Welcome to the Safari zoo in Rancangua in central Chile, where vehicles takes visitors on a drive through a 2-hectare (5 acre) enclosure that is home to six lions.
Travelers ride inside the caged-in back of the truck.
Then it's up to the lions to decide what they feel like doing: ambling up for a sniff, climbing atop to eat the meat and look at the cowering humans below, or even lying down for a rest.
Then, just stick a brave finger through the metal grates and there you are, touching the king of the jungle's tummy.
Safari park is the first of its kind in Chile and one of few in Latin America.
The idea is for people to see animals in their natural habitat, in effect with people caged up rather than the majestic animals themselves.
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Travelers ride inside the caged-in back of the truck.
Then it's up to the lions to decide what they feel like doing: ambling up for a sniff, climbing atop to eat the meat and look at the cowering humans below, or even lying down for a rest.
Then, just stick a brave finger through the metal grates and there you are, touching the king of the jungle's tummy.
Safari park is the first of its kind in Chile and one of few in Latin America.
The idea is for people to see animals in their natural habitat, in effect with people caged up rather than the majestic animals themselves.
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