Best UK Sea Lion enclosure

Best UK Sea Lion enclosure?

  • Banham

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • WMSP

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Whipsnade

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Flamingo Land

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Belfast

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Dudley

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Other

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    50
  • Poll closed .
Agreed; considering it was built in 1905, it was very good indeed and is still greatly missed.
I know I've said this before, but Sealions used to provide one of the iconic sounds of London Zoo. And that pool was good, especially backing onto the Southern Aviary for largely water birds.
 
Does the seal area at Living Coasts have a tunnel or is it just underwater viewing windows? I can't picture it in my head :confused:
I think if it is a tunnel it does not go across the whole exhibit like Colchester, it was only last July but can't really remember!
 
I'm not sure I'd bother with fur seals! Bristol, living coast where else? Neither of those are great

Yes, you may well be right I was going to do them as a possibly later based on the continued popularity polls. There are plenty other better species to do first which I have planned.
 
There's lots of these smallish exhibits with turquoise water that makes it really easy to see the sea lions, but then there's Longleat with the massive lake which is probably the best one for the sea lions, although they are mixed with hippos, which could be stressful for them. But I think a good compromise of the two is Colchester's exhibit, great for the sea lions but also excellent for the visitors, with multiple indoor underwater viewing areas, good signage on their predators etc. and the only underwater tunnel for sea lions in the UK. You can also view the exhibit from a boardwalk around part of the exhibit. In conclusion, I reckon it is the best in the UK for these reasons.
Longleat Sealions can often be seen hauled out on the back of a dozing Hippopotamus. I voted for Longleat because their Sealions have far more swimming scope than any others in UK. Breeding records over the years point to the suitability of the setting, while seeing them porpoising alongside the safari boat is for me one of the great zoo experiences.
 
I think if it is a tunnel it does not go across the whole exhibit like Colchester, it was only last July but can't really remember!

Lol - if it is a tunnel then it can't be very impressive if it had so little impact on both of us that we can't remember it...
 
I'm not sure I'd bother with fur seals! Bristol, living coast where else? Neither of those are great

I'd be strongly inclined to disagree with you as far as Bristol is concerned, even if you are correct with regards to LC :P
 
And neither would have won anyway!
To clarify my point, I don't think that in the context of Bristol Zoo that the fur seal exhibit is poor, just that it is too small to compete with Blackpool or Colchester! I would probably place it 3rd though!
 
To clarify my point, I don't think that in the context of Bristol Zoo that the fur seal exhibit is poor, just that it is too small to compete with Blackpool or Colchester! I would probably place it 3rd though!
Looking at the exhibit as a whole (including the penguin side), it's a very nice complex!
 
It is the presence of that particular tunnel that is the issue due to its structural limitations. You have incorrectly extrapolated that to all underwater viewing tunnels which is not at all what I said at all.

I have been pondering this statement since it has been posted,and I have a question with regards it.I am aware that everything is built has a structural limitation,but surely if a Bull sealion has a weight to great for the tunnel,then surely 4 females are of a great weight and impose a greater risk than the Bull.So in effect I suppose what I am saying is the tunnel isn't the problem for them keeping a bull.I could be wrong and quite often I am.
 
Does the seal area at Living Coasts have a tunnel or is it just underwater viewing windows? I can't picture it in my head :confused:
LC has a tunnel crossing the 2/3 width of the second pool (ocean side). It is the pool where the Macaronis we’re first kept. Apparently the seals don’t like the tunnel and though they have access, they rarely go over that side. As I’ve stated here before, I genuinely love LC but they should not be keeping fur seals in that exhibit in 2020. It was designed for sea otter. At best, the smaller pool which the fur seals prefer could house native seals for rehab whilst the tunnel pool could/should be made into a separate display for sea otter, fairy penguin or ......? Either way, this discussion may be over soon anyway if LC closes due to funding issues! I really hope not but.....
 
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I have been pondering this statement since it has been posted,and I have a question with regards it.I am aware that everything is built has a structural limitation,but surely if a Bull sealion has a weight to great for the tunnel,then surely 4 females are of a great weight and impose a greater risk than the Bull.So in effect I suppose what I am saying is the tunnel isn't the problem for them keeping a bull.I could be wrong and quite often I am.

In this case it isn't a matter of weight so much as pressure. If a bull sea lion were to try and break through the glass with his nose or tail, he could because of the pressure he exerts over a relatively small area compared to female sea lions, who, I assume, are not as strong nor as powerful :)
 
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