
The San Francisco
Aquariums
Visitors to San Francisco have a choice of three major options
when seeking an aquarium. Fortunately, there's no way to go wrong -
all three are terrific.
Aquarium Of the
Bay
The Aquarium by the Bay, first opened in 1996, houses dozens of
exhibits holding thousands of animals. There are hundreds of
interesting species on display - everything from nearly invisible
sea horses to all too visible sharks.
The moving walkway takes you down through two glass-lined
tunnels, 300 feet long. Behind the walls are 700,000 gallons of
filtered water from the San Francisco Bay. Those tanks are home to
over 23,000 aquatic animals of the sort divers might encounter near
the shore or off the coast. Species run the gamut from angel sharks
and giant Pacific octopi to the tiniest of shrimp.
Further on, there's an array of multi-colored species from
tidepools near the coast where visitors can actually touch the
animals. Anenomes cling to coral as leopard sharks and bat rays
glide by.
The Aquarium is located at Pier 39.
The Steinhart
Aquarium
875 Howard St.
San Francisco, CA 94103
The Steinhart Aquarium downtown is home to a similar variety of
species, but with some delightful variations. Everything from
poison dart frogs to alligator snapping turtles to penguins find a
home here.
Eels are a specialty of the aquarium with many curious and
obscure species on exhibit. There's the fairly common moray eel,
but the aquarium also houses several wolf eels that grow up to
seven feet.
The Steinhart has its own tidepool display, jam-packed with sea
stars and hermit crabs. (Best not to pet the crabs, though!)
Elsewhere, get a close up look at giant sea bass or sturgeon, or
come find out what a gar looks like. Still around after millions of
years, the long-snouted, leopard-spotted fish has an array of nasty
needle-like teeth.
And be sure to check out the penguins as they clumsily groom
themselves on the ice shelf or swim gracefully by under the
surface. Birds just don't get any funnier.
Steinhart Aquarium is at 875 Howard Street located between 4th
and 5th Streets.
Monterey
Bay

Two hours south by bus from downtown is the Monterey Bay
Aquarium. The jewel of the San Francisco area aquariums, the site
is both a tourist exhibit and scientific research center.
Here visitors can see thousands of near-transparent jellyfish
floating gracefully around a tank or go outside and see live seals
sunning themselves on the rocks.
Now released, the aquarium once housed a live Great White shark.
Extremely rare to catch live, and with a poor survival rate in
captivity, the exhibit displayed the animal for nearly two
years.
Undoubtedly young, given its length of five feet (1.5m), the
Great White was re-introduced to the Gulf of the Farallones at 6 ft
4.5 in (194cm) at 162 lbs (73.6kg), having gained 100 lbs (45.4kg).
Several parts of the exhibit show the history of interaction with
this fearsome predator.
Outside there are dozens of seal and sea otters to view and they
appear to appreciate the frequent applause their antics
inspire.
Several companies offer bus trips to Monterey and back. Though
long, the trip is well worth it for those who enjoy world class
aquariums. Those driving from the south will find it an easy
detour. Monterey has a number of other attractions as well.
Enjoy your visit to San Francisco's aquariums, but stay dry!
|