The parrot area was also a welcome surprise, with some amazing species: grey breasted parakeet, swift parakeet, blue-throated conure, derbyan parakeet and the best of the bunch - the horned parakeet.
When I saw this post last back end I was intrigued. I hadn't seen a swift parakeet since 1972 and I had never seen a horned parakeet at all. Finding such rare and beautiful species at a theme park seemed as unlikely as finding a half-truth in a Jose Mourinho press conference

However as Xmas and winter intervened, I didn't get the chance to check them out for myself,
until today.
It's not really my sort of place: a greybeard with a camera stands out among the families with young children. And it is all rather tatty and tacky, unless you have a fixation on Thomas the Tank Engine. Actually that's not fair - the Gents Toilets near the Zoo are splendid, indeed so magnificent that I was tempted to take some photos - but that seemed in poor taste, so you'll have to take my word for it.
As you enter the Zoo section, there are reindeer cows on the left and meerkats on the right. I didn't stop for either, I headed directly for the sound of the parrots. Past the umbrella cockatoos and opposite a large flight for a mixed group of macaws, there they were 2 horned parakeets and 3 swifts, in the same range were Derbyans, blue-throated, grey-breasted and sun conures and roseate cockatoos. Plus 15 African greys in another large flight, which were making more noise than all the others, and a pair of Moluccan cockatoos too.
The design of the aviaries made photography difficult and poor light made it worse, so my images of these birds may take some time to post, but I was very pleased to see them. Swifts are quiet little birds, but one of them did a nice little whistling song - not really what you expect from a parrot. The horned parakeets are fantastic, wonderfully coloured, active and curious. I had imagined they would be rather like cockatiels or kakarikis, but they seemed larger and more robust than those species. They made my day.
The rest of the zoo did not really stand comparison. As Pertinax wrote recently about Chester, zoos look their worst at this time of year. Paddocks are muddy and worn before spring arrives. Exhibits may have suffered during the winter and zoo maintenance staff are getting ready to repair and refresh them before Easter comes. Although it was Sunday afternoon, one worker was building a new bamboo climbing frame for the lar gibbons, and it was nice to see them using it before I left. I did like the Tamarin Trail and the large aviaries for the owls (snowy great grey and spectacled). A new aviary is under construction for tarictic hornbills and what looked like the old penguin pool had been refurbished as an aviary for Hawaiian geese and Laysan teal. I was also impressed by the signage and by some of the reptiles and I was pleased to see their pig-tailed macaques - another nice species that I haven't seen for years.
Photos to follow
