The Alabama Gulf Coast Zoo — “The Little Zoo That Could” — is about 15 minutes from Orange Beach, and it’s the corridor’s answer to the day when everybody’s had enough sand. It’s a nonprofit, and it operates at a scale where the animals aren’t anonymous: 118 species, 22 of them critically endangered, and the zoo’s own line is that every animal has a name and a backstory.
The encounters
This is the draw. Sloth and kangaroo encounters get booked here, plus giraffe feedings and sulcata tortoise interactions — the up-close stuff big-city zoos either don’t offer or charge a fortune for. Keeper presentations come included with regular admission. The residents range from African lions and Eurasian lynx to ring-tailed lemurs, capybaras, and macaws.
Good to know
Open daily 9am to 4pm — note that early close and go in the morning, when the animals are moving and the heat isn’t. Admission runs $23.95 for adults, $15.95 for kids 3–12, under 2 free, with a senior rate at $20.95.
Why locals care
A small nonprofit zoo surviving on the hurricane coast is not a given. This one has, for decades, on admission tickets and local goodwill — spending a morning there is the kind of tourism money we don’t mind pointing people toward.