charliejb
Well-Known Member
New litter of Lynx kittens at Wild Place
Litter of lynx kittens born at Wild Place Project - Wild Place
Litter of lynx kittens born at Wild Place Project - Wild Place
I thought the Okapi enclose WAS remarkable. It’s the only time I’ve seen Okapi in a wood, which after all is where they’ve evolved to be.Visited here the other day and was truly impressed with the place, definitely looking good all round with some stunning exhibits. Bear Woods is really good, but the fencing takes away from any sense of naturalism they were going for, thick black isn't great and surely green would have been slightly less obtrusive. The walkway was the most impressive thing for me though, that is one hell of a feat of engineering and it looks great as well. Did love the enclosures on the whole and managed to see at least one of every species. In fact I went two for two on consecutive days at different zoos for Wolverines!
Other quality exhibits were the Gelada enclosure, not huge but really nice to look at an ideal size for the small group they hold. The Cheetah enclosure on the other hand is maybe too big, stunning enclosure but absolutely huge and seeing a cheetah must require a fair bit of luck. The African section in the middle of the zoo is nice but unremarkable, likewise the Madagascan section and the Okapi enclosures. Just leaves the Walled Garden which is fine but is really let down by having an actual garden greenhouse to keep the Meerkats in. I'd expect more from somewhere that is ran by the same society as Bristol.
Overall I enjoyed my visit immensely, and even though Bristol keep more species that I like and has always been a firm favourite I'm beginning to think Wild Place may overtake it in my personal ranking before Bristol even closes it's doors.
I didn't get the full effect as the only Okapi that we saw was in it's house and barely visible behind the plastic stripping. If I had seen one utilising the wooded area then it probably would have stood out far more in my mind.I thought the Okapi enclose WAS remarkable. It’s the only time I’ve seen Okapi in a wood, which after all is where they’ve evolved to be.
Just leaves the Walled Garden which is fine but is really let down by having an actual garden greenhouse to keep the Meerkats in. I'd expect more from somewhere that is ran by the same society as Bristol.
Don't get me wrong, I do like it but it's always going to be compared to CWP's Walled Garden, and on that level it fails massively because it's unfortunately significantly smaller. There are some really nice bird highlights in there (Tarictic Hornbill, Socorro Dove, Pink Pigeon), and the Dik-dik/Crane/Weaver aviary is particularly nice if a little small, but that greenhouse really does not fit the aesthetic. I'm assuming it's one they had knocking around as you can get modern houses for relatively cheap, whereas that just looks like something I'd have seen on my local allotment in the early nineties...I'm suprised you're not a fan of this section, it's one of my favourites!
I bearly notice the fencing myself. What you missed out on is the viewpoint that is closed off due to covid, where you can get eye level with the bears and wolves if they pass it while you are in there.Thought you'd have more issue with my Bear Woods review to be honest,
I see what you did there!I bearly notice the fencing myself.
Yeah, saw that but as you say, blocked off. Wouldn't have been much use though as the bears were up high and the wolves were miles away.What you missed out on is the viewpoint that is closed off due to covid, where you can get eye level with the bears and wolves if they pass it while you are in there.
You say that, but the greenhouse alone gives the meerkats more space than many enclosures as a whole in the UK. *Cough HCC Cough*...I'm assuming it's one they had knocking around as you can get modern houses for relatively cheap, whereas that just looks like something I'd have seen on my local allotment in the early nineties...![]()
I am a huge fan, and think it looks fantastic. I have heard that some of the foliage has been cut back, so it looks less naturalistic than it once did... But I'll have to be the judge of that myselfThought you'd have more issue with my Bear Woods review to be honest, I know you're a massive fan of it, and I agree it is fantastic, but unfortunately the work on the walkway impressed me far more than any actual exhibits there (saying something),
Yeah, might be a fair bit of space but it looks ugly as hell and really out of keeping with the rest of the Walled Garden. When that's one of my only criticisms then the place is going in the right direction.You say that, but the greenhouse alone gives the meerkats more space than many enclosures as a whole in the UK. *Cough HCC Cough*...![]()
Speaking of criticisms the only other major one is those bloody fences in Bear Woods, just horrible council-style fencing. Just ruin s the aesthetic once again. I'm not one to extol the virtues of "immersion" but when you've clearly gone all out to try and do an immersion exhibit then why ruin it with the fences. In any other exhibit I'd give them a free pass but because this is supposed to be ground breaking then I'm surprised they just used heavy black rather than a more natural colour. Still think it's a great exhibit though and I'm just nit-picking really.I am a huge fan, and think it looks fantastic. I have heard that some of the foliage has been cut back, so it looks less naturalistic than it once did... But I'll have to be the judge of that myself![]()
Although really nice to read about the various contractors being hired for this huge project. What I am intrigued about and really would like to know what species and conservation areas will they be focussing on? How different is this vision from their stated masterplan from some years back that was quite detailed on habitat types, zoogeographical areas and focal species. Am I missing the point or am I not and right in wondering what kind of developments and animal collection we may be expecting. Say Sumatran tiger, eastern black rhino, western lowland gorilla, Grevy's zebra ...????
The 'mood boards' seem really exciting with so many fascinating and endangered species on it but I really hope that the zoo isn't just ABC species and large hoofstock. Bristol zoo have a great collection of reptiles, fish and small mammals, I really hope that we see as many of these species make the move to Wild Place as possible. I'm planning on potentially visiting Wild Place later this week so I'll make sure to share any changes that I see.I don't know if the mood boards that Bristol Zoo released originally (when the announcement was made about the intention to close the old site and relocate to Wild Place), gives a bit of an indication of some of the new species they are hoping to exhibit. If so, it suggests they are aiming for a big cat species Leopard it looks like in the first phase along with the gorillas which would clearly be the group from the old zoo being moved over.
Phase 2 seems to suggest the possibility of Orangutan and Tigers and then what looks like a bison of some kind in Phase 3 along with deer and stags. It could of course be a red herring in the end but I would welcome seeing more big cat species, at the Wild Place site as part of the 'new' Bristol Zoo especially given the space they have there.