ORLANDO FLORIDA | SEA WORLD | DONNE TEMPO | KUBIN
After
a day at Discovery Lagoon, the underwater excitement
continues with your Discovery Cove pass allowing you
entrance to Sea World, also owned by Anheuser-Bush.
Sea World, Orlando, with its array of sea lions, otters, dolphins, rays, fish and crustacean habitats, and, of course the Orca “Shamu” provides a different type of theme park adventure, however it holds its own against both the Walt Disney conglomerate and Universal group properties.
Sea World is a marine mammal and wildlife education and conservation facility first, theme park second. Sea World scientists, zoologists, rescue teams and trainers work around the world to save animals, from stranded whales to injured sea lions, while sending a steady message of conservation, research, environmental awareness and animal rehabilitation.
Sea World offers plenty of thrills, with high speed roller coasters such as Journey to Atlantis and The Kracken, or the park’s Shark Encounter exhibit that takes visitor’s on a journey over a hundred million years to met the most awesome predator of the sea as you journey through their habitat courtesy of the world’s largest underwater viewing tunnel.
The chills come courtesy of the Penguin Encounter where visitors watch, laugh and learn as they watch a variety of penguins, Emperor, Puffins, Gentos, Rock hoppers and chinstraps, cavort within their Antarctic diorama.
At the core of Sea World is “Believe” a multi-media themed show how featuring Shamu. “Believe: opened in May, 2006 introducing a new production that blends killer whale behaviors with music and state of the art multimedia presentations.
A tour around the “back lot” behind the rides and exhibits visitors will find a large green sea turtle being rehabilitated after being sucked into a water treatment plant, manatees recovering from encounters with boat propellers and dolphins who will hopefully be, someday, returned to the wild.
Visitors to Sea World can, with advanced reservations, “get behind the scenes” through a series of Educational Programs/Guided Tours. One Hour Behind the Scenes Tours includes the Polar Education, Saving a Species, Predators and Dolphin Spotlight.
These tours provide visitors with the opportunity to meet a penguin up close, get a bit closer to the shark and Shamu exhibits, go backstage at the Whale and Dolphin Stadium or visit the rescue and rehabilitation facilities.
To tour the “behind the scenes” Rescue and Rehabilitation area and to speak with the young people who are so passionate about their roles as caretakers makes one want to go out and do something to help these benevolent and marvelous animals.
And you are. By visiting the parks you are, in various ways, helping to financially support the groups efforts and by bringing your children introducing them to the wonders of all the marine mammals and wildlife that Sea World and Discovery Cove offers.
Through these adventure packed days you are, hopefully, giving them a message about how important our Seas, and those living things that inhabit them, are.
More information (Click the titles below)
Sea World, Orlando, with its array of sea lions, otters, dolphins, rays, fish and crustacean habitats, and, of course the Orca “Shamu” provides a different type of theme park adventure, however it holds its own against both the Walt Disney conglomerate and Universal group properties.
Sea World is a marine mammal and wildlife education and conservation facility first, theme park second. Sea World scientists, zoologists, rescue teams and trainers work around the world to save animals, from stranded whales to injured sea lions, while sending a steady message of conservation, research, environmental awareness and animal rehabilitation.
Sea World offers plenty of thrills, with high speed roller coasters such as Journey to Atlantis and The Kracken, or the park’s Shark Encounter exhibit that takes visitor’s on a journey over a hundred million years to met the most awesome predator of the sea as you journey through their habitat courtesy of the world’s largest underwater viewing tunnel.
The chills come courtesy of the Penguin Encounter where visitors watch, laugh and learn as they watch a variety of penguins, Emperor, Puffins, Gentos, Rock hoppers and chinstraps, cavort within their Antarctic diorama.
At the core of Sea World is “Believe” a multi-media themed show how featuring Shamu. “Believe: opened in May, 2006 introducing a new production that blends killer whale behaviors with music and state of the art multimedia presentations.
A tour around the “back lot” behind the rides and exhibits visitors will find a large green sea turtle being rehabilitated after being sucked into a water treatment plant, manatees recovering from encounters with boat propellers and dolphins who will hopefully be, someday, returned to the wild.
Visitors to Sea World can, with advanced reservations, “get behind the scenes” through a series of Educational Programs/Guided Tours. One Hour Behind the Scenes Tours includes the Polar Education, Saving a Species, Predators and Dolphin Spotlight.
These tours provide visitors with the opportunity to meet a penguin up close, get a bit closer to the shark and Shamu exhibits, go backstage at the Whale and Dolphin Stadium or visit the rescue and rehabilitation facilities.
To tour the “behind the scenes” Rescue and Rehabilitation area and to speak with the young people who are so passionate about their roles as caretakers makes one want to go out and do something to help these benevolent and marvelous animals.
And you are. By visiting the parks you are, in various ways, helping to financially support the groups efforts and by bringing your children introducing them to the wonders of all the marine mammals and wildlife that Sea World and Discovery Cove offers.
Through these adventure packed days you are, hopefully, giving them a message about how important our Seas, and those living things that inhabit them, are.
More information (Click the titles below)
Visiting Discovery Cove – some tips to remember
- The Hotel Jerome offers the utmost in luxury. Ask for and anticipate paying for the best you can afford. It will be worth it.
- Please, you are in the Rocky Mountains. These mountains are very much alive and they always unpredictable. Never take off on a nature excursion without leaving an itinerary and expected return time. If you are going deep into the mountains, off the road or the well-traveled path, take a knowing guide. No one wants to become a headline.
- Temperatures are different. We visited in June and it required warm coats and gloves one day while a light jacket more than sufficed on another.
- Plan on making some side trips to see the silver mines. A journey to the Continental Divide marker should include snow boots and gloves as well as a camera and sketchpad.
SEA WORLD
After a day at Discovery Lagoon, the underwater
excitement continues with your Discovery Cove
pass allowing you entrance to Sea World, also
owned by Anheuser-Bush.
Sea World, Orlando, with its array of sea lions, otters, dolphins, rays, fish and crustacean habitats, and, of course the Orca “Shamu” provides a different type of theme park adventure, however it holds its own against both the Walt Disney conglomerate and Universal group properties.
Sea World is a marine mammal and wildlife education and conservation facility first, theme park second. Sea World scientists, zoologists, rescue teams and trainers work around the world to save animals, from stranded whales to injured sea lions, while sending a steady message of conservation, research, environmental awareness and animal rehabilitation.
Sea World offers plenty of thrills, with high speed roller coasters such as Journey to Atlantis and The Kracken, or the park’s Shark Encounter exhibit that takes visitor’s on a journey over a hundred million years to met the most awesome predator of the sea as you journey through their habitat courtesy of the world’s largest underwater viewing tunnel.
The chills come courtesy of the Penguin Encounter where visitors watch, laugh and learn as they watch a variety of penguins, Emperor, Puffins, Gentos, Rock hoppers and chinstraps, cavort within their Antarctic diorama.
At the core of Sea World is “Believe” a multi-media themed show how featuring Shamu. “Believe: opened in May, 2006 introducing a new production that blends killer whale behaviors with music and state of the art multimedia presentations.
A tour around the “back lot” behind the rides and exhibits visitors will find a large green sea turtle being rehabilitated after being sucked into a water treatment plant, manatees recovering from encounters with boat propellers and dolphins who will hopefully be, someday, returned to the wild.
Visitors to Sea World can, with advanced reservations, “get behind the scenes” through a series of Educational Programs/Guided Tours. One Hour Behind the Scenes Tours includes the Polar Education, Saving a Species, Predators and Dolphin Spotlight.
These tours provide visitors with the opportunity to meet a penguin up close, get a bit closer to the shark and Shamu exhibits, go backstage at the Whale and Dolphin Stadium or visit the rescue and rehabilitation facilities.
To tour the “behind the scenes” Rescue and Rehabilitation area and to speak with the young people who are so passionate about their roles as caretakers makes one want to go out and do something to help these benevolent and marvelous animals.
And you are. By visiting the parks you are, in various ways, helping to financially support the groups efforts and by bringing your children introducing them to the wonders of all the marine mammals and wildlife that Sea World and Discovery Cove offers.
Through these adventure packed days you are, hopefully, giving them a message about how important our Seas, and those living things that inhabit them, are.
Sea World, Orlando, with its array of sea lions, otters, dolphins, rays, fish and crustacean habitats, and, of course the Orca “Shamu” provides a different type of theme park adventure, however it holds its own against both the Walt Disney conglomerate and Universal group properties.
Sea World is a marine mammal and wildlife education and conservation facility first, theme park second. Sea World scientists, zoologists, rescue teams and trainers work around the world to save animals, from stranded whales to injured sea lions, while sending a steady message of conservation, research, environmental awareness and animal rehabilitation.
Sea World offers plenty of thrills, with high speed roller coasters such as Journey to Atlantis and The Kracken, or the park’s Shark Encounter exhibit that takes visitor’s on a journey over a hundred million years to met the most awesome predator of the sea as you journey through their habitat courtesy of the world’s largest underwater viewing tunnel.
The chills come courtesy of the Penguin Encounter where visitors watch, laugh and learn as they watch a variety of penguins, Emperor, Puffins, Gentos, Rock hoppers and chinstraps, cavort within their Antarctic diorama.
At the core of Sea World is “Believe” a multi-media themed show how featuring Shamu. “Believe: opened in May, 2006 introducing a new production that blends killer whale behaviors with music and state of the art multimedia presentations.
A tour around the “back lot” behind the rides and exhibits visitors will find a large green sea turtle being rehabilitated after being sucked into a water treatment plant, manatees recovering from encounters with boat propellers and dolphins who will hopefully be, someday, returned to the wild.
Visitors to Sea World can, with advanced reservations, “get behind the scenes” through a series of Educational Programs/Guided Tours. One Hour Behind the Scenes Tours includes the Polar Education, Saving a Species, Predators and Dolphin Spotlight.
These tours provide visitors with the opportunity to meet a penguin up close, get a bit closer to the shark and Shamu exhibits, go backstage at the Whale and Dolphin Stadium or visit the rescue and rehabilitation facilities.
To tour the “behind the scenes” Rescue and Rehabilitation area and to speak with the young people who are so passionate about their roles as caretakers makes one want to go out and do something to help these benevolent and marvelous animals.
And you are. By visiting the parks you are, in various ways, helping to financially support the groups efforts and by bringing your children introducing them to the wonders of all the marine mammals and wildlife that Sea World and Discovery Cove offers.
Through these adventure packed days you are, hopefully, giving them a message about how important our Seas, and those living things that inhabit them, are.