Sunday, April 1, 2012

SeaWorld San Diego

Jill's Journal: That’s a dolphin! And that’s our child, feeding that dolphin. Wow. Talk about making a memory! We’re convinced SeaWorld is a wonderful/exquisite/perfect way to spend a day as a family.

We skipped the rides as we weren’t at SeaWorld for the amusement park aspect. Instead, we visited all the exhibits and went to all the shows. Opened in 1964 by four buddies from UCLA, SeaWorld San Diego is the original of what today also includes parks in Orlando and San Antonio. SeaWorld is most closely identified with its killer whales (all given the stage name Shamu), but there’s also beluga whales, dolphins, sea turtles, sea lions, seals, otters, polar bears, penguins, and so much more.

Madelyn particularly embraced SeaWorld, just as we thought she would, and she now wants to be a scuba diver when she grows up. It didn’t hurt that we splurged and took a behind-the-scenes tour. More on that in a minute.

This is Bodine, a 25-year-old, 796-pound male bottlenose dolphin. He surely made up the most wonderful part of our time at SeaWorld. Our behind-the-scenes tour began with feeding sea turtles over a fence, which was tame in comparison to our close-up time with "Bo."

The kids learned and practiced some of the training moves and signals used by the marine animal trainers. Bo was only too happy to oblige and show off his stuff. Forget the guinea pigs of last week; the girls all want pet dolphins now.

The girls each got to feed Bo repeatedly. The food was mostly small, intact fish, but he even likes jello. Yes, jello. Dolphins don’t eat jello in the wild, obviously, but in captivity, they eat it to help stay hydrated.

All three girls also got to spend a moment petting this happy and charming creature. Heaven.


We got to see a bit of SeaWorld’s massive marine animal rescue and rehabilitation operation. This is their primary occupation; the park is what funds this work and raises marine animal awareness.

One last stop behind the scenes…the moray eels. These freaky creatures are even freakier close-up and I couldn’t help but cringe around them. Rob was in wholehearted agreement. The girls did fine, however, and handfed them plenty of raw squid through special tubes. Madelyn fed them with particular gusto (I think she set some sort of eel-feeding record) and thought they were terribly cool. Yes, for those who are concerned, this is our child with a severe fish allergy. She’s allergic to even the touch of the proteins in cooked fish; happily, raw fish poses no such problem.


The shows were, of course, so much fun to see. The girls loved them.

At the end of the day, we even visited with a pig…

…and a kangaroo. Not quite marine animals, but SeaWorld also puts on an amusing pet show featuring dozens of rescued dogs, cats, and random other animals. It’s not often one touches a dolphin and a kangaroo in the same day. Needless to say, we absolutely loved our day at SeaWorld.

3 comments:

gretchenhs said...

Liz is so green with jealousy. She LOVES dolphins and even has two in the wold that she has "rescued". She says she's packing her bags to come to San Diego.!

Anonymous said...

What an adventure!! I can see the kids enjoyed it. Love the pictures.

Beppy

Andrea Kanelopoulos - Anam Nostos House said...

I admit we don't go to these parks for personal ethics of animals, but these are beautiful photos and I DO love what Sea World offers!! :-)