The wolf exhibit was located at the very front of the predator-themed area, adjacent to the tiger exhibit, with an entrance made of many large, irregular pieces of granite cobbled together to form a cave.
The granite was an ancient shade of gray-yellow, as if it had been through thousands of years of drastic changes, eroded by constant mountain winds and battered by rainwater, to finally take on its current appearance; a clump of lush green grass tenaciously extended out from the crevices in the rocks at the bottom.
The large rocks were stacked upon each other, spreading out layer by layer around them, not only serving as a fence for the grassland but also as resting benches.
At this moment, a family pushing a stroller seemed to have grown tired from walking and was taking a brief rest here.
Primitive murals, some clear, some blurred, some deep, and some shallow black etchings, were carved into the large stones, depicting various scenes related to wolves.