As some of you might know, this July GerbenElzinga, KevinVar and I visited a handful of some of Europe's best zoos in Germany, Poland and The Czech Republic (The long-aspired zoo-trip of two Dutchmen and a Belgian). We thoroughly enjoyed this 12-day journey filled with new lifers, inspiration and a lot of interesting experiences, so immediately we were planning to go somewhere again.
Inspired by the lengthy galleries, Thylo's recent trip, Kevin's love for the UK, and a lot of hours in the chatroom, our eyes fell on the distant, ever-rainy paradise of the United Kingdom. We still have a lot of time to plan everything out and thus haven't thought about everything (including how to get there, heh), but we decided we might as well start planning things ahead of time. The still very temporary planning is as such;
Day 1: Get from our respective countries to the UK.
Day 2: Howlett's Wild Animal Park
Day 3: Wingham Wildlife Park and train to Port Lympne
Day 4: Port Lympne Wild Animal Park and train to Colchester
Day 5: Colchester Zoo and drive to somewhere around Hamerton/Linton
Day 6: Linton Zoo and Hamerton Zoo and drive to Twycross
Day 7: Twycross Zoo and drive to Chester
Day 8: Chester Zoo and drive to somewhere around Cotswold
Day 9: Cotswold Falconry Centre, Crocodiles of the World and Cotswold Wildlife Park
Day 10: Get back to our respective countries.
This plan is still very basic and is very open to change; if one of the above collections desperately takes 2 days to visit, or if one of them can easily be combined with a smaller collection nearby, we'd be very interested in doing so. We'd also like to squeeze in a little bit of birding here and there, but don't really know what the best places for doing so would be. Any suggestions, opinions or tips are always welcome!
As is probably obvious from the above list, our goal is to see as many different new species in a relatively short time, while still not having to rush every single zoo we visit. One of the things that surprised us about the above collections is the amount of odd primate species the zoos in the UK have to offer, that aren't kept anywhere else. This is why, for example, Wingham and Linton make it to the list and Whipsnade doesn't.
Another oddity is that London zoo is missing; We've all visited this collection before, and don't feel getting in and out of London to revisit would quite be worth the effort, as wonderful a collection as it is.
As in the previous topic, we will try to write an as interesting as possible report of the zoos we visit here, and hopefully we'll get those up a little bit quicker than last time
Inspired by the lengthy galleries, Thylo's recent trip, Kevin's love for the UK, and a lot of hours in the chatroom, our eyes fell on the distant, ever-rainy paradise of the United Kingdom. We still have a lot of time to plan everything out and thus haven't thought about everything (including how to get there, heh), but we decided we might as well start planning things ahead of time. The still very temporary planning is as such;
Day 1: Get from our respective countries to the UK.
Day 2: Howlett's Wild Animal Park
Day 3: Wingham Wildlife Park and train to Port Lympne
Day 4: Port Lympne Wild Animal Park and train to Colchester
Day 5: Colchester Zoo and drive to somewhere around Hamerton/Linton
Day 6: Linton Zoo and Hamerton Zoo and drive to Twycross
Day 7: Twycross Zoo and drive to Chester
Day 8: Chester Zoo and drive to somewhere around Cotswold
Day 9: Cotswold Falconry Centre, Crocodiles of the World and Cotswold Wildlife Park
Day 10: Get back to our respective countries.
This plan is still very basic and is very open to change; if one of the above collections desperately takes 2 days to visit, or if one of them can easily be combined with a smaller collection nearby, we'd be very interested in doing so. We'd also like to squeeze in a little bit of birding here and there, but don't really know what the best places for doing so would be. Any suggestions, opinions or tips are always welcome!
As is probably obvious from the above list, our goal is to see as many different new species in a relatively short time, while still not having to rush every single zoo we visit. One of the things that surprised us about the above collections is the amount of odd primate species the zoos in the UK have to offer, that aren't kept anywhere else. This is why, for example, Wingham and Linton make it to the list and Whipsnade doesn't.
Another oddity is that London zoo is missing; We've all visited this collection before, and don't feel getting in and out of London to revisit would quite be worth the effort, as wonderful a collection as it is.
As in the previous topic, we will try to write an as interesting as possible report of the zoos we visit here, and hopefully we'll get those up a little bit quicker than last time
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