• New Events
  • Feed
  • Subject
    • Eat
    • Sleep
    • Visit
    • Read
    • Listen
    • Watch
    • Life
    • Moonridge
  • Trending
  • Karen
  • Privacy Policy
  • Subscribe

Always Packed for Adventure!

It's the destination and the journey.

  • New Events
  • Feed
  • Subject
    • Eat
    • Sleep
    • Visit
    • Read
    • Listen
    • Watch
    • Life
    • Moonridge
  • Trending
  • Karen
  • Privacy Policy
  • Subscribe

Bearizona 2019

Shockingly, I had never even heard of Bearizona until seeing a brochure at a Hampton Inn near Havasu City in Arizona. I love animals, especially bears. I love attractions, especially places with over-the-top theming. And, I love wordplay…Bearizona!!!

Initially, we had planned to spend an entire long-weekend by a pool in Phoenix, and Havasu City was our first stop on the way to sunshine and umbrella drinks, however, the weather in Phoenix was more tees and jeans, than swimsuits. We cut our Phoenix stay short and headed to Williams, Arizona to see the bears.

We spent one evening in Flagstaff and woke up early to be the first in line at Bearizona. Technically, we were third in the queue, but it was good enough to have the experience of a virtually empty park.

View fullsize MVIMG_20190305_085553.jpg
View fullsize MVIMG_20190305_085726.jpg
View fullsize 00000IMG_00000_BURST20190305085820211_COVER.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_085910.jpg

The current entrance fees ( as of 4/20/21) are $25.00 for adults, $15.00 kids (4-12, children under four are free) and $23.00 for seniors ( 62+).

Bearizona is a magical and unique place that is divided into multiple sections. The most exciting section is a large portion of the park where you can drive-thru enclosures for a close-up view of the animals in a naturalistic environment.

We were advised to begin our day with the drive-thru section of the park. For visitors who would rather not drive or would prefer a guided tour, the admission also includes access to a bus ride through the same loop. Admission allows you to drive the loop/take the bus unlimited times throughout the day and we did it twice. The loop takes about thirty minutes.

Here we are on the bus! It wasn’t full, so we could spread out.

View fullsize IMG_20190305_100040.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_095907.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_100046.jpg

My pictures are a mix of our self-guided tour and the bus. During our drive, we felt very much alone and we were able to drive very slowly, enjoying everything. There were no cars waiting behind us. Our bus tour, a few hours later, revealed how busy the park had become within just a few hours ( arrive early.) I recommend doing both the self-guided and the bus. We enjoyed the stories on the bus tour, such as a woman who drove through the wolf section with her windows down ( big no-no, signs are everywhere to keep windows and doors closed) and a wolf jumped in her back seat and made off with a bag of dirty laundry!

The entrance… Welcome to Bearizona!

IMG_20190305_090308.jpg

The first animals we encountered had hooves: reindeer, deer, mules.

IMG_20190305_090442.jpg
IMG_20190305_090737.jpg
IMG_20190305_100744.jpg
IMG_20190305_090905.jpg
IMG_20190305_100952.jpg
IMG_20190305_090352.jpg
IMG_20190305_090543.jpg
IMG_20190305_090541.jpg

I never realized how cute bison could be, until I saw them at Bearizona. Look at those adorable faces! I love the one that is chilling by the snow.

View fullsize IMG_20190305_091722.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_091815.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_091946.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_091903.jpg
View fullsize VID_20190305_092030.jpg
View fullsize MVIMG_20190305_090344.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_100341.jpg

I couldn’t have predicted it back in 2019, but we have now moved to Colorado, where we live just minutes away from a big horn sheep preserve. That said, I have still only seen them in zoos. I’m hoping to change that this summer with a few local hikes. My husband gifted me with proper hiking boots and walking poles, now I just need to dump the excuses. ( It is mid-April and snowing as I’m writing this. Crazy Colorado!!!)

View fullsize IMG_20190305_092105.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_092126.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_092135.jpg

Check out those playful wolves! We were told in particular, the juvenile wolves are the most unpredictable in the park, and for safety reasons, we absolutely could not stop the car in their enclosure. They are known for being very interested in visitors and even hopping on vehicles.

View fullsize IMG_20190305_091025.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_091120.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_091127.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_091412.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_091136.jpg
View fullsize MVIMG_20190305_091130.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_101429.jpg

All of the above animals are fabulous in their own ways, but the star of Bearizona is clearly going to be the bears.

I’ve never seen so many bears! Bears in dens, bears in trees, bears chasing other bears, bears sleeping, bears crossing the road…BEARS!!! Most of them completely ignored us and carried on with their bear activities. It was great.

View fullsize IMG_20190305_092211.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_091711.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_092516.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_092533.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_093949.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_093946.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_104543.jpg

After the tour, we headed to the other half of Bearizona, which is more like a traditional zoo, but with state-of-the-art enclosures and heavy theming.

There was a petting zoo with a giant turkey!

View fullsize MVIMG_20190305_095018-EFFECTS.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_095000.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_095258.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_105246.jpg

One of our favorite North America mammals, the endlessly entertaining, raccoon! We were luck to catch the raccoons during feeding time.

View fullsize IMG_20190305_094154.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_094358.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_094400.jpg

Foxes, badgers, and bobcats!

View fullsize IMG_20190305_095645.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_095638.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_105123.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_105054.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_105634.jpg

And baby bears. We were surprised by the lack of fur. Aw.

View fullsize IMG_20190305_094655.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_094747.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_094657.jpg

Our favorite individual animal of the day had to go to this otter who seemed to be asking everyone to throw him a fish! He stood like this for about twenty minutes and was bursting with personality.

View fullsize IMG_20190305_110610.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_110545.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_110616.jpg

The final animals were these gorgeous jaguars. The spotted one was exhibiting odd behavior. It was leaning against the glass and panting very hard. It was growing and clearly agitated at people on the other side of the glass. It seemed to be in distress, so we alerted a zookeeper.

View fullsize IMG_20190305_111401.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_110836.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_111753.jpg

I spent many years working in the Behavioral Research Department at the Los Angeles Zoo, and despite the situation with the jaguar, I generally felt that Bearizona was concerned with both animal welfare and happiness. I was impressed with Bearizona.

We ate lunch in the main cafe, which was enormous with two floors and theming to feel like a lodge in the woods. It’s beautiful and the food was delicious, although definitely theme-park pricing. I ate a pulled-pork sandwich with potato salad and Dan ordered macaroni and cheese.

View fullsize IMG_20190305_120815.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_120805.jpg

After lunch, we perused the gift shop, which is also enormous. We bought tee-shirts, our customary souvenir magnet, and some stickers. I resisted, but the stuffed animal collection was particularly impressive.

We visited on a quiet day, mid-week in March and saw everything in the park within four hours. It couldn’t have been more perfect.

I’m ending with a few more miscellaneous pictures from our visit to Bearizona. If you are near Williams, Arizona, make sure to visit Bearizona for a spectacular animal experience.

View fullsize IMG_20190305_093133.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_093148.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_093410.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_092926.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_110141.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_123015.jpg
View fullsize IMG_20190305_122326.jpg
tags: Bearizona, Our Trip to Bearizona, Things to do in Arizona, Attractions in Arizona, Animal Attractions in Arizona, Our Arizona Trip Report, Arizona Trip Report 2019, What we Did in Arizona, Arizona Vacation with Kids, Animals at Bearizona, Animal Encounters Arizona, Price for Bearizona, Tips for Visiting Bearizona, Planning a Day at Bearizona, Drive-Thru Animal Exhibits, Petting Zoo at Bearizona, Otters at Bearizona, Bus Tour Bearizona, Safety at Bearizona, Wolves at Bearizona, Bears at Bearizona, Reindeer Bearizona, Deer Bearizona, white bison bearizona, Bighorn Sheep Colorado, Bighorn Sheep Bearizona, Arctic Wolves Bearizona, Tundra Wolves Bearizona, Bear Cubs Bearizona, Bear Warning Sign, Turkey Bearizona, Raccoons Bearizona, Foxes Bearizona, Badgers Bearizona, Bobcats Bearizona, Funny Animal Pictures, Dining at Bearizona, Bearizona Gift Shop, Our Trip to Bearizona Pictures, Why You Should Visit Bearizona, Best Zoos in the United States, Jaguar Beaizona, Zoo animals in Distress, Williams Arizona, Things to do in Williams Arizona, Arizona Tourist, Northern Arizona Attractions
categories: Eat, Visit
Tuesday 04.20.21
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 

2019: Annual Wrap-Up

It’s my annual wrap-up post: time to take stock of my year and to appreciate all of the incredible things that happened in these past 365 days.

Admittedly, 2019 was a hard year. It was filled with difficult changes and challenges. We had losses and blessings. We are hoping that 2020 will be easier.

We started the year with a blessing. We had my step kids, Zoe and Felix with us for the holidays. We rang in 2019 with fireworks at Knott’s Berry Farm and spent the first day of the year on the beach in Santa Monica. It was wonderful to have the kids with us and we even experienced a magical “White Christmas,” when it began to snow as we were in the middle of opening presents.

Then the plague hit…on the drive home from Santa Monica, I started to get the chills and had a high fever. I was intensely ill for several days, but had to fly the kids back to Sweden, so I got started on a course of antibiotics. Dan caught my cold the day before the kids left and was ill for over a week. Zoe and Felix miraculously escaped catching our bug.

I flew the kids home and on the way back, I stayed three nights in England at my sister-in-law’s house. It was great. I spent time with family and even went with my niece Pippa, for a day of drinking and theater in London. We saw Kit Harington in a production of True West. On that trip, I also spent time with my mother-in-law, Jan, which ended- up being very special.

On my flight home, I had the good fortune to be upgraded to British Airways Club World (essentially business class, with my own pod area). The guy ahead of me in the queue to board was obnoxious and basically demanded an aisle seat, so he was given my original booking and I was granted a major upgrade! It was awesome, but mid-way through the flight, I started feeling achy and by the time we landed, my fever was back. I was very ill for about two weeks and needed more antibiotics.

January, February, and March were a blur of bad weather and mini-trips, especially to Palm Springs for Dan to under-go painful dental work. Excuse my language, but it was a shit-show really. We had a massive storm on Valetine’s Day, when Dan was away at an annual conference, that actually made me feel worried that the house would slide down the hill. It was swaying and we lost power, so I cuddled with my cat and tried to keep calm. In the end it was okay, but there was more snow than this Glendale girl could handle. I was trapped in the house for a few days and had to dig myself out.

We took one memorable to trip Arizona, visiting Phoenix and Flagstaff on a four day road trip. We went in an attempt to find sunshine and warm weather, but ended up realizing it wasn’t quite as nice for the pool as we had hoped. The best part of the trip was a morning spent at Bearizona. Bearizona is a wildlife park where visitors can drive through some of the exhibits- animals coming up to your car! We visited during an off-peak, weekday and we were alone with the bears, wolves, and other wildlife. It was one of the best days of the year!

At the end of March, I was booked to attend the AWP conference in Portland, while Dan worked, but we got terrible news that Dan’s mom was in the hospital. We changed our plans to fly to England, but she passed before we arrived. It was unexpected, sad, and surprising. It’s also weird to think that now, all of our parents have passed. The upside of the situation is that we did get to spend time with Dan’s sister and her family, plus a day trip to see Dan’s uncle Barry and his wife Jo. We also saw a few friends, including Dan’s best friend Paul. Despite the terrible circumstances, the time we had with family and friends is to be cherished.

In April, we went to Las Vegas for a trade show that Dan attends annually. I like to tag along and get pool time. Of course, the weather was unseasonably cold and windy.

In late spring, we started to push getting our house ready to be sold. We knew that we wanted to move, but had severel projects that needed to be completed in order to put it on the market. Getting contractors moving was a full-time job and nothing moved fast. It was expensive and frustrating.

We spent the 4th of July holiday at our favorite resort, The La Quinta Resort and Spa in Palm Desert. It was boiling hot and we both got sick again with fevers. We went to a local urgent care and we were both diagnosed with sinus infections. I suppose if you have to recover, a fancy hotel isn’t a terrible place to be sick. We mostly slept in the room, but as soon as the antibiotics kicked in, we were poolside..

Zoe and Felix were back with us in mid-July and this was the best part of our year. We took a two-week family trip to the Big Island of Hawaii, where we snorkeled, went horseback riding, attended a luau, toured a chocolate plantation, went rafting through an old sugar cane irrigation system, rode a zodiac boat, visited the Mauna Loa Macadamia Nut Factory, and spent a day at Volcanoes National Park. It was the best vacation that we have ever taken! To book-end the weeks in Hawaii, we spent several days at the La Quinta Resort in Palm Desert. I’m surprised that we didn’t turn into raisins from all of water activities.

August was spent putting the final touches on getting our house ready to sell. In the last few days of the month, we embarked on a road trip to Oregon. We went through Death Valley and Yosemite National Park. On the drive back, we went through Sequoia National Park. California has so much natural beauty!

Dan left his job in September, which occurred right around the same time as we put our house up for sale. We also brought Slinky to stay with a family friend, until we got settled in our new place. This was a very stressful time for us, but we tried to keep positive and we enjoyed a few small trips. We went to Las Vegas to relax at the Waldorf Astoria and we also traveled to San Diego, where we bought annual passes to the zoo and wild animal park.

Our house got an offer in October and Dan did too, a great new job that brought us to Colorado. Prior to his accepting the position, we visited Colorado, to make sure that it would be a good life for us. We were worried after our bad experience in Portland. Colorado immediately won us over. It is so beautiful and the people are welcoming. Plus, although it has snow, it has tons of sunshine. We treated that first visit as a bit of a tourist trip, incase the opportunity didn't work out. We visited the Coors Beer factory and saw Buffalo Bill’s Grave.

November was spent anxiously hoping that the sale of our Big Bear house would go through without any delays. We found a new construction home in a new estate called Sterling Ranch, in Littleton and put a down payment to start the buying process. We drove our Camero out to Colorado, taking the Arizona/New Mexico route. In New Mexico, we took the cable car up to the top of Sandia Peak, discovered “Christmas” chili, and had our car cleaned at the car wash from Breaking Bad. We flew back to California to finish packing up our house. Our move was not simple and involved three different companies. Our big Timothy Oulton furniture required a crane to get it out of our house. We also had to have certain items crated. It was a logistical nightmare that somehow worked out. We had a goodbye dinner with our friend’s Bryan and Valerie, hitting several of the local restaurants in Big Bear Village. The next morning, we set off in our Ram Truck, taking a Nevada/Utah route to Colorado.

We spent about two weeks at a local Hampton Inn, as Big Bear was nearing the end of escrow and the finishing touches were being made on our new home. The staff at the Hampton Inn were terrific, but we were thrilled when we finally moved out the week before Thanksgiving. With a huge amount of luck, everything regarding the sale of Big Bear and buying in Littleton worked out exactly as it needed to. Our new home is gorgeous and our neighbors are welcoming. We live near a giant field with cows!

I’m writing this a few days before Christmas and we finally feel settled into our home. It feels like our home in a way that the previous places we lived, never did. Last week, I flew back to California to pick up Slinky. He experienced his first plane ride. I was very worried about flying with a cat, but it was less traumatizing for both of us than I Imagined. We missed him so much and are just happy that he is back with us.

Speaking of cats, we have a new one! We adopted a ten month old kitten that we named Tom. He’s a long-haired ginger, fluffy ball of trouble. Slinky isn’t so sure about Tom, but Tom adores Slinky. Slinky can’t eat or use his litter box, without Tom following him.

916803F9-EAF4-408A-A846-7AFCD8B8D21B.jpg


We are ending the storm of 2019, on a calm and happy note. Dan’s company even closes for the holidays, so we get a bonus vacation that starts on Christmas Eve. We tossed around the idea of a holiday trip to Orlando, which I never thought I’d think was a bad idea, but we decided that it would be better to stay home and just relax with the cats. We haven’t decorated for Christmas and we have zero plans for either Christmas or New Years. Yesterday, we did join a local gym, so maybe we will just get a head start on those resolutions.


tags: 2019 year in review, 2019 Annual Review, My 2019, Moving to Colorado, Living in Sterling Ranch Colorado, Moving from California to Colorado, Living in Big Bear Lake California, Vacation to Big Island Hawaii, Loss of Parents, Loss of Mother-in-Law, Adopting a New Kitten, Flying with a Cat, Flying with a Cat on Southwest Airlines, Breaking Bad Filming Locations, Sandia Peak New Mexico, First Visit to New Mexico, Christmas Chili New Mexico, Road Trip to Portland Oregon, Death Valley National Park, Yosemite National Park, Sequoia National Park, Timothy Oulton, Hampton Inn, La Quinta Resort and Spa, Knott's Berry Farm for New Years Eve, Traveling to Sweden, Traveling to England, Kit Harington in True West, New Year's Day in Santa Monica, British Airways Club World, Getting Upgraded on British Airways, awp conference 2019 Portland, NAB Las Vegas 2019, Valentine's Day Storm 2019 Big Bear Lake, Mauna Loa Macadamia Nut Factory, Volcanoes National Park, Things to do on the Big Island of Hawaii, Selling Your Home, Most Stressful Things in Life, Biggest Life Changes, San Diego Wild Animal Park, San Diego Zoo, starting early on New Yeasrs Resolutions, Bearizona
categories: Life
Sunday 12.29.19
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 

Powered by Squarespace 6