Lethbridge Herald

Toronto Zoo offers drive-thru

‘DRIVE-THRU EXPERIENCE’ A SAFE ALTERNATIV­E IN COVID ERA

- Nicole Thompson THE CANADIAN PRESS — TORONTO

The Toronto Zoo will be a “drive-thru experience” when it gets the green light to open its gates to visitors, a spokeswoma­n said Thursday, while other zoos eye numerous options as they map out their postpandem­ic plans.

The zoo’s 3.4kilometre route goes above and beyond the Ontario government’s framework to reopen the province as the spread of COVID-19 slows, Amanda Chambers said in an emailed statement.

“The pre-booked driving route would allow guests to see the zoo’s animals from the comfort and safety of their own vehicle,” Chambers said.

She did not say whether the format would be temporary.

Pivoting to drive-thru is one of numerous options zoos and aquariums are contemplat­ing as they figure out how to safely reopen now that the spread of COVID-19 is slowing across much of Canada.

“While it varies from facility to facility, there are some commonalit­ies amongst them,” said Jim Facette, executive director of Canada’s Accredited Zoos and Aquariums.

He said the organizati­on’s members are also looking at providing masks to visitors, having them walk along a predetermi­ned route or having people pre-book timed visits online, limiting the number of guests and reducing the number of cash outlets.

“Our accredited zoos and aquariums understand the fact that it’s public safety first,” Facette said. “So they know that certain facilities that they have where there tend to be larger gatherings of people — be it restaurant­s or theatres — they’re just not going to be opened.”

Roughly two-thirds of accredited zoos and aquariums have made use of government assistance, Facette said, and this week’s federal announceme­nt on help for the tourism sector is expected to bolster the industry.

But zoos have also had to make some compromise­s, including asking for donations from the public to make sure they can feed their animals while continuing conservati­on work.

In April, the Toronto Zoo, Calgary Zoo and Vancouver Aquarium all said they were facing new financial strains because they typically rely on admissions and parking fees to pay for such necessitie­s as food and environmen­t upkeep.

The Calgary Zoo announced this week it will be returning two giant pandas on loan from China because the COVID-19 pandemic has made it hard to get enough bamboo to feed them.

The zoo’s president, Clement Lanthier, said the facility spent months trying to overcome transporta­tion barriers in acquiring fresh bamboo and eventually decided it’s best for the animals to be in China, where their main food source is abundant.

“It’s about the animals. At the end of the day, we cannot pretend that we care for animals if we don’t take those tough decisions,” he said.

 ?? Canadian Press photo ?? A journalist takes a selfie with Alice, a 20-year-old Bactrian Camel native to Mongolia, at the Toronto Zoo in this 2016 file photo.
Canadian Press photo A journalist takes a selfie with Alice, a 20-year-old Bactrian Camel native to Mongolia, at the Toronto Zoo in this 2016 file photo.

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