It's a place of
either flood or drought."
For a seaport such as Baltimore with its abundance of water, that's a
startling contrast—and a great teaching tool.
National Aquarium in Baltimore: www.aqua.org or [410] 576-3800.
For More Information about Baltimore go to the Baltimore Editors' City Guide.