DAY 3: Thursday, August 4th
Here is a review of the 4th and final zoo that I visited on August 4th. I uploaded approximately 130 new photos of Givskud Zoo into the gallery and so there is an extensive set of fresh images for this Danish delight. Head to the ZooChat gallery for a comprehensive overview.
Zoo/Aquarium # 4: Givskud Zoo (Givskud, DK)
Givskud Zoo has changed a lot over the years. It opened as a drive-through in 1969 with only African Lions, before Asian Elephants were added in 1970, then 150 Olive Baboons (!!) were added to a drive-through section in 1973, and things took off from there. By 1975, visitors were taken through the baboon exhibit by tractor wagons as the pesky monkeys had destroyed too many automobiles. The zoo gradually expanded for decades, before beginning to flourish in the last 15 years.
Pulling into the city of Givskud, I saw two big stone lion statues (in separate locations) and a large advertisement for the zoo. The population of the village is less than a thousand people, so anyone visiting the town is heading straight to the zoo! The total land owned by the zoo is around 300 acres (121 hectares), with 160 acres (65 hectares) being the maintained grounds. That makes Givskud a large zoo, with approximately 50 species and 600 animals in total but on a significant acreage. There is a lot of space to utilize, and the zoo does a fantastic job in terms of having spacious enclosures for its inhabitants.
Givskud Zoo has basically no reptiles, amphibians or fish, with only a few birds. This is a big zoo on a sprawling acreage that has almost exclusively popular ABC mammals. It’s a zoo that I was a bit unsure on at first, but in truth I loved my time there and without once stopping to eat, drink or sit down, it took me more than 4 hours to see it all. This is a zoo with some of the largest and best exhibits I’ve ever seen for particular species, and very little in the way of poor enclosures. About a decade ago, there was an announcement that the zoo would be known as ‘Zootopia’, and that is the technical name beneath Givskud Zoo, but the ambitious plans for a big overhaul seem to have fallen by the wayside. Still, the addition of Giant Otters (2013), a terrific Dinosaur Park (2015), the world’s largest Spectacled Bear complex (2019) and a 1.2-acre Humboldt Penguin exhibit (2022) have really improved the zoo.
It’s a bit odd when it comes to how people visit the facility. I think that there are only a couple of species that cannot be seen via walking around like a traditional zoo, thus probably half the families there had parked outside and just walked all day. However, the other half did what I did and drove into the zoo and parked in P1. From there, you get out and walk around and see a group of exhibits in the near vicinity. Then you drive through Safaris 1, 2, 3 and 4, before parking in P2 and once again walking around at your leisure. After that, you go back to your car and drive through Safaris 5 and 6 before parking in P3 for a final walk-around. Then you are done and drive home!
If I ever visit Givskud Zoo again then I’d just park at the main entrance and walk the whole thing, as drive through experiences are usually close to the bottom of my list of exciting zoological attractions. (They are just above butterfly walk-throughs, which are ridiculously humid and boring) The drive-through section of Givskud has four Safaris all in a row, which is basically driving through South America for 5 minutes (Guanaco, Capybara, Rhea), then North America for 5 minutes (American Bison, White-tailed Deer), then an African area (Common Eland, Ostrich) and finally another African section (giraffe, zebra, ostrich) and you are done. Safari #5 is simply a road that goes past the huge African Savanna (which can be seen a million times better on foot) and Safari #6 is into the African Lion exhibit, which is many acres of space and contained exactly 6 lions on my visit (I asked). The problem with drive-through aspects of zoos is that trundling along in a car doesn’t allow a generous amount of time to view animals and take photos. Then an eland or an ostrich wanders across the road and immediately a dozen cars all slam on their brakes and you have to sit there patiently while the animal scratches itself or shoves its head into a car window. It’s all very tedious, maddeningly tedious for a veteran zoo nerd. Other than perhaps the giraffes and zebras, all the species at Givskud Zoo can be easily seen on foot. There is also a Safari Bus option, but those things run for 1.5 hours and are so slow that as I type this, many days later, I suspect that some passengers are still sitting there watching an eland take a leak on the grass.
Okay, onto the good stuff. Givskud Zoo has what is surely the largest Spectacled Bear complex on the planet. Apart from perhaps Zurich, it is the best around. Set in a quiet corner of the park, there are three extremely large exhibits with a dizzying array of viewing opportunities. There are overhead views, through fencing, glass, in a cave, in a tree trunk, etc., and with 5 bears between the trio of habitats, and plenty of detailed interpretative material, I was hugely impressed. This exhibit just opened in 2019 and is brilliantly done. It’s a lot of acreage and investment, but the zoo had never once had bears and now they have a wonderful area for a neat, relatively unknown species for the average zoo-going muggle.
World-class Spectacled Bear exhibits:
The brand-new Humboldt Penguin exhibit just opened this year, is 1.2 acres in size, and magnificent. It could be the largest penguin enclosure in the world. There are around 60 birds in what is a walk-through complex, although the penguins cannot come onto the visitor pathway. There are large sandy sections, underwater viewing and a ton of space that the birds will probably not even use.
World-class, 1.2 Acre Humboldt Penguin exhibit:
The Giant Otter House (2013) is another amazing addition to the zoo. The otters have a spacious outdoor exhibit, filled with dense foliage and a large pool, and the indoor area has separate sections and an immersive feel with woodchips on the floor. I’ve never seen a larger otter setup, although I know that Doue is famous for its Giant Otters.
I can usually give or take dinosaur areas, much like other zoo nerds, but if I’m with my wife and 4 kids then dinosaurs are popular attractions. Givskud Zoo has one that is really well done, even though there aren’t any animatronic creatures. It’s free with zoo admission, contains over 50 dinosaurs of 26 different species, and most of the dinosaurs are able to be touched and that adds a different layer to the experience. All of that made this a very popular section of the zoo during my visit, and this 2015 addition helped drive up attendance numbers.
Argentinosaurus:
Besides the Spectacled Bears, Humboldt Penguins, Giant Otters and dinosaurs, all amongst the best of their kind, Givskud Zoo has plenty of other notable attractions. A real highlight for me was the Bongo exhibit, acres in size and with a dozen animals in a thickly forested, very quiet part of the zoo. Magnificent. Then there’s the main African Savanna, with 6 White Rhinos, a dozen Black Wildebeest, a dozen Sable Antelope and at least 10 Gemsbok all together on acres of greenery. There are even signs for Cape Buffalo in the mix, although I didn’t see any on my visit.
Bongo exhibit:
The massive African Savanna includes 6 White Rhinos:
The zoo has an immersive Gorilla complex, with two exhibits and loads of viewing opportunities and a half-dozen of the apes. There’s a big walk-through Barbary Macaque exhibit with at least 25 monkeys, a large Banded Mongoose enclosure, two scenic Pygmy Hippo exhibits, a massive Ring-tailed Lemur walk-through, a forested European Grey Wolf exhibit near a log cabin and an Indigenous settlement with a real campfire burning. I saw a couple of Asian Elephants with a small herd of Blackbuck in an exhibit that’s fine for those animals, 8 Bactrian Camels in a long paddock, Przewalski’s Horses, Sulawesi Crested Macaques, Asian Water Buffalo and other delights. For those that complain that sometimes zoos make exhibits too big, Givskud’s answer is to have large numbers of animals in each habitat. For example, the multi-acre Asian hoofstock paddock is enormous, but with at least 10 Yak and 12 Nilgai all together, there are plenty of creatures to catch one’s attention.
Givskud Zoo is a high-quality zoo, with a number of exhibits that truly are amidst the largest I’ve ever seen. There are also plenty of big playgrounds and nice-looking restaurants, and even with an almost exclusive focus on mammals, this zoo is well worth visiting. My main complaint is that the zoo should shift away from its old drive-through reputation, which it already has done over the decades to some extent, and perhaps eliminate all the drive-through areas except for the original lion complex. By having three big parking lots in different zones within the grounds, it just creates unnecessary confusion and hassle for families loading and unloading strollers and kids on three separate occasions. Also, the parking lots are quite dangerous, with people pulling in for the walking sections while others are leaving at the same time, and with kids running everywhere. Other than that, Givskud certainly is a very good zoo with several world-class areas, and I expect it to be one of the highlights of this trip.
Baobab Restaurant entrance:
Pygmy Hippo exhibits (one on each side of the pathway):