MinooParkInsectMuseum, located within OsakaPrefecture’s MinooPark in MinooCity,
is a small educational facility dedicated to insects. It is notable for its greenhouse where
visitors can get a really up-close look at various butterflies that are raised
at the facility.
Educational Displays
and Models
The
first part of the facility consists of educational displays explaining various
facts about insects. The displays appear
to be designed mainly for children, and they include many illustrations and
models. Unfortunately, all of the
explanations are only written in Japanese.
The
below photo shows a real wasp nest with actual mounted (dead) wasps.
This
photo shows an oversized replica of a wasp nest.
Specimen Displays
In the later part of the
facility, there are many mounted specimens of insects. The collection of butterflies is the most
impressive.
Opportunities for
Animal Encounters
In the rear part of the building,
there is a glass wall that reveals a live honeycomb of honeybees. The honeycomb is built into a separate room
that has openings to the outside. The honeycomb
appears to have been there for awhile, and the windows are quite dirty. It may be an interesting way to show the
inside of a honeycomb, but because of the dirty windows, it creates an
unsanitary appearance.
The
below photos show the greenhouse where live butterflies are raised. The area is not very large, and probably only
about 10 to 15 people can fit comfortably into the room at the same time. There are a number of different types of
butterflies, but the small number of individual specimens actually flying
around was a bit disappointing. Visitors
are asked to not touch the butterflies and to be careful not to step on any butterflies
resting on the walkway.
Getting There
The
nearest railway station is the Hankyu Railway Minoo Station. Immediately after exiting the station, walk
in the direction of the mountains and look for the road that heads into the MinooPark
and goes to Minoo Waterfall. In the
beginning, this road will look like an ordinary neighborhood street, but it is
notable because it is lined with many small souvenir shops. (If in doubt, check the large billboard sign
map that stands just outside of the train station.) Just follow the road uphill into the park 1
kilometer until you reach the spot where the road makes a sharp turn to the
right. The InsectMuseum
will be directly in front of you.
Admission for adults and high school students is 270 yen. Intermediate school students and younger get
in free.
(Note:
All photos taken in this post were taken during a visit on November 1, 2014. The comments in this post are based on
observations made on that day.
Conditions may have since changed.
Please check it out for yourself!)
In
Japanese folklore, foxes are depicted as intelligent, mystical creatures that
possess the ability to change their appearance - often to trick humans. After spending over five hours on a bright
autumn day among well over one hundred of them at MiyagiZaoFoxVillage in MiyagiPrefecture,
I started to feel a little bewitched myself.
The animals here are charmingly cute and endearing. And yet, I couldn’t shake the feeling that
there was something deep and mysterious hidden among the trees.
ZaoFoxVillage is a
simple proposition. Its main area
consists of a plot of forest land a little smaller than an American baseball
field (or perhaps two-thirds of a soccer pitch) that is surrounded by a
chain-link fence about 3 meters high.
Within that area are a number of roofed walkways, numerous small roofed
shelters for the foxes, a fenced area for juvenile foxes, a platform shelter
from where visitors can feed the foxes, and even a Shinto shrine. Within this main area, the foxes are free to
roam. On this particular autumn day, the
leaves on the trees were just starting to change color, and walking around this
small forest would have been a near-idyllic experience if it wasn’t for the
almost constant background music that was broadcast over loudspeakers located near
the western perimeter of this main enclosure.
Can
you spot the foxes hidden in the forest?
There
were many small shelters like the one below, with foxes sleeping within them
and under them.
Foxes at Very CloseRange
While
the foxes at ZaoFoxVillage
are not totally tamed, they are by no means wild. If I walked directly towards a fox, it would quickly
walk away. But if I stood quiet and still
in one place, usually at least one or two curious foxes would eventually
approach me to check if I was carrying any treats for them to eat. From photographs found on ZaoFoxVillage’s blog and on the internet, and
from observations made on an earlier visit, I suspect that many, if not most,
of the newborn foxes here are extensively handled by humans.
On
this sunny day, most of the foxes spent most of the time snoozing. I could walk right up to the sleeping foxes,
and if I were inclined to risk getting bitten, I would have certainly been able
to touch them. On the occasion when a
sleeping fox sensed my approach, it might startle, raise its head, give me a
very brief look over, and then go back to sleep. These foxes are obviously accustomed to the
close presence of humans.
The
below photo shows the feeding platform located in the middle of the main
enclosed area. Visitors can buy small
bags of specially made sausage bits at the souvenir store for 100 yen. Signs posted throughout the facility instruct
visitors to toss feed the foxes only from the platform, and to not show the
foxes the bags of treats while walking around outside of the platform. During the five hours I was in ZaoFoxVillage on this
particular Saturday, I would estimate that between 80 to 100 people entered the
forest area. At least half of the
visitors fed the foxes.
Some
of these foxes seem to be quite well fed.
Different Varieties
of Fox
The ZaoFoxVillage homepage explains that there are
six varieties of foxes kept at the facility.
The foxes living in the main large open area appear to be Ezo Red Foxes
and color variations of red foxes. The
home page (Japanese language only, the English translations here are mine)
describes them as Kita kitsune (Ezo
Red Fox); Purachina kitsune (Platinum
fox), Juuji gitsune (Cross fox), and Gin gitsune (Silver fox).
Outside
of the main open area, there is a wood-framed structure housing a number of Arctic
foxes.
(Photo
April 26, 2014)
(Photo
April 26, 2014)
These
are described on the homepage as Hokkyoku
gitsune shado (Arctic fox - Shadow), and Hokkyoku gitsune buru- (Arctic fox - Blue). Unfortunately, scientific names are not
provided on either the homepage or the signs posted throughout the
facility. Noteworthy is the fact that Ezo
Red Foxes (Vulpes vulpes schrencki)
are native to the island of Hokkaido, and not the island
of Honshu where MiyagiPrefecture
is located. This fact suggests that the
foxes at ZaoFoxVillage, including the color
variations, were originally imported (purchased?) from Hokkaido or perhaps even from other
countries.
Lots of Foxes, Lots
of Cages
ZaoFoxVillage has a very large number of foxes. In all probability, they have too many
foxes. Upon entering the main area, one
is greeted by the below scene of numerous sleeping foxes.
I was
unable to count how many foxes were resident in the main forest enclosure area,
but I think a lower conservative estimate would be about 50 to 70 individuals,
with an upper estimate being over 100. And
since the foxes in the main area are free to roam, they are free to interact,
and presumably to reproduce.
Besides
the foxes living in the main open area, there were also many foxes living in
cages and pens located on the southern and western perimeters of the main
area. The signs on these cages and pens
indicated that these foxes were juveniles or foxes that were receiving some
type of medical treatment.
There were 2 juvenile foxes and
1 mother in the pen in the foreground and about 11 juveniles in the pen in the
background.
There
were 9 juveniles in this set of pens.
The
structure below housed 20 juveniles.
This
photograph, taken from the opposite side of the pen, shows some of the 20
juveniles sleeping.
There
were another 11 juveniles in this pen.
The
sign above the cages below indicates that the cages are for medical treatment.
I could not get close enough to see what types of injuries the foxes had
incurred.
The
sign on the cage below states that the 2 foxes inside are Hondo kitsune, the variety native to Honshu
island(Vulpes vulpes japonica). As
far as I could see, these were the only two Hondo
kitsune residing at ZaoFoxVillage.
The size of this particular cage was only about 2 meters from side to side and
about 2 meters from front to back. With
only wire mesh for a floor, it did not appear to be very comfortable.
All
in all, I counted about 130 juvenile foxes in the various pens/cages located on the
property. This number does not include
the foxes roaming freely in the main open forest area. If there are at least 50 to 70 foxes in the
main enclosure area, it would mean there are at least 180 to 200 foxes residing
at this facility. An entry on ZaoFoxVillage’s internet blog stated that 150 pups were born at Zao in 2014. Further checking of the blog indicates that this year’s baby boom of 150
pups was very unusual.The entries in the
blog mentioned 19 pups born in 2007, 31 pups born in 2008, 56 pups born in
2012, and 28 pups born in 2013.(Numbers
were not found for years 2009, 2010, and 2011).It will be interesting to see how many pups are born in 2015, and how
the facility handles the space crowding issues.I get the sense that the open forest area is already overloaded.When they move the juveniles to the
open area, it will be wall-to-wall fox.
Other Animals
On the day of my Autumn visit,
I also counted 51 rabbits, 2 ponies, 7 goats, 4 crows, and 1 Japanese Badger.
These
3 crows had a main space of about 2 meters wide by 2 meters deep by 2 meters
tall with a small attached box about one-fourth of that size.
Below
is a Nihon anaguma (Japanese Badger: Meles anakuma).
Explanations and
Cautions
In ZaoFoxVillage, there were many caution signs
and explanatory signs. This sign posted
by the entrance to the main area instructs visitors to not allow children to
carry food for the foxes, to hide the food while walking through the enclosure,
and to only feed the foxes from the designated platform.
This
sign explains the attributes of the Kita
Kitsune (Ezo Red Fox). There were
similar explanatory signs for the other color variations.
This
sign compares fox ages to human ages.
This
sign explains the frequency of disinfecting procedures undertaken at ZaoFoxVillage to prevent
diseases.
This
sign explains the disease Chinococciasis Multilocularis and the measures taken
by ZaoFoxVillage
to check for and prevent the disease.
This
signs tells visitors to not insert their fingers into the cage.
Opportunities for
Animal Encounters
Immediately inside the
entrance of ZaoFoxVillage,
there is a buffer area where visitors can relax before and after entering the
main enclosure. There were 3 foxes in
this area leashed to poles or posts. A
yellow plastic chain marked the area around each fox that visitors should not
enter.
There
were 2 foxes in the below cage. Visitors
could carry and pose for a photo with one of these young foxes for 400 yen. Information from the blog indicated that, in
usual years, these photo opportunities stop at the beginning of July. Apparently, since there were so many late
born pups this year, these posing sessions continued until the end of October.
Visitors
could also hold and pose with a rabbit for 100 yen.
Food and Souvenirs
(Photo
April 26, 2014)
The
souvenir shop at ZaoFoxVillage
is very well stocked with all sorts of cute fox-related goods: plush toys, keychains,
figurines, shoe horns, photo books, etc.
There were also a lot of locally-produced Japanese manju sweets,
cookies, and candies available. Fox
lovers should be forewarned that the souvenir shop is decorated with a number
of fox taxidermy specimens, a fact that at least some visitors might consider
to be a bit morbid or even objectionable.
There
was a small dining area adjacent to the souvenir area, but since the kitchen
was closed when I visited this facility, I cannot report on the food offerings.
Getting
There
MiyagiZaoFoxVillage is located in the mountains about a 20-minute
drive from ShiroishiTown in MiyagiPrefecture. Since the only practical way to get there is
by motor vehicle, you either have to have your own wheels, rent a car, or take
a taxi. The taxi that took me from the
JR Shiroishi train station to ZaoFoxVillage
cost me 3730 yen. The return ride cost
3640 yen. If you have a license to drive
in Japan,
a rental car may be a cheaper option.
Admission was 1000 yen for adults and students in intermediate school
and up. Children in elementary school and
younger get in free.
(Note:
Unless otherwise noted, the photos taken in this post were taken during a visit
on October 25, 2014. The comments in
this post are based on observations made on that day. Conditions may have since changed. Please check it out for yourself!)