Beale Park Beale Park news

Bele

Well-Known Member
15+ year member
After attending a wedding on Saturday I found myself staying in the attractive village of Pangbourne , only a mile from Beale Park . So , of course ,that is where we had to go on Sunday morning . The Park has an attractive setting next to the Thames with lakes , lovely gardens and lots of statuary .

The Wildlife Park and Gardens , as is is known , is run by a Charitable Trust - more information on their web-site Beale Park - Wildlife and Animal Park/Gardens near Reading, Berkshire. Children's Entertainment, Activities and Days Out . The curator Dave Coles , is well known in avicultural circles . The World Pheasant Association had its base here for a long time - not certain if it still is - and previously an extensive pheasant collection was housed in large ranges of aviaries along with softbills such as a lvarious laughing-thrush species . The web-site claims its bird collection is one of the foremost in Europe - I do not agree with this .

Now , instead of rows of smaller aviaries there are a few very large attractively landscaped and planted aviaries . Four are themed - Himalayas , South America , Africa and Australasia - the last being walk-through . Each houses a mix of birds with ducks , waders , pigeons , softbills and small seed-eaters . A few parrot aviaries have lesser and greater vasa parrots and madagascar lovebirds ( nice to see these ) amongst others . A large waterfowl collection is housed on the lakes and pens . There is also a pair of white storks but no cranes which they used to have .

A large range of big aviaries houses a good owl collection - notable being ashy-faced from Muncaster , also spectacled , hawk , brown wood etc. plus breeding striated cara-caras and American black vultures . Rheas and emus are housed with mammals in regionally themed paddocks .

The mammal collection has grown . Aviary type enclosures house white-fronted and breeding red-handed tamarins and Goeldi's monkeys , larger accomodation is provided for squirrel monkeys and ring-tailed lemurs housed with white-faced tree ducks . A new rangs of pens with a raised viewing platform house prairie dogs , yellow mongoose and meercats ( unusually not showing themselves ) . The other mammals are housed in the paddocks - fallow and sika deer , Bennett's and Parma wallaby , mara . There is also a good variety of domestics - alpaca , dwarf zebu and unusual Arapawa goats froma New Zealand island ( these attractive small animals were said to be the only ones on show in the UK though ISIS says Cotswold also has them ) .

As a visitor attraction there is much to attract families with small children - a train ride is included in the ticket price £8.50 for adults and £6 for children , several play areas for various ages and paddling pools . In this respect it reminded me of Paradise Park . The Pavilion houses an impressive model boat collection . You can take river trips from the Park and fishing is available on the lakes which are also good for wild birds with a large reed bed . The Park is only open from March to October .

A very pleasant place to visit , but do not expect any great zoo rarities . It is only a few miles from the M4 and near Reading . We also passed the Living Rainforest at Hampstead Norreys , not too far away .
 
and unusual Arapawa goats froma New Zealand island ( these attractive small animals were said to be the only ones on show in the UK though ISIS says Cotswold also has them ) .

Cotswold do have them- 1.1 plus a kid. They are fawn coloured with 'swiss' stripes on the face?

I first went to the Child-Beale Trust in the 1950's as I lived near there. It was just the Lakes and some Pheasant pens in those days and a strange Mausoleum.
 
I visited this zoo today and am surprised it hasn’t had any more threads!

I wasn’t sure what to expect as it is a small zoo with quite a few common zoo animals but i was pleasantly surprised!

Its a lovely place, which has plenty of land, yet doesn't seem to pack the animals into as small a space as possible. The park is split up by lovely lakes, statues and gardens, giving it an open feel.
The enclosures were large and from speaking with Dave Coles the curator he has some great ideas for the park in the future and judging the meerkat and mongoose enclosures it looks like they will be built to a good standard.

They have 4 species of mongoose in brilliant enclosures (Meerkat, Dwarf, Yellow and Banded Mongoose)

It is currently closed over the winter but will re-open in February and i would recommend a visit for anyone with half a day spare as it is a very nice small zoo with picturesque surroundings.
 
Well its not really a zoo, park is the word that suits it best. But yes, I went a few years ago and it is a really nice place, all well presented.
 
3 skunks have gone on-show.

Beale Park on Twitter
Visited last weekend, very impressed with big skunk enclosure, and very active skunks, none of which appeared overweight, unlike some skunks one sees.
Highlights for me included Purple Swamphens, Wild Muscovey ducks, lots of Crested Pigeons, good numbers of Red Turtledoves, and the new Inca Terns. Wild Egyptian Geese were a bonus, as was singing Orange-headed Ground Thrush.
 
Visited last weekend, very impressed with big skunk enclosure, and very active skunks, none of which appeared overweight, unlike some skunks one sees.
Highlights for me included Purple Swamphens, Wild Muscovey ducks, lots of Crested Pigeons, good numbers of Red Turtledoves, and the new Inca Terns. Wild Egyptian Geese were a bonus, as was singing Orange-headed Ground Thrush.

I've seen Egyptian geese along that stretch of the Thames also.

Do Beale Trust still have their Axis deer?
 
I've seen Egyptian geese along that stretch of the Thames also.

Do Beale Trust still have their Axis deer?
I may be wrong, but I thought it was Sika they had, at least latterly. Pretty sure there's only a few goats, if anything, left in the Deer Park. I probably should have looked harder.
 
I may be wrong, but I thought it was Sika they had, at least latterly. Pretty sure there's only a few goats, if anything, left in the Deer Park. I probably should have looked harder.

They defintely had Axis. You could see them from the road. They may have had Sika as well, not sure.
 
I visited on Tuesday and only saw sika deer and one albino fallow deer. There was no signage in the deer park part though but I don't think there was any axis deer in the area as I walked back to the station and only saw the sika herd.
 
I visited on Tuesday and only saw sika deer and one albino fallow deer. There was no signage in the deer park part though but I don't think there was any axis deer in the area as I walked back to the station and only saw the sika herd.

There are photos in the Gallery dated 2010 that show Axis, Fallow( both normal and white) and 'Formosan' sika all in the one enclosure. I don't know what the situation is now but it sounds as if Axis and Fallow numbers have both declined.
 
Beale Park has a strange history. I used to visit here in the 1950's... in those days there was just the Mausoleum with statues, the lake and fountains and a pheasantry , with individual enclosures and rearing pens, plus ornamental waterfowl. In those days you could just walk in from the riverside but there was nothing much to see really. Nowadays it seems to have developed more along the farmpark/wildlife park route, with a number of exotic mammals and other birds and new access and parking from the road.
 
First visit today, and was pleasantly surprised. Nice selection of small mammals, especially the banded mongoose, don't see them in many places. The bird collection was very nice, highlights being yellow-headed caracara, striated caracara, singing orange-headed ground thrush, and the selection of parrots, especially the swift parrots, Lord Derby's parakeet and blue-throated conure.

The cafe is pretty decent too and the walk from Pangbourne train station is pleasant and easy, next to the Thames and with a decent path the whole way.
 
Posting on this old thread because there is no need for a new one.

My local little zoo is really growing! The big change is the renaming to beale wildlife park, as can be seen on their website and new signs. Their collection has also been improved massively, bringing in 2 female plains zebra last year, as well as a pair of scottish wildcats and a male carpathian lynx. They’ve also brought in an african dwarf crocodile, crested porcupines and a group of brazilian cavies. Their bird collection is still impressive, though the loss of the swift parrots (replaced by a single timneh parrot) and yellow-headed caracaras is unfortunate.
 
For anyone interested, the lynx came from Newquay :)
 
Beale Park has Chacoan maras. I'm surprised that 39 collections on ZTL are lusted as having the species. It was only a few years ago that barely any zoos had it.
Yep! Didn’t mention it as they’ve had them for a bit, but they have a pair easily viewable.
 
Visited today to see some new arrivals. They have acquired a Brazilian tapir, four black-and-white ruffed lemur brothers, and a very active tayra named Silas. Two short-clawed otter girls were born this summer, and a keeper tells me they are expecting a mate for the lynx to arrive in january.
 
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