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Georgia Aquarium (A LOT OF PICTURES!!!!)


JoeBlog

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I went to the Georgia Aquarium a little over a week ago, and it was AMAZING!! I bought the usual ticket as well as a behind the scenes tour. The tour was a bit pricy at $50 for an hour, but well worth it. Anyway, to the pictures… (I must apologize in advance. I was borrowing my buddies camera and couldn't for the life of me hold my hand still enough to avoid blurred shots in a few/many of the pictures. :oops: :( )

Welcome to the aquarium…

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I got the bright and early to avoid the massive lines that formed later in the day. Many of the hour time slots for entry were sold out even on a Monday!!

Here is the 1st welcoming aquarium with a massive school of these fairly large fish. There was a 2nd aquarium with exactly the same stock on the opposing wall of the hallway.

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Next you walk into this huge entry hall to all the exhibits.

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Of course, I immediately headed straight for the reef!

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This is the first aquarium in the reef exhibit. It has an insanely large school of (possibly) squirrel fish. It was amazing and made me decide that a huge school of fish is mandatory for my next big tank.

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In the sand of this tank were all of these worms(??).

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Now to the main reef...

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Just after the surge... (I have a movie of this as well, but don't know how to post those.)

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The reef is VERY young and the corals are quite small (relative to the massive size of the aquarium). Also, they are starting a propogation center in order to completely stock the tank over time. In the mean time, they have quite a few fake corals to fill in the gaps. I am definitely planning on coming back in a few years to see how things have filled in. Just for propective though, most of those yellow tangs are HUGE compared to anything I've seen in anyone's aquariums.

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Now for some "behind the scenes" pictures... First, the massive skimmers for the reef tank:

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Now the surge device:

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At the back of the reef, they have a refuge with mangroves. They first introduce new fish here and when the fish decides that they want to enter the aquarium, they swim over the top of the reef.

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A few more behind the scenes shots before we get to the BIG AQUARIUM. Here are a few bags of Instant Ocean:

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The husbandry center where they prepare all the food.

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The vet center

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Now to the Ocean Voyage...

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You first enter by going through a tunnel at the center of the tank, which is SO big that you can't see any of the walls. It appears like an actual slice of the deep ocean.

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Many people were just lingering in awe in the tunnel and the staff kept trying to convince people to move on since it only gets better. And unbelievably they were right...

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Picture just after the automatic feeder went off and the fish went MAD. I also have a movie of this and will post if I can figure it out.

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Here is a sample of the plastic used for the viewing pane.

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Some behind the scenes pictures of this tank. The yellow catwalk is where they target feed the two whale sharks, other sharks and large fish. All the other thousands of fish in the tank are feed periodically on automatic feeders spread all around the tank. The viewing pane for this tank is right behind this catwalk.

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This is a view of the rest of the tank next to and from the catwalk. The viewing tunnel is right in the center where the water is agitated with fans/bubbles. So from the main viewing window, you actually only see about 1/4 of the whole tank, and it is still CRAZY huge. :o

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A picture of one of the whale sharks from the catwalk.

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I know that this will probably piss quite a few of you off, but here are some pictures of the "petting" areas. There are several of these around (various types of crabs, starfish, etc...) with a biologist at each one to educate and assist. I was surprised by having the hammer head sharks as one of the petting exhibits, but they didn't seem to mind. I found it quite interesting.

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Here's a picture of a huge crab in the cold water exhibit.

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They had many other exhibits including quite amazing fresh water stuff, seals, penguins, otters, Beluga whales, Georgia coastline specific species, etc… Unfortunately, I was running out of memory on my buddy’s small card and had to make not so tough decisions. The tropical marine stuff won hands down. :wink:

I hope you enjoyed the pictures and would definitely recommend a trip there to anyone coming to the States. I got there around 9AM and they practically had to kick me out close to 6PM. So if you do go, make sure to plan a WHOLE day and pay the extra bucks for the "behind the scenes" tickets.

Steve

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You know what? It makes Kelly Tarlton looks like a piece of junk and not worth visiting at all. I'd rather pay US$50 and visit the Georgia Aquarium. It only took me like 15 mins to go through Kelly Tarlton.

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Just to a post to on Kelly Tarltons it was built over twenty years ago and was the first in the world of its kind. Georgia aquarium had a bugdet in the excess of over 150 times the budget we built ours for. We are the only 100% protein skimmed aquarium in the world another first, after our filtration upgrade. If it only took you fifteen minutes then you can't of been that interested :o .

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Its uses ozone, so skimming isnt so ridiculous. There is a ocean right there and the tanks temps arent the same as the ocean, it costs a lot of money to either heat, chill, pump and filter water from the Rangitoto channel.

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Thanks JoeBlog for the pictures.

I am in a state of shock... never thought anything like this exsisted. Can't wait to show my wife.

Now I need to visit the USA..... how much can I get for a small child? enough for an airfair?

Only joking I think Loto is my ticket!!

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