It took almost 20 years for me to just visit the Nashville Zoo. In my Nashville years, I never went to the zoo just for the zoo.
I ran the Zoo 5K three times, and in 2015 work had a summer event on the elephant pavilion (the zoo no longer has elephants).
Meg and I changed that one Sunday morning. The parking garage and ponds were new since my last visit. An AZA reciprocity benefit from my Pueblo Zoo membership earned me half-price admission.
The zoo was not too crowded yet, but as we left you could feel a crush of people massing as the alcohol stations opened and the live music began. At least we were there early enough to hear the gibbons sings before contemporary country blotted out everything else.
Well-forested and with numerous creeks and waterways, the zoo is more of an immersive experience despite being along the city’s busy Nolensville Pike corridor.
These days, many zoos specialize in specific species. The Nashville Zoo remains best-known for its clouded leopards, having had 50 births at the zoo as part of its species survival/captive breeding program. One enclosure housed two younger leopards, while adults sat among high branches of another. The teenagers played vigorously, one ready to pounce at the other’s swooshing tail.
At one point a walkway looks down upon a cassowary, the flightless dinosaur bird from Australia. Their colorful head crests and black-feathered torsos make them a delightful sight, but they also boast feet with sharp talons. A kicking cassowary is a dangerous encounter.
While the elephants have passed away and their pavilion has been repurposed, Nashville’s zoo has other large zoo stalwarts. Rhinos and giraffes roamed separate yards. The lions and tigers were mostly obscured in the foliage of their exhibits. Others took advantage of exhibits hemmed by high netting, such as the red-ruffed lemurs and various species of monkeys. The Andean bears also lounged high in the trees.
The big veterinary center at the top of the zoo holds the one creature no one wanted to miss. On this Sunday, Azi the clouded leopard cub. At two-month-olds, Azi played vigorously in her habitat, much like a house kitten, although she was already much larger. Shortly after our visit, another leopard was born and will debut in late summer.
Due to the work of the Nashville Zoo, the species is thriving in captivity. These new lives give you hope that same development might occur in the wild someday. In the meantime, there's another clouded leopard cub to visit.



































