In the aviary, this friendly pair of Bleeding Heart Doves was building a nest three feet off the ground right next to the busy walkway. From the back, they look like common pigeons, but their fine chest feathers sport the shocking red spot that gives them their name.
Inside the cool air conditioned Lee H. Brown Conservation Learning Center, several docents were encouraging visitors to feel the spiny skin of the reptiles.
Folks of all ages enjoyed learning about these cold-blooded scaled wonders of nature.
Back outdoors, I noticed the warty, spiky surfaces of plants like the pachypodium.
I was surprised to find out that this deeply wrinkled pachyderm is younger than I am.
The fancy head feathers of these constantly moving Victoria Crowned Pigeons looked like frizzy blue clouds. I was reminded of Patty and Selma Bouvier, Marge's blue-haired twin sisters on The Simpson's cartoon.
For $2, one can feed a giraffe a biscuit or lettuce leaf and marvel at the animal's 18" long, black rough-textured tongue.
All giraffes have unique coat patterns. Like human fingerprints, no two giraffes are alike. This mosaic-like pattern sort of resembled the chain link fence.
Perhaps you're tempted now, to reach out and explore textures in your neck of the woods.
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