Kuala Lumpur Bird Park


A gated attraction, Kuala Lumpur Bird Park is a public aviary in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. It is a popular tourist attraction in the country, receiving an annual average of 200,000 visitors. It is located adjacent to the Lake Gardens within a KL green lung in Bukit Aman, close to the National Mosque and Royal Malaysian Police Museum. The Bird Park houses more than 3,000 birds representing more than 200 species in an enclosed aviary. About 90% are local birds and 10% were imported from countries such as Australia, China, Holland, Indonesia, New Guinea, Tanzania and Thailand.

History

The bird park is part of the Lake Gardens, which were established in 1888. In addition to the bird park, which was created in 1991, the gardens include an artificial lake, the National Monument, the Kuala Lumpur Butterfly Park, the Deer Park, Orchid and Hibiscus gardens, and the former Malaysia Parliament House. It is one of the world's largest covered bird parks. The park has been sited on a hillside in Bukit Aman, with netted walk-in aviaries hugging the slopes and folds on the hillside.

Activities

is a common activity here where the flora and fauna is rich. The Kuala Lumpur Bird Park has earned a reputation among those who are keen on the study of birds in their natural habitat. Some of them include research scientists who monitor bird nests for the study of behavioral patterns.

Admission Fees (as of May 2019)

The KL Bird Park is open from 9am to 6pm daily including public holidays. After paying the admission fee, guests will be given a bar-coded wrist band and paper map of the park's layout and attractions. The wrist band allows visitors to enter the park again should they leave the premises via the restaurant gift shop. Many of the park's staff are bilingual and will cheerfully share more about the birdlife.
Adult: RM25 with Mykad
Children : RM6 with Mykad

Attractions

KL Bird Park is divided into four areas, Zones 1 through 4. Visitors should set aside around three hours to tour all zones. The ticketing booth is outside Zone 2. The park layout from north to south: Zone 2, Zone 1, Zone 3, Zone 4. Look out for the bird feeding areas where cut fruit like papaya is fed to the free-roaming birds.
Zone 1: The main entrance brings visitors into the netted walk-in aviary in Zone 1. This zone comprises the Love Aviary, Brahminy Land, Flamingo Pond, Bulbul Land, Peacocks and Peahens roam the grounds freely. Feeding times: Free Flying Birds: 10:30 am. Eagles: 2:30pm
Zone 2: Baya weaver, Nicobar pigeon, Ostrich and Scarlet ibis.
Zone 3: Rhinoceros Hornbill, Oriental Pied Hornbill, Hill Myna, Formosan Blue Magpie, Purple Swamphen. The park's Hornbill Restaurant & Gift Shop is located in this area. The restaurant is also accessible from the car park for diners who do not wish to enter the park. Feeding time: Hornbills: 11:30am
Zone 4: This zone has a walk-in parrot enclosure with 20 different species of parrots such as Macaws, Cockatoos, Lories and Parakeets. It also features the Flightless Birds exhibit with Emu, Greater Rhea, Lesser Rhea, Ostrich, and Southern Cassowary. Don't miss the feeding station that allows visitors to hand feed these flightless birds. The air-conditioned Bird Gallery, Education Station and Bird School teaches visitors more about avian life. The Education Station has egg incubators where visitors can see chicks and ducklings hatch. Also in this zone is the Oriental Bird Aviary, which has some 50 species of oriental birds such as Toucans and Starlings. The highlight of this zone is the Waterfall Aviary where Milky Storks live in a netted enclosure that has a 30-foot high freshwater waterfall. The park's 350-seat Amphitheatre is the venue for the daily Bird Arena Spectacular, which are staged daily at 12:30pm & 3.30pm. Feeding times: 10am to 5pm for Ostriches and Lories. 4pm for Milky Storks in the Waterfall Aviary.

Getting there

Visitors can get to the park by bus or by train.