NationalGeographicTravellerAustraliaandNewZealandWinter2018

(Sean Pound) #1

wild adventures


Overnight sensatiOns


Urban jungle

At Werribee Open
Range Zoo, just outside
Melbourne, guests take
part in a unique camping
experience for Roar ’n’
Snore. After dinner, check
out how the nocturnal
animals live and wake the
next morning to the call
of gibbons.
zoo.org.au

Kenya calling

Deep in Nairobi National
Park (below), bed down
in a luxe canvas dwelling
at Nairobi Tented Camp.
At night, you might hear a
buffalo crashing through
the undergrowth or the
roarof lions, and when the
sun comes up you’re in
prime position to explore
the nature reserve and
its wildlife.
nairobitentedcamp.com

Tropical treasure

From Jicaro Island Lodge
on Lake Nicaragua, take a
kayaking tour to spy the
birdlife that resides here
or trek into Mombacho
Volcano Nature Reserve.
Here, deep in the cloud
forest, keep your eyes
peeled for two-toed sloths
and howler monkeys.
jicarolodge.com

SuITe
DReamS

Three more animal
sleepovers.

W


e should make sure the meerkats are
doing OK.” During an overnight stay at
Jamala Lodge’s giraffe treehouses, this
becomes our mantra each time we leave the room.
The cute critters, including a variety of tiny pups,
are located in an enclosure just outside our rooms
and are prone to bursts of activity any time we peer
over the concrete fence.
Jamala is located on the grounds of Canberra’s
National Zoo & Aquarium. If spending quality time
feeding carrots to Hummer, the cheeky giraffe,
from your balcony doesn’t appeal, then choose a
room with huge glass windows overlooking tigers,
cheetahs, lions or bears (both brown and sun bears
live here). Most of the time, they pay little mind to
human guests, although one family, who are staying
in the bear lodge, admit to spending hours staring

at their huge neighbours napping in the sunshine.
While the appeal of spying on the kings of the
jungle and plains from bed is undeniable, it’s the
behind-the-scenes insights that make any stay at
Jamala memorable. Before the zoo’s day visitors
arrive (and long after they’ve left), keepers take
guided tours. Guests discover the animals’ quirks
and habits. We toss treats, wrapped in banana
leaves, to the capuchin monkeys and chat to keepers
taking the dingoes for a walk.
Drinks and dinner take place in the lodge,
where the rare white lions, Jake and Mishka, visit
to be fed. There’s also the chance to get up close to
the rhinos and feed an eland, the biggest species of
antelope. For animal lovers, it’s a rare opportunity
to see wild animals up close and discover more
about the role of zoos and their participation in
global breeding and conservation programs. Oh,
and you might get to meet a meerkat.
jamalawildlifelodge.com.au

Head to Canberra for the chance to sleep
with lions and tigers and bears. Oh my!

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32 NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC TRAVELLER
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