Animal Adventures in North Carolina Author:Jennifer Bean Bower Weekend and day trips are always fun. Combine them with attractions that allow the viewing, touching, and feeding of animals and such excursions suddenly become adventures. If you have ever dreamed of feeding reindeer, listening to the howls of a New Guinea singing dog, trekking through the mountains beside a llama, or seeing your first Siberian... more » chipmunk, then Animal Adventures in North Carolina is the guidebook for you--and you won't even need a passport.
Animal attractions draw over 200 million visitors in the United States each year. These attractions provide many Americans with their only connection the nature. Throughout North Carolina, facilities dedicated to the rescue, rehabilitation, and conservation of various animal species abound. Through a variety of exhibits, programs, and personal encounters, these facilities heighten appreciation for animal conservation while offering exciting educational experiences for everyone in the family.
In Animal Adventures in North Carolina, Jennifer Bean Bower shares 77 animal attractionsthat she has personally discovered through her travels of the entire state. Each entry provides contact information, driving directions, possible fees, hours of operation, and useful travel tips, accompanied by photographs and detailed descriptions of the attraction's offerings. An extensive appendix lists additional opportunities for viewing and interacting with animals in North Carolina, including wildlife refuges, farm tours, nature preserves and working farm vacations.
Some of the fun to be found in Animal Adventures in North Carolina:
Visit a wolf sanctuary in Bakersville where you can pet Cherokee White Rose, an Artic wolf
Get an up-close view of Radar and Lil Wayne, two ligers (a hybrid cross between a tiger and a lion) at Tiger World in Rockwell
Meet Igor, a Brahma bull that travels the Eastern Seaboard attending fairs and agricultural events, at Sunny Slopes Farm in Asheboro« less