Friday, June 25, 2021

A second visit to Space Farms, this time we saw the animals!

 On Wednesday my brother took the day off from work so we could go to the Space Farms Zoo and Museum in New Jersey. Luckily, it was 64 degrees out so I was able to do a lot more walking than I could when we went in September...and we saw everything this time! I took over 800 photos but I'm not going to post them all here...just the favorites. It's still a lot, and some tell a story, so stay tuned...

Normally, I post adventure pictures in roughly chronological order, but there were a couple photos I want to really highlight because I like them so much.

This goat climbed right up the fence to see if I had any food. You can feed the goats and some of the other animals. Once they determined we didn't have food they lost interest pretty quickly.
a lemur
The first time I've ever seen a peacock with it's tail feathers open. Both of them there were open at the same time!

Now, the rest of the photos in chronological order. Most of them speak for themselves.






Arctic Fox

They did not try to sell me insurance.
Not sure if the geese are considered part of the zoo or they just showed up. The geese and ducks wander the park. 



bear scratching his back
Prairie dogs!

The bear is sitting in the drinking troth! 







The lioness got up, stretched, went over to the lion and poked at him. He got up and just moved a few feet away. It was funny. They are just like regular cats, only bigger. 
a sika deer in the process of standing up



The fallow deer eat all their grass and ground covering, including the roots, meaning they have the only bare enclosure there. According to the sign they are the only deer that do that. 





elk
The only zoo I know that has a woodchuck exhibit. According to the sign, they are edible. Yikes! 




Funning watching this alligator get out of the pool


the Baboons are former lab animals that they gave a home to

I should have brought an old nickel to compare. 

After finishing the animals section (mostly) we finished the builds I was too exhausted to do in September. Tractors are first...

The Space family's wagon they used when it was a dairy farm.




Even though I did the car rooms last time, you know I'm going to do them again, every time I go there! 









this is actually a baby alpaca, taken out the window in the hallway that leads to the carriage room. In that room is one of my new favorite exhibits there, which I feel the story is worth reading so it's posted here in full. 
















My brother makes a rare appearance on Cardboard History, this really shows how big the wagon actually is. 

After the wagon room, which is very dark and hard to photograph, we did the tool room...
The large bucket was carved from a single tree!




It's Hammer Time.
A horse treadmill! I had read about these but had never seen one.
A dog powered treadmill was news to me however! According to the label it was used for churning butter and dates to the 1860s.

After the tool room was the toy room, which was pretty cool. 






I actually caught this bird in mid-blink



Baby snakes on the plinth
Baby goat
Not in the museum, but along the road. That part of northern New Jersey is mostly farms. I love seeing cows and this shot was nice and clear so it gets posted.
They do have a billboard telling you where to turn but I didn't see it on the way out. (we had GPS so we were fine)
As much as I love the cows, my favorite side of the road spotting was this El Camino! 
As we went by Stewart International Airport in Newburgh, a military C130 came in for a landing. 

It was a great trip, we really had a lot of fun. The museum is packed...it has more artifacts than any other museum I've been to. Proportionally even more than the Museum of Natural History. The amazing thing is that some of the artifacts were actually passed down through the family that runs it, 
the only museum I know of where that's the case with pre Columbian artifacts. 

Because we had done most of the museum section already, we saw all this in only about 3 and a half hours time.

I do have all the photos, and a few videos which I can't figure out how to post here, up on my website here: Space Farms 2021

Thanks for reading!

16 comments:

  1. That's a C-17 coming in for that landing, not a -130. I've spent plenty of time riding in the back of both. And if Bruno reads this you might give him a heart attack!

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    1. I don't think that will be a concern! I'm lucky I knew it was a C something. I'm a car guy, not an airplane guy, lol.

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  2. Very nice! I think I told about my visit to Space Farms last time, so I won't bore everyone with that again.

    Does anyone know what kind of bird that is flying high above in the 20th picture? They fly near my place a lot.

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    1. My first guess would be a juvenile bald eagle. They don't get the white feathers on the head and tail until after they reach adulthood. And I think the wingspan is too big for it to be a hawk of any kind.

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    2. It's hard to tell, but it could be a turkey vulture too.

      Fun post, Billy!

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    3. I think it might be a black vulture. They are native to this area. They have a dark gray head and the color patches on the wings.

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  3. Haven't been to a zoo in years. Thanks for the tour.

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  4. That alligator sequence was cool!

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  5. Looks like fun! I've been trying to get my girls out to a zoo, farm, or museum for a while. I'll definitely recommend this if it's close enough. Thanks for posting so many great pictures, especially that peacock!

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    1. I think you would enjoy taking them there. It's a zoo, farm AND museum all in one! It's very family friendly. Bring quarters and you and they can feed the animals too

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  6. Wow, I didn't realize they had so many animals there! Glad it wasn't too hot so you could get all those great photos.

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    1. They have a lot of everything there! I really enjoy going. Glad it held out

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  7. Bit confused...You can eat the woodchucks?

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