Fishy Business

On New Years Day, my friends Patti and Tom treated me to a visit to the Georgia Aquarium in downtown Atlanta. This aquarium, which is the world’s largest, has brought more than six million people downtown since its opening in 2005. Built on what had been a long-empty parcel of land in a neglected end of downtown, the aquarium became a catalyst for economic growth in Atlanta’s city center. Since its opening, the downtown has seen an explosion of development, including high rise condominium towers, new shops and restaurants, and gleaming new office towers. Some 75 additional mixed use projects are slated to be completed in Atlanta’s central business district by 2010 and employers are returning to the downtown every day. It is such an impressive, jaw-dropping facility that I just had to share some photos of it:

After visiting the touch pools, where I touched a shark, we walked through the River Scout Gallery. This area of the aquarium focuses on riverine environments and the exhibit simulates being under a river, looking up. It was a bizarre experience to be surrounded by water, with giant longnose gar fish swimming over my head:

Georgia Aquarium River Scout Gallery
Georgia Aquarium River Scout Gallery

The River Scout Gallery also features other exotic species from the Amazon, such as these electric catfish and red piranha:

Georgia Aquarium electric catfish
Georgia Aquarium electric catfish
Georgia Aquarium red piranha
Red piranha

In the Cold Water Quest exhibit we saw Japanese spider crabs that can grow as large as a car:

Georgia Aquarium Japanese spider crabs
Giant Japanese spider crabs

Leafy sea dragons that have developed a unique form of camouflage over the eons; they have body appendages that resemble the leaves of the seaweed in which they live:

Georgia Aquarium leafy sea dragons
Leafy sea dragons

California sea lions (here Patti is begging for a kiss through the plate glass):

Georgia Aquarium California sea lion
California sea lions

And the favorite residents of the Aquarium, the Beluga whales, who entertain visitors with their perpetual underwater ballet:

Georgia Aquarium Beluga whale
Beluga whale

Further along we entered the Ocean Voyager gallery, where an acrylic tunnel leads through the bowels of a giant aquarium. Whale shark (the ocean”s largest fish) swim overhead, alongside schools of miniature neon-colored fish numbering in the thousands. The tunnel opens out into a large hall where the aquarium forms the main wall of the room. People stand and sit on the floor in front of the tank, in awe of the deep blue display that dominates the darkened auditorium. It is without a doubt the largest aquarium I have ever seen:

Georgia Aquarium Ocean Voyager
Georgia Aquarium Ocean Voyager
Georgia Aquarium Ocean Voyager
Massive Ocean Voyager tank
Georgia Aquarium Ocean Voyager
Sharks in the tank
Georgia Aquarium Ocean Voyager
And this big boy

Around the corner from the Ocean Voyager gallery we found the Tropical Diver exhibit, which focuses on the tropical coral reefs around the world. In one tank, hundreds of lacy jellyfish bobbed and drifted, alternately filling and expelling water from their delicate domes to move around the tank. Their movements were indescribably mesmerizing and soothing. If everyone in the world had to stand in front of this tank for five minutes each day, I’m certain we could eliminate war:

Georgia Aquarium jellyfish
Jellyfish tank was mesmerizing
Georgia Aquarium jellyfish
Jellyfish
Georgia Aquarium jellyfish
Lacy and gorgeous

Further along the corridor we found Nemo, contentedly napping in the tentacles of a sea anemone. Dozens of kids were gathered around, pointing out his small fins and exclaiming, “Nemo can’t swim very well, you know.”

Georgia Aquarium clownfish Nemo
Where’s Nemo?

At the center of the Tropical Diver exhibit is yet another enormous tank, where thousands of colorful reef fish dart in and out of a living tropical Pacific coral reef, complete with an overhead crashing wave:

Georgia Aquarium living coral reef
Living coral reef tank with surf

The Georgia Aquarium is a remarkable place and well worth a visit if you happen to be in Atlanta. Admission is $26 for adults and $19.50 for children. And if you’re thinking about your next vacation destination, consider Atlanta. In addition to the Georgia Aquarium, downtown offers Centennial Park, with its mock ice skating rink; the new World of Coca Cola Museum; Atlanta’s famed Underground, with its below street level shopping mall and entertainment; CNN world headquarters (they offer tours); the Margaret Mitchell Museum and House, where Mitchell wrote Gone With The Wind; the King Center, featuring interactive exhibits that illustrate the beloved community that Martin Luther King Jr. envisioned and how that dream can still become a reality; and the Atlanta Botanical Gardens. Nearby is Stone Mountain Park, where you can take a skyride to the top of the mountain and get an up-close look at the Stone Mountain Carving, take a scenic train ride around the mountain; or enjoy a paddle wheel riverboat cruise on Stone Mountain Lake. Atlanta surprised me and made me want to stay longer. No doubt, I’ll be back at some point.

5 thoughts on “Fishy Business”

  1. Your fishy pictures are fabulous!!!! I tried taking pics at the Chiang Mai aquarium, so I can appreciate how good your pics are.

    Reply
  2. Barbara, this is not the ordinary post you see here and there. You have blown me away as the pictures is just completely mind blowing and b..e..a.u t.iful!

    But wait…are you serious? Can the Japanese spider crab really grow as large as a car?

    What a view I love to visit this place.

    Reply

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