The recent bump to this post got me thinking about the changes to my rankings in the last five years. Though I didn’t post on this (not even sure if I was a member) back in 2015, I still know exactly what my top five would have been, even if by that point I’d not visited anywhere near as many zoos as I have now. In no particular order and from a 2015 perspective:
1. Bristol Zoo. My home zoo, the one I have the most experience with, and the only one I’ve contributed to in any significant way. Gets basically a free pass even if one of my favourite buildings (the aquarium) wasn’t as good in 2015 as it was 4-5 years previously. Big points for Bug World, the reptile house, Twilight World and the bird collection, as well as the superb gardens and planting.
2. London Zoo. The best aquarium in a zoo in the UK puts this right up, along with some gorgeous architecture and animal houses. The reptile house is excellent, as is the main bird house and ‘rainforest’ house (plus nocturnal section), and a very nice collection of birds and mammals of a wide variety of species adds balance.
3. Slimbridge WWT. Another with a very personal connection which earns it points (because what are lists if not personally subjective?). Commitment to local and global conservation is superb, the research they put out is massively influential and the grounds are a pleasure to wander around.
4. Chester Zoo. The zoo I loath to love. I hate the crass commercialisation and the colossal waste of money on imperialistic set dressing for Islands [note, I had previously visited Chester in 2014, and was keeping up to date with Islands’ opening, though it wouldn’t be until 2016 that I visited], and yet it’s such a wonderfully balanced zoo to visit from all of the main criteria I have for zoo visits, highlights including the tropical house, aquarium, Europe aviary, and carnivorous plant collection, that I just can’t not have it in the top 5.
5. Paignton Zoo. When I visited this for the first time since the 90s in 2014 I was just blown away. Crocodile swamps, the desert house, the parrot cages and cottage aviary, the avian breeding centre and the gardens were some of the best parts of any zoo in the UK and it stole my heart within about 30 minutes thanks to the superb collection of exhibits to the left of the entrance. The collection was balanced-ish and I had really high hopes for this continuing to grow to keep itself as one of the best zoos in the country.
Five years on and a lot has changed. I’ve visited far more zoos both in the UK and abroad and feel I have a better handle on what I enjoy from a zoo, even if my active involvement with them has waned somewhat. I’m also going to pretend that a certain pandemic isn’t happening because that’s a wildcard no-one needs right now…
1. Bristol Zoo. Now relying very heavily on that personal connection. If it wasn’t for that then even the (ex-)Wallace Aviary, BugWorld and aquarium couldn’t save it from being taken off the list. However, the decimation of the bird collection which took place is now finally being repaired and the newer ideas for the collection might be the boost it needs. With Wild Place beginning to stand on its own two feet without the financial support of Bristol (which has been essentially a loss-leader for years now) I’m hopeful that Bristol will start to capitalise on the areas that make it great and to change things for the better. Cautiously optimistic from the slump I felt it was in from 2017-2019.
2. Slimbridge WWT. Very little has changed at Slimbridge (despite the sad closure of the tropical house) and what always made it great has stayed largely the same, despite the loss of a couple of species, and the lower number of wintering geese. The Slimbridge 2020 reforms however are very welcome, and I’m excited to see the Living Wetland Theatre when it opens next year.
3. Chester Zoo. Damn it, Islands was great fun. Yes I hated the set dressing as much as I thought I would do, the fake plants in Monsoon Forest really were a bit silly, and the overtheming of the smaller tanks in Monsoon was so anti-visitor it was almost funny, but this was still an excellent addition to an already great zoo. Once Monsoon is back open I really need to schedule in another visit before the aquarium and tropical hall are closed down…
4. Cotswold Wildlife Park. The most British of British zoos. The gardens are simply stunning, and the effort to combine these with the animal enclosures needs to be applauded. It’s a near-complete experience (needs more fish…), even if there are a few rough edges here and there. The collection is well balanced between big public draws and weird stuff for us, and despite some very disjunct areas the whole place comes across as distinctly cohesive.
5. Newquay Zoo. A total dorky paradise which takes over from Paignton as my favourite zoo in the far south west. Generally excellent enclosures, plenty of crowd favourites balanced with obscure species and a surprisingly strong role in aviculture in the UK allow this to sneak into my top 5. It’s simply a fun zoo to visit.
London losing the aquarium immediately killed my interest sadly. Land of the Lions was terrible and although a waste of money I could overlook it because I really wasn’t interested in that area anyway, but other developments don’t seem to have been too interesting, and it’s fallen well off my radar. Paignton has had an incredibly difficult time, and I’ll keep extolling its virtues, but it just isn’t the zoo it was. If only the kiwi could move to Newquay…
International Centre for Birds of Prey and the Hawk Conservancy are brilliant visits, though neither has really changed in five years. Hamerton and Wild Place are my two bets for the future – the former for a total collectors paradise (it even includes a great fish section!) which I’m hoping will grow into itself (recent enclosures are a big step up from previous), though I wish the conservation side of things was higher on the agenda. Wild Place is growing nicely but having not been for a good few years I’m a bit behind – Bear Woods certainly looks excellent, and another exhibit of similar quality would probably put it up there. Whipsnade has always interested me just outside of a top 5 (though it might have been when I first visited it in 2012), and the aquarium opening might balance out some of the loss of hoofstock for me when I come to eventually visit again.