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Taronga Western Plains Zoo Dubbo

Taronga Western Plains Zoo

Located near Dubbo in the central west of New South Wales, Taronga Western Plains Zoo is one of Australia’s premier zoos. The zoo is home to over 5,000 animals from over 350 species, many of them rare and endangered. Taronga is part of an international breeding and conservation program to ensure these animals survival.

Getting Around Taronga Western Plains Zoo

Being an open range zoo allows the animals to move freely, which is spread out over a huge area. The circuit road is five kilometres long, with numerous sidetracks showing various exhibits adding many kilometres. We managed to walk over 14km during our visit.

If you don’t feel like, or are unable to walk around the zoo, there are option including drive your own car, hire a bike or golf cart. Each of these has its own appeal, depending on your circumstances and the weather.

Refreshments

Food and drinks are available at the entrance where the Zoo Café and Bar is located, or at the halfway point at the Waterhole. We ate at the Waterhole because it was four hours into our visit and near lunch time.

The tables at the Waterhole are next to cages with meerkats. This is nice, because you can eat while watching them play. If you have children, this area has a small water park and play equipment, allowing them to play while you relax.

Throughout the park are several vending machines and water refill stations, which is great for that quick snack.

If you bring you own food, picnic areas are available, so you to eat surrounded by animals.

The Animals of Taronga Western Plains Zoo

With so many animals to see don’t rush, take your time. This way you will have a great visit while seeing lots of different animals.

Cheetah

We were lucky at the cheetah enclosure because they had just been fed. They were playing a game of tug with a piece of food, even though there was another piece lying nearby.

Lion

Sumatran Tiger

More tigers are located in Taronga’s Sydney Zoo, but this one looked very relaxed by itself. Taronga is proud to be part of a regional conservation management plan for Sumatran Tigers including breeding, research, fundraising and community action to support sustainably produced palm oil, which we all know has ruined the tigers natural habitat.

Rhinoceros

The zoo has three species of rhino on display. Each has its own large enclosure, where you can view them. It was great to see all three species, especially the critically endangered black rhino.

Black Rhinoceros

The black rhinoceros is classified as critically endangered, due to hunting and habitat loss.

Southern White Rhinoceros

The Southern white rhinoceros is the most abundant of the rhino sub-species, with around 20,000 living mostly in South Africa.

Greater One Horned Rhinoceros

The greater one-horned rhinoceros is native to the Indian subcontinent, and is listed as vulnerable, with under 4,000 animals globally.

Camels

Hippopotamus

The hippos were active while we visited, munching grass while slowly walking around.

Taronga Western Plains Zoo Giraffe Herd

Seeing a herd of giraffes was great, as they acted like a family group[ with adults and calves moving together.

Ostrich

Ostrich Taronga Western Plains Zoo
Ostrich

Emu

Two enclosures hold emus, including the walk around Australian section, where you can get up close to one. If you would rather see them from a distance, a large enclosure nearby has a flock of them walking around.

Swamp Wallaby

Banteng

Addax

Eland

Bongo

These vividly striped animals were eating breakfast, so we were able to see them up close.

Takhi / Przewalksi’s Horse

Taronga Western Plains Zoo holds a large herd of Takhi or Przewalksi’s Horse. The story of the Takhi is told on information boards, inside building resembling Yurts, because the horses come from Mongolia.

Persian Onager

White Handed Gibbon

Meerkats

Always fun to watch, the meerkats put on a fun display, chasing each other and play fighting. There are two meerkat displays, one near the entrance and a second at the Watering Hole Café.

Otters

Sunning themselves on the grass, the family of otters were sleepy but curious about the people looking at them. Several are staring at the camera while the photo was taken.

African Wild Dog

Galapagos Turtle

The last exhibit before you exit the park is the Galapagos turtles, what a great sight they are. We have seen them on TV shows, but to see them up close really lets you grasp how large they are. They are also very old, with the male around 50 and the female over 100 years old.

Look at the exhibit behind the turtles, because there are several young ones there, around five to seven years old when we visited.

Interesting Statues, Sculptures and Buildings at Taronga Western Plains Zoo

What Did We Think?

Taronga Western Plains Zoo is a great place to visit, not just for the animals you see, but because of the understanding you get about how fragile their existence is. On your trip around the zoo, you learn about their endangered environments. At the same time it is enjoyable and kids have great fun here.

To see what else there is to do in New South Wales, please see some of our other stories.

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2 Replies to “Taronga Western Plains Zoo Dubbo”

  1. For a second, I thought the sculptures are real animals with a bit of skin condition. LOL. Love them. They are so cute. By the way the wild dog look a lot better than those wild dogs in Animal Planet programs. The striped bongo looks so beautiful. Striped is not very fashionable among human outfits, but it looks stunning on animals.

    1. YEs, the sculptures are really good. I think they look after the wild dogs better than the dogs treat themselves in the wild. The zoo keepers really love their animals

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