A Guidebook Library: TLD's year-long randomised walkthrough of zoo guides

ZTL gives the following species-list for Bognor Regis Pet Corner :
African brush-tailed porcupine
Bantam
Indian peafowl (Blue peafowl) (Indien Peacock)
Drill
European brown bear
European badger
European red fox
Common chimpanzee (No Subspecific status)
Golden pheasant
Grivet (Green monkey) (Malbrouck monkey) (no species or subspecies status)
Black-capped capuchin (Guianan brown capuchin) (no subspecies-status)
Domestic rabbit (No Breed-Status)
Guinea pig (No Breeds-status)
Domestic guineafowl
Crab-eating macaque (Long-tailed macaque) (Java macaque)
Llama
Leopard (no subspecies-status)
Lion (No subspecies-status)
Barbary sheep (Arui) (Aoudad) (no subspecific status)
Northern Raccoon (Common Raccoon)
Cougar (Puma) (No subspecific status)
Rhesus macaque
South American coati (Brown-nosed coati) (Ring-tailed coati) (No Subspecific status)
Red deer (no subspecies status)
Silkie bantam (Silkie chicken) (No Breed-status)
Serval (no subspecies-status)
Silver pheasant (No Subspecific status)
Tiger (no subspecies-status)
Bactrian camel (Two-humped camel)
White-faced capuchin (White-throated capuchin) (no species or subspecies status)
In the book 'Wildlife in Britain more species are named :
- Crested porcupine
- Black-tailed prairiedog
- Viscacha
- Kinkajou
- Gerbils
- Wallaby
- Ducks ( various species )
- Geese ( various species )
- Pigeons ( various species )
- Pheasants ( various species )
- Pinguin
- Pelican
- White ibis
- Tortoises
In the Tropical House there were various species of finches, weaver, small parrot, toucanet, mynah, touraco, hornbill and purple gallinules.
Would be realy intresting to know the exact species of the species from which various species were kept as well as which species of gerbil, wallaby, pinguin and pelican. Any ZooChatter who has been at this place and knows more about exact species kept ?
 
This place might have the strangest name of any zoo ever. If you asked me what "Pet's Corner" was without seeing this I would have said a pet shop or maybe a dog groomer.
That's just one of those American vs English usages - I doubt there is anybody from England who would not know what it meant. When I first started reading your post I thought you were going to be commenting on the Bognor Regis part of the name!
 
Day 88: Chester Zoo (2005) - Amboina Box Turtle

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Page count: 120 pages
Photographs: c.225
Illustrations/diagrams: N/A
Layout: Introduction and discussion of conservation work, followed by walkthrough account of collection and species within, concluding with various segments relating to the zoo, its work and visitor amenities.
Map: Fold-out map within interior back page


Today, the guidebook which has been selected for discussion is one of the final editions published by Chester Zoo before they ceased to produce material of this sort; as I intend to demonstrate, this is a great pity considering the high quality and depth of information present within this volume. For a surprisingly long time, considering the high level of appreciation I have for Chester Zoo, very few guidebooks from the zoo were contained within my personal collection. However, in the past year or so this has been remedied somewhat; I picked up this particular edition around nine months ago on AbeBooks, with several others having been obtained around the same timespan either through said website, eBay, or in-person trade with other collectors.

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The first thing which needs to be noted when discussing this guidebook is the high production quality which is visible throughout; this is one of the very few UK guide books published in recent decades which (in a similar vein to those produced by Walsrode and the two Berlin collections) truly are *books* in their scope, content and design, with glossy, tightly-bound pages, a comprehensive contents page and references section, and hundreds of high-quality colour photographs scattered throughout the main body of the text. The guidebook opens with a general introduction to the collection written by the director of the time, Gordon McGregor Reid, followed by a section - visible above - discussing the latest developments and building projects taking place at the zoo. I always rather like it when guidebooks contain material of this sort, as it ties them into a very specific point in time within the history of a collection, rather than being more generalised and "timeless". Beyond this point, several double-page spreads cover a variety of important and noteworthy points of interest to the zoo visitor; information relating to visitor facilities, safety information and rules of admission; promotion of zoo memberships and animal adoptions; and general advice for those visiting the collection during the winter or in adverse weather.

These passages are followed by a lengthy segment intended to form a more in-depth introduction to the collection prior to the main body of the guidebook, comprising introductory passages written by the chief curators for the animal and horticultural sections, a series of short essays highlighting six "Must See Exhibits" and a comprehensive table of all endangered animal species held by the collection at the time of publication. As the subject of conservation work is one which is returned to at a later point within the guidebook, I shall discuss the lattermost of these anon.

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Beyond here, the main body of the guidebook comprises a roughly-alphabetical walkthrough of the various species displayed within the collection at the time of publication, with a paragraph or two devoted to the majority; several of the more significant taxa or animal groups are described within larger double-page accounts, as are the six "must see" exhibits which had been touched on previously. These accounts reach consistently-high levels of detail and quality, with the information presented within covering subjects such as the conservation work undertaken by Chester Zoo, breeding successes within the collection, details of the specific individuals held at the zoo, and remarks on the day-to-day lifestyle and behaviour of the species in question. Moreover, the accounts relating to particularly significant species contain tables showing vital statistics such as conservation status, size, diet and range. As is the case throughout this guidebook, the accounts are lushly-illustrated with colour photographs showing the species and exhibits under discussion.

Given the wide range of detailed and high-quality accounts within this section of the guidebook, it has proven somewhat difficult to select which particular portions should be highlighted here through use of scanned double-page spreads; I could have easily provided any number of alternative images and conveyed the quality and general format of the accounts just as well, but I ultimately decided to highlight three of the exhibit accounts relating to some of the newest developments within the collection at the time of publication - the Twilight Forest bat house, the Spirit of the Jaguar house, and the Tsavo complex for Black Rhinoceros. Hopefully, these provide a good insight into the quality and content of this guidebook where the animal/exhibit accounts are concerned!

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The guidebook concludes with a wide range of further essays and discussions relating to Chester Zoo, the various attractions and amenities found at the collection beyond the animal exhibits, and various other subjects; these include discussion of the gardens and botanical displays within the zoo, the use of the zoo as a venue for functions and events, a "frequently asked questions" section and a brief but detailed description of the importance of zoological collections in the present day, making reference to the "Five Freedoms" of animal welfare.

However, perhaps the most important - and certainly the lengthiest, comprising as it does several segments covering a variety of subtopics - is the significant level of discussion relating to the conservation work undertaken by the collection both ex-situ and in-situ. The above image, showing a portion of a table listing the various endangered species held by Chester Zoo at the time of publication, their conservation status, any relevant breeding successes by the collection and information on which taxa were subject to managed programmes, comes from the aforementioned section on conservation work which is situated prior to the animal/exhibit accounts. However, I feel it is worth highlighting here given the relevance it has to these accounts, which provide further insight into the in-situ and ex-situ conservation work undertaken by the collection through use of a map showing the various locations throughout the world where Chester Zoo is involved with such projects.

The guidebook concludes with a detailed and high-quality fold-out map of the collection within the interior rear cover; not only are the various paths and exhibits illustrated clearly and in an aesthetically-pleasing fashion, greatly increasing the ease of navigation throughout the zoo through use of the map, but each of the exhibits, paddocks and enclosures are labelled succinctly. Interestingly, the map also contains a scale bar, thereby providing an insight into the size of the collection and the distance between exhibits; this is something which I have encountered in very few zoological maps, and which I feel would vastly enhance the quality and utility of such material were it more commonplace. In many ways, the high quality and visual appeal of this map is bittersweet, given how starkly different it is to the maps printed by Chester Zoo over the course of the last decade or so; these, sad to say, are much simpler, aesthetically-jarring to look at, and quite frankly confusing to use.

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All things considered, then, this guidebook represents one of the very best that the UK zoological landscape has produced in recent decades; it is rich in detail, providing information which is interesting and relevant both to zoo enthusiasts and casual visitors and covers a wide range of subjects, and is presented in an attractive and aesthetically-pleasing fashion. As such, the fact that this is also one of the very last guidebooks published by the collection before it ceased to produce material of this sort provokes a distinct sense of loss; although Chester Zoo itself has continued to develop and flourish over the decade-and-a-half since the publication of this guidebook, the decision to both cease producing guidebooks and severely dumb-down the quality of the maps produced at the collection is a glaring omission.... particularly when the cited reason for both decisions is the erroneous belief that an "app" renders guidebooks and maps irrelevant, ignoring (among other things) the fact that such things are seldom-if-ever archived or accessible in retrospect.

I have most certainly omitted a vast amount of information in this discussion; as such I suspect there is even more grounds for discussion, feedback and questions than usual. I open the floor to you!
 
Day 87: Bognor Regis Pets Corner (1956) - Rhesus Macaque "Judy"

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Page count: 18 pages (including interior front and rear covers)
Photographs: 26 black-and-white photographs
Illustrations/diagrams: 6 drawings
Layout: General overview of species held in collection, advice on keeping pets and summary of other attractions within Hotham Park.
Map: Two maps; on interior front cover showing location of collection within Bognor Regis; and plan of collection within central pages.


Appropriately enough, considering the fact that the most recent discussions within this thread have revolved around closed UK collections, the guidebook which has come up for discussion today pertains to one such collection - albeit not one of those which was cited within the previous guidebook. Bognor Regis Pets Corner first opened in 1950, and per the information available on the Bartlett Society website remained open until 1984; beyond these basic details, I have never really known all that much about the collection. As such, when I found this particular guidebook on eBay some time ago I was very pleased to seize the opportunity to learn more!

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The guidebook opens with the above map showing the location of the Pets Corner within Hotham Park, an area of parkland in southeast Bognor Regis, along with a brief introduction both to the Pets Corner and the park as a whole. Beyond here, the main body of the text can be divided into three distinct segments; a general summary of the species (both domestic and exotic) displayed within the Pets Corner itself; a segment relating to the correct care of various commonplace domestic species which the readers of the guidebook may have owned as pets; and finally a brief segment discussing some of the other attractions available to the public within Hotham Park.

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As one can imagine, this guidebook is very obviously aimed towards a younger audience; in many ways, the general tone and content of the text is reminiscent of children's literature published around this time, echoing much of the stilted and somewhat condescending delivery found in such books. However, it must be noted that the guidebook is nonetheless rather well-illustrated with a wide range of black-and-white photographs depicting the animals held within the collection at the time of publication, along with some of the exhibits and paddocks located within the Pets Corner, and *does* provide a reasonably high amount of information about those species and individual animals discussed within the text. Each of the major species located within the collection are addressed within a paragraph or two, separated numerically; it should, however, be noted that unlike some guidebooks I have discussed within this thread, the numbering does not correspond whatsoever to that presented within the map found within the central pages of the guidebook. Another notable feature of these accounts is that, by and large, they pertain specifically to the individual animals held within the collection, referring to them by name and in rather anthropomorphic terms - although, as noted, a large amount of information about the species and individual animals held within the Pets Corner is conveyed, this is interwoven with statements such as the claim within the above scan that the European Badger held within the collection had "become more civilised" as regards his diet.

These accounts are followed by a section - visible below - providing a wide range of advice on the care and upkeep of pet animals; again, this is very obviously aimed towards a younger audience as regards the general tone and content of the text. The quality of the advice presented is extremely variable; some comprises fairly reasonable and common-sense observations, other portions feel a little more antiquated, which some - the section relating to hedgehogs being the most obvious example - are actively and harmfully misleading in the information they relay. Beyond here, the guidebook concludes with a very brief summary of some of the other attractions and features which the visitor to Hotham Park could see at the time of publication.

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The map located within the central pages of this guidebook, showing the general footprint and layout of the Pets Corner and surrounding areas of Hotham Park, is remarkably attractive and detailed given the aforementioned child-friendly focus of the guidebook as a whole, being presented in an aesthetically-pleasing isometric point of view which somewhat simulates an aerial view of the collection as a whole. The use of labelling and supporting information within the key is also particularly good - although, as noted, the exhibit numbering on the map does not correspond to the numbering within the main body of the text, it *does* present a large amount of information, noting where multiple exhibits hold a given species or group of animals and also displaying the location of various supplementary buildings and structures. Most notable of these is the Georgian mansion which forms the original focus of Hotham Park itself - and which, to the best of my knowledge, still stands to this day, several decades after the closure of the Pets Corner.

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Overall, then, this is an rather interesting and historically-significant guidebook for one of the lesser-known closed collections which operated within the UK during the second half of the 20th century; given the somewhat old-fashioned and child-focused language, it is possibly more fulfilling and enjoyable to read as a historical record than it is as a guidebook for the collection to which it pertains - with the key exception of the map located within the central pages, which is perhaps the best part of the guidebook when viewed as a physical guide to the collection as it stood at the time of publication.

As usual, I would be very interested to receive any comments, questions or feedback - I imagine it is possible that some reading this thread may have even visited the collection over the years!
Why is there a page on how to keep pets? Do they also sell pets within the zoo? Can i buy a wallaby?
 
Nice guidebook indeed, are there some contemporary guidebooks in the Uk which represent a similar quality?
 
Day 89: L'Aquarium Barcelona (2018) - Libre Record (Catalan-language)

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Page count: 20 pages
Photographs: 14 colour photographs
Illustrations/diagrams: 64 drawings
Layout: Introduction, followed by an exhibit-by-exhibit walkthrough of collection.
Map: Located within main body of guidebook


A rather interesting one this time; I purchased this guidebook in March 2019 whilst on a trip to the Iberian Peninsula, during which time I visited L'Aquarium Barcelona more-or-less on an impulse after leaving the zoo with a few hours remaining before my booked train back to Madrid. On arriving at the aquarium, I found that it is perhaps the European collection which publishes the widest range of variant-language guidebooks; along with the Catalan-language edition which we are discussing today (the first in said language to enter my personal collection) the collection also sold translated editions in English, Spanish, French, Italian and German. I purchased the first of these alongside the Catalan edition, although I must admit that my more completionist side was very tempted to purchase the other editions too!

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The guidebook opens with a general introduction, which can be divided roughly into three sections; the first of these comprises a short discussion on the oceans and seas of the world, and the threats which face marine environments in the present day. Beyond here, a more focused introduction to the aquarium itself is provided, giving a rough outline of the recommended route throughout the collection and the general focus of the exhibits within, and listing various symbols and labels which are used throughout the main body of the guidebook in order to convey additional points of information regarding the species held within the aquarium. Finally, a comprehensive map of the aquarium - with the various exhibits numbered in correspondence with the various sections of the guidebook - is provided; as can be seen above, this is well-labelled, attractive and easy-to-interpret, and as such is very well-suited to the general needs of visitors to the collection.

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The main body of the guidebook comprises a detailed exhibit-by-exhibit walkthrough of the aquarium, and is separated into two distinct sections; the first and longest deals with the various exhibits and tanks within the aquarium which represent a fairly comprehensive representation of the habitats, ecosystems and marine communities found throughout the Mediterranean, whilst the second discusses those which represent a general cross-section of tropical marine habitats. Each of the exhibit accounts covers a page or so of detailed text describing the habitat/community which is represented within, alongside several simple but attractive colour illustrations depicting a selection of the species present within the exhibit in question. Each of these illustrations is accompanied by the informational symbols and labels which - as previously noted - were listed within the introductory segments of this guidebook. The majority of the exhibit accounts are also accompanied by colour photographs showing select species, annotated with supplementary information about factors such as the behaviour, diet or morphology of the taxa in question.

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Given the consistently-high quality and aesthetic appeal of these exhibit accounts, it has proven rather difficult to select only a few to provide here as examples; as such, although I have scanned only three examples - a benthic/pelagic exhibit and the central walk-through Oceanarium tank from the Mediterranean exhibits, and a tropical atoll exhibit - for the purposes of this thread, I feel that it would be worthwhile to list the various tanks/exhibits cited within the text. This will have the added benefit of perhaps providing points of interest for further discussion and questions.

The Mediterranean habitat exhibits listed within the guidebook are as follows:

  • Shallow rocky-coast
  • Shallow sandy-coast
  • Ebro Delta
  • Underwater caves and tunnels
  • Mediterranean seagrass
  • Shallow-water seaweed community
  • Pre-coralline community
  • Coralline community
  • Intertidal zone
  • Benthic
  • Red Coral
  • Oceanarium
  • Medes Islands
  • Life in the Benthos

The tropical exhibits listed within the guidebook are as follows:

  • Tropical sharks
  • Tropical coral reef
  • Caribbean
  • Great Barrier Reef
  • Red Sea
  • Venomous and aggressive fish
  • Tropical atoll

The guidebook concludes with a very brief discussion of the Planeta Aqua exhibit complex located in the upper floor of the aquarium, a museum exhibit discussing the impact that marine and freshwater habitats have had on the development of life on Earth across the last 3.5 billion years, and which contains a small handful of live exhibits.

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I was rather pleasantly surprised by this guidebook, all things considered; not only are the production standards extremely good, with a simple but highly-attractive layout complemented by colourful images and photographs, but the information provided within is both detailed and accessible. When I visited the collection in question, I felt that the physical signage and general "feel" of the aquarium left much to be desired, and generally speaking had the impression that it was experiencing a period of neglect; however, given the fact that this guidebook (along with the various sister volumes in a variety of other European languages) was newly-published at the time of my visit, and represents precisely the sort of up-to-date and "fresh" content which I felt was lacking from the informational signage there, I am left with some hope that this marks a turning-point for the aquarium. One can certainly hope that the high standard of visual and informational quality established within this guidebook is soon echoed within the educational signage and supplementary material at the aquarium itself.... if this is not already the case. The fact that the guidebooks published by this collection are apparently successful enough that it was financially-viable to publish editions in a total of six languages certainly bodes well for the future.
 
Day 89: L'Aquarium Barcelona (2018) - Libre Record (Catalan-language)

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Page count: 20 pages
Photographs: 14 colour photographs
Illustrations/diagrams: 64 drawings
Layout: Introduction, followed by an exhibit-by-exhibit walkthrough of collection.
Map: Located within main body of guidebook


A rather interesting one this time; I purchased this guidebook in March 2019 whilst on a trip to the Iberian Peninsula, during which time I visited L'Aquarium Barcelona more-or-less on an impulse after leaving the zoo with a few hours remaining before my booked train back to Madrid. On arriving at the aquarium, I found that it is perhaps the European collection which publishes the widest range of variant-language guidebooks; along with the Catalan-language edition which we are discussing today (the first in said language to enter my personal collection) the collection also sold translated editions in English, Spanish, French, Italian and German. I purchased the first of these alongside the Catalan edition, although I must admit that my more completionist side was very tempted to purchase the other editions too!

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The guidebook opens with a general introduction, which can be divided roughly into three sections; the first of these comprises a short discussion on the oceans and seas of the world, and the threats which face marine environments in the present day. Beyond here, a more focused introduction to the aquarium itself is provided, giving a rough outline of the recommended route throughout the collection and the general focus of the exhibits within, and listing various symbols and labels which are used throughout the main body of the guidebook in order to convey additional points of information regarding the species held within the aquarium. Finally, a comprehensive map of the aquarium - with the various exhibits numbered in correspondence with the various sections of the guidebook - is provided; as can be seen above, this is well-labelled, attractive and easy-to-interpret, and as such is very well-suited to the general needs of visitors to the collection.

full


The main body of the guidebook comprises a detailed exhibit-by-exhibit walkthrough of the aquarium, and is separated into two distinct sections; the first and longest deals with the various exhibits and tanks within the aquarium which represent a fairly comprehensive representation of the habitats, ecosystems and marine communities found throughout the Mediterranean, whilst the second discusses those which represent a general cross-section of tropical marine habitats. Each of the exhibit accounts covers a page or so of detailed text describing the habitat/community which is represented within, alongside several simple but attractive colour illustrations depicting a selection of the species present within the exhibit in question. Each of these illustrations is accompanied by the informational symbols and labels which - as previously noted - were listed within the introductory segments of this guidebook. The majority of the exhibit accounts are also accompanied by colour photographs showing select species, annotated with supplementary information about factors such as the behaviour, diet or morphology of the taxa in question.

full


Given the consistently-high quality and aesthetic appeal of these exhibit accounts, it has proven rather difficult to select only a few to provide here as examples; as such, although I have scanned only three examples - a benthic/pelagic exhibit and the central walk-through Oceanarium tank from the Mediterranean exhibits, and a tropical atoll exhibit - for the purposes of this thread, I feel that it would be worthwhile to list the various tanks/exhibits cited within the text. This will have the added benefit of perhaps providing points of interest for further discussion and questions.

The Mediterranean habitat exhibits listed within the guidebook are as follows:

  • Shallow rocky-coast
  • Shallow sandy-coast
  • Ebro Delta
  • Underwater caves and tunnels
  • Mediterranean seagrass
  • Shallow-water seaweed community
  • Pre-coralline community
  • Coralline community
  • Intertidal zone
  • Benthic
  • Red Coral
  • Oceanarium
  • Medes Islands
  • Life in the Benthos

The tropical exhibits listed within the guidebook are as follows:

  • Tropical sharks
  • Tropical coral reef
  • Caribbean
  • Great Barrier Reef
  • Red Sea
  • Venomous and aggressive fish
  • Tropical atoll

The guidebook concludes with a very brief discussion of the Planeta Aqua exhibit complex located in the upper floor of the aquarium, a museum exhibit discussing the impact that marine and freshwater habitats have had on the development of life on Earth across the last 3.5 billion years, and which contains a small handful of live exhibits.

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I was rather pleasantly surprised by this guidebook, all things considered; not only are the production standards extremely good, with a simple but highly-attractive layout complemented by colourful images and photographs, but the information provided within is both detailed and accessible. When I visited the collection in question, I felt that the physical signage and general "feel" of the aquarium left much to be desired, and generally speaking had the impression that it was experiencing a period of neglect; however, given the fact that this guidebook (along with the various sister volumes in a variety of other European languages) was newly-published at the time of my visit, and represents precisely the sort of up-to-date and "fresh" content which I felt was lacking from the informational signage there, I am left with some hope that this marks a turning-point for the aquarium. One can certainly hope that the high standard of visual and informational quality established within this guidebook is soon echoed within the educational signage and supplementary material at the aquarium itself.... if this is not already the case. The fact that the guidebooks published by this collection are apparently successful enough that it was financially-viable to publish editions in a total of six languages certainly bodes well for the future.

Funnily enough I visited that same year! In september however.

I never came across this guidebook when I went and can't help but feel a bit of regret not looking for it.. Even though I extensively looked through the giftstore.

I personally really loved the aquarium, given it was the first ''Aquarium'' for me that wasn't part of a zoo (Rotterdam & Burgers')
 
Day 90: Bideford Zoo (1970) - Red-necked Wallaby

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Page count: 16 pages
Photographs: 10 colour photographs
Illustrations/diagrams: N/A
Layout: General introduction to the collection, followed by summary of species held at the time of publication.
Map: N/A


Today, we shall be discussing a guidebook from yet another of the many zoological collections to have closed in the United Kingdom over the course of the 20th century; given the brevity of the guidebook in question, and my limited knowledge of the collection to which it pertains, this post will be on the shorter side I suspect! Bideford Zoo was located on the outskirts of the town of the same name in northwest Devon, and is perhaps the most short-lived of the various closed collections for which I own a guidebook, having opened in 1966 and closed four years later, not long after this guidebook was published. Given how obscure and remote the collection is, and the fact that it closed over 50 years ago, I think it is entirely possible that none of our members ever had occasion to visit - although I would of course be delighted to be proven incorrect. At any rate, given the rarity of guidebooks from Bideford Zoo, and my extreme lack of knowledge about the collection, I acted quickly to ensure that I was able to secure this copy when it first became available through eBay some time ago.

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The guidebook opens with a handful of short sections which serve both as a historical account of the events which led to the opening of the collection, an introduction to the zoo and the guidebook as a whole, and a general summary of important visitor rules and regulations. Given the significance of this guidebook as a historical record, I have elected to provide this information in its entirety above; considering the fact that the collection closed down soon after the publication of this guidebook, it is rather interesting to read the future plans and intentions which are presented here!

As can be seen from these scans, and the one below, the guidebook proceeds to provide a rough species-by-species account of the collection, divided into mammals, birds, reptiles and amphibians. The information presented here is of variable quality; scientific names are not used whatsoever, and in some cases the common name given is far too general to provide any real insight into the species held - for instance, allusions to "tortoises and turtles", unspecified "pheasants" from south-east Asia and "waterfowl" without further clarification.
Furthermore, at some points there is little distinction made between those species held within the collection, and those being cited as general examples of their taxonomic group. The accounts themselves generally comprise a sentence or two of description, providing trivia about the species to which they pertain, and are supplemented by a handful of colour photographs depicting some of the species held within the collection.

Given the rarity of this guidebook, and how precious little information about the collection as a whole now survives, I feel that it would be worthwhile at this point to list each of the taxa specifically cited within the main body of the text; it is entirely possible that this post will therefore represent the first online record depicting (as best as is possible given my aforementioned reservations about the patchy quality of identification within these accounts) the scale of the animal collection at Bideford shortly before the collection permanently closed.

The mammal species cited are as follows:
  • Red-Necked Wallaby
  • Puma
  • Raccoon Dog
  • Arctic Fox
  • Red Fox
  • Himalayan Black Bear
  • Malayan Sun Bear
  • White-nosed Coati
  • Asian Short-clawed Otter
  • Grey Squirrel
  • Giant Malabar Squirrel
  • Brush-tailed Porcupine (species unspecified)
  • Roe Deer
  • Chinese Water Deer
  • Humboldt's Woolly Monkey
  • Martin's Spot-nosed Guenon
  • Olive Baboon
The bird species cited (alongside unspecified parrots, waterfowl and gamebirds) are as follows:
  • Grey Parrot (species unspecified)
  • African Lovebird (species unspecified)
  • Senegal Parrot
  • Ring-necked Parakeet (species unspecified)
  • Budgerigar
  • Scarlet Macaw
  • Amazon Parrot (unspecified)
  • Celestial Parrotlet
  • Quaker Parakeet
  • Greater Hill Mynah
  • Common Magpie
  • Malayan Fish Owl
  • Savanna Hawk
  • Egyptian Vulture
  • Mute Swan
  • African Crowned Crane (unspecified)
  • White-crested Guan
  • Peafowl (unspecified)
  • Red Junglefowl
  • Sonnerat's Junglefowl
  • Indian Pied Hornbill
  • Humboldt's Penguin
The reptiles cited (alongside unspecified crocodiles, alligators, tortoises, turtles and amphibians) are as follows:
  • Reticulated Python
  • Boa Constrictor
The guidebook concludes with three very brief passages on the following subjects; the importance of zoological collections in the conservation of endangered species; a list of the various kinds of food used by the collection in a given week; and key information such as opening times, rules of admission and amenities available to visitors.

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Overall, then, this is a rather interesting if brief guidebook, which is extremely valuable as a historical document and resource pertaining to a closed collection - and as such is almost certainly of rather greater interest than it ever will have been at the time of publication, given the fact it is otherwise a fairly standard if slightly below-average guidebook of the time!

It goes without saying that if anyone reading this thread has memories of the collection in question, it would be very interesting to hear from them - otherwise, feel free to post and remarks, feedback or questions!
 
I found it interesting that the scanned pages you included mentioned that the goal of the zoo was to be "a broad collection of creatures great and small; hand-reared whenever possible, tame and contented..." then immediately follows that up with hopes about expanding their cat collection in order to breed endangered species. I don't know what the prevailing scientific opinions on that were in 1970, but from today's standpoint those two things feel very contradictory!

Still surprises me just how many zoos there have been in Britain founded on these numerous country estates... I've already lost track of just the ones you've covered so far! :p
 
Do they managed to get any wild feline in their short history? There aren't any listed from you.

Still surprises me just how many zoos there have been in Britain founded on these numerous country estates... I've already lost track of just the ones you've covered so far! :p
Well they seems to have better standards than your numerous roadside zoos in USA!
 
Still surprises me just how many zoos there have been in Britain founded on these numerous country estates... I've already lost track of just the ones you've covered so far! :p

To varying degrees of how one defines a "country estate" I have thus far discussed guidebooks from the following:

Howletts Wild Animal Park
Penscynor Wildlife Park
Cotswold Wildlife Park
Lowther Wildlife Park
Loch Lomond Bear Park
Lambton Lion Park
Kilverstone Wildlife Park
Bideford Zoo

Interestingly, only two of these still exist! There are at least two other major "country house/estate" collections which have yet to be discussed and are still open, of course.

Do they managed to get any wild feline in their short history? There aren't any listed from you.

I don't really know all that much about the collection beyond what is contained within this guidebook - but given the fact the collection closed down in the same year the guidebook was published, I doubt it!
 
According to ZTL. Bideford Zoo closed in 1970 and its collection included:
Alpaca; Asian elephant; blue-and-yellow, scarlet, military and green-winged macaws; common chimpanzee; domestic donkey; Humboldt penguin; Asiatic black bear; leopard; northern raccoon; puma and red-necked wallaby

This seems strange as most of these species weren't listed in the guide book. The only ones that were are the scarlet macaw, red-necked wallaby, puma, Asiatic black bear and Humboldt's penguin.
 
According to ZTL. Bideford Zoo closed in 1970 and its collection included:
Alpaca; Asian elephant; blue-and-yellow, scarlet, military and green-winged macaws; common chimpanzee; domestic donkey; Humboldt penguin; Asiatic black bear; leopard; northern raccoon; puma and red-necked wallaby

This seems strange as most of these species weren't listed in the guide book. The only ones that were are the scarlet macaw, red-necked wallaby, puma, Asiatic black bear and Humboldt's penguin.
The elephant interested me, although of course having an elephant in an obscure small zoo wasn't exactly as unusual then as perhaps now. There is a Zoochat thread which mentions the elephant as well as the possibility that the zoo continued on into 1972 even though it officially closed in 1970 (Zoos with elephants... in the past... now... and in the future).

More specifically, this newspaper article dated June 1972 is about the elephant arriving at Bideford Zoo...
Devon Air Good for Sick Elsa
 
Do they managed to get any wild feline in their short history? There aren't any listed from you.


Well they seems to have better standards than your numerous roadside zoos in USA!
Sometimes...
Looking at the house shown in the Bideford guide; those at Mole Hall, Kelling Park, Guilsborough Grange, Coton Manor etc were similar size, Manor House too...? Some of these were very nice, but a couple would rival the American 'road-sides'.
 
Sometimes...
Looking at the house shown in the Bideford guide; those at Mole Hall, Kelling Park, Guilsborough Grange, Coton Manor etc were similar size, Manor House too...? Some of these were very nice, but a couple would rival the American 'road-sides'.
sorry for the double entry, but I couldn't edit - a quick 'Google' shows a couple of interesting clips. Film footage of Bideford which shows it to be conserably more up-market than Mole Hall or Guilsborough, with lots of the white painted woodwork loved by Twycross in the day. A second better (Pathe) clip came up on my search, showing the 'zoo by the sea' which appeared to be Ilfracombe. Interesting stuff...
 
Clin Keeling writes very briefly about Bideford Zoo in his book Where the Zebu Grazed. He is complimentary about the place, describing the owner Katherine Tottenham as a "good naturalist", the guidebook as a "gem of its kind" and the labelling as "good". (From somebody who is normally extremely critical of zoo labels, that's praise indeed.)
 
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