MHH took us to
Zoo Negara last Saturday. We’ve enjoyed ourselves, Alhamdulillah. We went early (upon advise from my sister), and were among the first few admitted when the zoo opened at 9. And the treat for us the early ‘birds’ were – well, birds, flocks of storks were roaming free on the street, unhindered by non-existing crowd. They were so many and so close, we could chase and touch them if we wanted to. And we watched the zoo staff on a truck threw fish to them, and the birds quickly flew towards the moving truck, right above us, we could feel the wind caused by all the flapping of their wings. That was a novel experience.

Anyway, I’m somehow interested to look a bit (just from a visitor’s view, I have no information whatsoever) in terms of their funding. I think (guesswork only) their main sources of income, in order to operate and maintain the zoo, comes from:
- Government/state funding
- Ticketing (RM15 for adults, RM6 for children/senior citizen
- Corporate sponsorship
And their secondary sources of income:
- Merchandising (all the T-shirt/cap/etc souvenirs)
- Tram tickets (RM3 for adults, RM2 for children)
- Renting out commercial outlets (drinks/snacks/meals/souvenirs booths etc there’s even a Celcom booth)
- Photos with animals (deterrently expensive, IMO)
- Renting out space for private function (a group were having some sort of telematch, probably a family day for a company, when we went there)
- Public donation
- There’s even a large inflatable slides (which reminds MHH of Thundercats) that charges kids to go on them
- And my favourite - a stint during the animal show, where a parrot would fly and take money from your hand. More effective than a donation box; afterall people are willing to pay for experiences.
Some suggestions for more incomes:
- A bit more advertising (but careful, don't be too disruptive and annoying)
- Visitors can buy prepared food to feed certain animals (only tame animals like goats, turtles, fish etc, janganlah pula nak feed lions and tigers hehe)
- Bicycles for hire (or would this be a nuisance to other visitors?)
- More vending machines (visitors are thirsty!)
- Pony rides or other experiences relating to animals (but not to be overdone lah)
Unrelated: A lady in black abaya and niqab (purdah), likely to be from Middle East, gave salaam to me. I smiled and answered. It's pleasant to receive salaams from strangers :)