Set out on the Ohio Safari & Big Muskie Bucket Tour, an eight-hour loop that begins in Mount Vernon, Ohio, and stitches together riverfront vistas, Appalachian foothills, mining heritage, and an open-air wildlife drive at The Wilds. The trip departs from Lifepoint Church Mount Vernon: 705 S Division St, Mount Vernon, OH 43050; arrive by 8:50 a.m. for timely boarding of the open-air bus that carries up to 13 guests. The route follows the Muskingum River, pausing at Dunkin Falls Lock where the river's engineered locks and gentle cascades reveal how waterways shaped this landscape. Rolling Appalachian Hills flank the valley—older sedimentary layers hewn by streams and time—setting a contrast to the industrial relics that follow. At Miners Memorial Park you'll climb into the Big Muskie Bucket, a hulking piece of Ohio's coal-mining past that lets you physically step into the region's extraction history and feel the scale of mid-20th-century industry. From there the tour pushes southeast into wide, reclaimed pastures toward The Wilds, an expansive conservation safari where the experience shifts from history to living ecosystems. The open-air bus spends roughly two hours winding through large, unfenced habitats where giraffe necks appear above grass, zebras graze at a shoulder level, and rhinos and cheetahs move with the purposeful calm of managed conservation herds. Guides narrate species behavior, habitat restoration work, and how The Wilds balances rare-animal care with Ohio's temperate seasons. This outing stands apart because it layers distinct local stories: river engineering on the Muskingum, Appalachian topography, coal-mining memory anchored by the Big Muskie Bucket, and modern wildlife conservation at The Wilds. The trip’s small-group format—maximum 13—keeps the experience intimate, with light walking required (less than half a mile overall) and long stretches aboard an open vehicle that brings you close to animals without the feeling of a petting zoo. Bring a wind layer and a camera with a mid-range telephoto for wildlife moments. The itinerary suits travelers who want history, geology, and wildlife in one day, and it’s especially good for families and photographers who enjoy structured access to large mammals. Practical details: park in the lower lot at Lifepoint Church where your car will be visible to security cameras while you’re out on the tour. Whether you come for the Big Muskie Bucket’s industrial awe or the giraffes stretching in Ohio grass, this tour stitches regional heritage and wildlife into a single, memorable day. Expect varied weather, from brisk river breezes in spring to hot, dust-prone afternoons in summer; fall can bring crisp light and migrating birds, while winter closures are possible—check availability and bring layers, water, sun protection, and binoculars to make the most of both close encounters and landscape photography opportunities on every trip.