The next part of the day was my favorite!!! Took the golf cart back to Wild Arctic - the keepers there were very nice; and I had a new photographer (will post pictures in a few days). We went in with their 4 belugas
. Whenever I had animal interactions (except the manatees) my guide would not be there - just the regular keepers. They're keeping the belugas in the back while they do work on their regular enclosure. There were 2 trainers per beluga, and I went with one of them. What they planned to do was switch belugas every so often; if one didn't do as they asked, we were to step back (no reinforcement). We'd also give them a break (recess) every few minutes. I ended up working with 1 whale for most of the time. I got to do rub downs, give a few signals, do some staged kisses and hugs. All of it was fun - I liked the belugas very much; their personalities are different than the dolphins (although I loved them too!).
After a bit, we stepped out of the room because one of the whales needed a no reinforcement time out. So they took me over to see the harbour seals and the harp seal. They told me that I'd probably never get the chance to even see a harp seal again - they got Wiley because he was on the Maine coast (really far south for him) and he was attacked by a coyote (hence, Wiley lol!). They got him and have been working with him. 2 of the keepers took the harbour seals, and I stayed with the harp seal. I had to be quiet and approach with care since he spooks easily. I did get to touch him with 2 fingers, then with 3, then whole hand. Very cool. His trainer told him to go back to the water and he looked up at me with his great big eyes like "what? you're not giving me fish too???".
Then we went back to the belugas for some more feeding/kisses, etc. Too short! I wonder what the difference between the interaction here and the beluga interaction program is?
I got a much needed shower and went to that really loooong awkward lunch. I told my guide what I wanted at the beginning of the day (3 or 4 choices of sandwich I think) and it was waiting for me at the cafeteria. I was allowed to get coffee/hot cocoa/ice tea, but no sodas - I suppose I could've if I paid the $.80. The lunch was fine - grilled chicken on a croissant, canned fruit salad, potato salad, a humongous cookie and large rice krispie treat. I gave some of it away since it was just so much! My guide showed me where to sit, and went to get his lunch. There was another older man at the other end of the table, said he worked in security. Then the guide came back and didn't talk - I didn't know what to ask at this point and he seemed disinclined to talk. Which made for a long lunch. Another keeper about the same age as my guide (older) sat down and started asking me questions about how I liked the day, etc. He asked if my guide had told me this story or that story and proceeded to tell the stories - he seemed very nice.
We weren't expected at the sea lions until later, and after more minutes of silence, my guide decided to walk through different parts of the park (yay! lol). We went over to the dolphin nursery - he did talk a lot there about the baby that had just been born, and 2 males who were kept there because they "misbehaved" in Key West. Twice. I think they bit people (oops) - not seriously, but... So they're confined there for the duration. I asked about the Manta aquarium so we went there and one of the leafy sea dragon keepers was there. He was very nice and informative. He said that he just got a few from Australia last year - I asked the price tag - $6000. I can only imagine what some of the other fish in there or the rays cost!!! We ducked behind the penguin exhibit - not inside, no touching, just into the windows behind the building and saw a few babies. We also walked through the normal penguin exhibit. As I mentioned a few (several!) times that it was cold. My mom and I visited SW in Jan. before and it wasn't crowded. Today there were more workers than people! Truly empty...
Then it was sea lion time! We went in the building and they were transferring some of the older ones into the back pools. A few had really bad eyesight, and one couldn't use her back flippers properly (or something like that). She was young though. I got to touch one of these guys. Then it was upstairs to the outside for some feeding
. They rely on the public to do most of the base feeding when they buy the fish. But because the park was empty they'd barely sold any fish. So we got to feed them a big lunch. I like the sea lions because they bark/beg to be fed and remind me of my parents' cat - the louder I scream, the more I get mentality. I had a huge bucket (or two) and by the time I was done couldn't feel my fingers... Lots of fun other than that!
Then it was back to Wild Arctic
and the polar bears! This keeper was also very nice and informative. We went into the back area (behind glass/steel mesh obviously) and watched one of them. There was a polar bear pelt that they'd confiscated to touch. I think this is where I learned the most - and it was neat to see a polar bear relatively close.
Last stop was the walrus. Again, behind elephant bars - protected contact. They fed them and explained a lot about them. At the end I got to put my fist up to be "kissed" by both of them. Again, something I'd never get to do other than this!
On the golf cart ride back I had to remind my guide (he'd asked me to remind him) to get my SW t-shirt and DVD. I didn't ask about the 7-day pass since I didn't intend to use it. It might be like Discovery Cove where you show your confirmation letter to get the ticket, I'm not sure. He walked me to the area where you could buy your pictures and said goodbye. That's it, no handshake, no "hope you enjoyed the tour", nothing. Very different than any other tour I've been on.
I did buy the pictures on a CD for $40 - not too bad compared to Disney's photopass CD. I walked around the park briefly. I'd hoped to go on Manta and Kraken, but both were closed because of the cold. So I walked through the shark exhibit and tried to see Shamu (not out). I called Sam and he said he'd meet me in 15 minutes. Went to the gift shop and bought another sweatshirt since it didn't seem like it would warm up for the rest of my stay and layering is always good...
The car ride back was smooth and comfortable. I forgot my gloves and called him about 30 seconds after he left me at FQ - he promptly turned around for me.
So all in all, it was a good day and I enjoyed the interactions very much. I think it was worth the price ($318) that I paid. I was very happy to return to Disney though. The CMs really truly help your experience, and for me it's what keeps me going back to Disney over a park like SW.
I keep coming back to my guide because I think it's a good thing to be aware of - maybe it was just my experience/expectations. But I've done most of the backstage tours at Disney; the ones involving animals - Backstage Safari and Dolphins in Depth several times. For 2 of the tours I was by myself, so I didn't think anything of going alone for this one. And the customer service for Disney is light years above SW. So the tour was what I expected as far as animal interaction was concerned, but far below what I'd expected as far as a tour guide goes.
Hope this helps anyone interested in the tour