Animal Days for the Whole Family
Zoos, aquariums, working farms, wildlife sanctuaries, the bird-banding stations nobody knows about. The animal kid has more options than the local zoo.
"We want to see animals" is one of the most common prompts a family planner gets, and the most boringly answered. Zoos are the obvious move. They are also crowded, often overpriced, and a lot of standing in line for kids who lose interest fast.
The interesting animal days are the second-tier ones. A working dairy farm with a milking demo. A wildlife rehab center with a public viewing window. A nature preserve with a heron rookery in spring. A small aquarium with touch tanks the kid actually gets to touch. The planner pulls from this whole spread, not just the marquee names.
More field entries coming soon.
We’re curating this list by hand. Join the waitlist and we’ll send word the moment it’s ready.
Want a day plan built around animal days?
Tell us about your family on the home page and we’ll send back an itinerary that fits, with food and timing worked out.
Plan our dayTell us if you want close-up touching (farms and small aquariums) or watching from a distance (sanctuaries and bigger zoos). The day comes back differently.