Have your say and vote for your favorite in our global Facebook poll.
Hong Kong Ocean Park Rainforest: The Amazon meets Ripley's Believe It Or Not!
Ocean Park just got wilder, and its new inhabitants are not what we expected them to be
By Jane Leung 23 June, 2011Hong Kong Ocean Park has a new attraction: a rainforest zone where pocket-sized monkeys live next to dog-sized rodents.
The just-opened zone does the Amazon Rainforest justice with more than 70 exotic South American animals, many of whom are on display in Hong Kong for the first time.
The completion of the 500-square-meter Rainforest zone is a key part of the New Ocean Park experience of "edutainment" envisioned in their six year HK$5.55 billion Master Redevelopment Plan.
It also features The Rapids, a permanent water ride that takes you throughout the zone and leaves you drenched.

A wet introduction
Starting at Ocean Parkâs entrance, the Ocean Express shuttle train takes visitors on a simulated submarine ride destined for the Rainforest.
The train is fast and efficient -- far better than the usual theme park cable car slog -- and feels a little like a dark, cold ride from Central to Admiralty. Only with sharks. LCD screens show realistic-looking hammerheads swimming above the train.
Once at the Rainforest, visitors can opt to bundle onto The Rapids water ride as it's the best way to get an overview of the park.
At The Rapids, you share a rubber raft and float along the twisting river which circles beneath the Rainforest Expedition Trail.
There are also many moments where you get drenched. Getting wet is almost unavoidable, even with the raincoats that the park hands out. Other park visitors get to station themselves at vantage points and aim buckets of water and even water guns at unsuspecting rafters.
The Rapids isnât big or fast enough to terrify -- itâs no roller coaster -- but with strangers gleefully aiming water pistols at you, it sure is unique.

Mini-monkeys, super-size rodents
The Expedition Trail is a walk-through attraction. Highlights include the weirdly adorable pygmy marmoset, the worldâs smallest monkey, which grows to the size of a teacup; and the kinkajou, which looks and acts like the love child of a monkey and a lemur.
Hanging by its prehensile tail, the kinkajou performs impressive feats, such as feeding upside down. Kids canât get enough of this.
Another resident of the park is the worldâs largest rodent, the capybara.
No, not that other theme parkâs mouse. Ocean Park is now home to the South American native capybara, with an average body length of 106-134 centimeters. Males weigh around 50-60 kilograms, about the size of a small mountain lion. Or pesky secondary student.
The capybara is an oddity worth gawking at, but only for a few minutes, given that the creature generally displays the disposition of a sedated kangaroo at a condemned petting zoo.

Making you a better person
Following Ocean Parkâs âedutainmentâ mission, The Rainforest has lots of displays that instruct visitors on the importance of conservation of the rainforest.
Signage is colorful and peppered with detailed rainforest information like fun facts about such groups as âYeÂŽkuana Venezuelan tribes, âpeople of the canoes.ââ They're interesting enough that you can actually stop and read things without feeling like an old man at a science museum.
âThe Rainforest offers a holistic experience with educational messages, animal displays, interpreters and a family water ride through which visitors can appreciate biodiversity in a fun and entertaining environment,â says Ocean Park spokesperson Annie Chung.
Brochure-speak translation: The Rainforest is not only nice to look at, itâs good for your brain.
Despite the fact that there is very little shade in this section of the park (even the most fashion-conscious should consider bringing an umbrella to block the sun and ward off heat stroke), The Rainforest already appears to be a hit with all ages.
At a time in which âAmazonâ is more often associated with online books than with the threatened home of thousands of rare creatures and magnificent landscapes, itâs heartening to see a homegrown theme park bringing environmental awareness, fun and some unusual animals to Hong Kong.
Ocean Park, Aberdeen, Hong Kong, +852 3923 2323; adults HK$250, children HK$125. Citybus route 629 runs daily to Ocean Park from Admiralty MTR Station or Central Pier No. 7. Bus fares are HK$10.60 for adults and $5.30 for children (ages 4-11).
Read more on the CNNGo app for iPhone / Android / Nokia now!
Get the latest travel and lifestyle news and views from across Asia. Discover more about your city with the best in local coverage and perspectives. Find out where to shop, play, drink, eat and escape - www.cnngo.com/mobile




















