Sure just call it as you see it thanksOK, will post an honest overall opinion tomorrow! There are positives but some definite negatives unfortunately!
Sure just call it as you see it thanksOK, will post an honest overall opinion tomorrow! There are positives but some definite negatives unfortunately!
Visited today for the first time in 2022, a spur of the moment decision,
Yes I didn't have to pay and walked straight in. If they turned any paying customers away yesterday that would have been ridiculous, there was hardly anyone there!Are you a member? If not it still says 'paying visitors need to prebook their tickets in advance..'But presumably you got in okay without any trouble though.
Sounds like my very last visit (pre-covid) on a very wet winter's day. Place was almost deserted then too.Yes I didn't have to pay and walked straight in. If they turned any paying customers away yesterday that would have been ridiculous, there was hardly anyone there!
Are you a member? If not it still says 'paying visitors need to prebook their tickets in advance..'But presumably you got in okay without any trouble though.
Last time I was there, people were buying tickets at the gates. I think the 'pre-book tickets' has been kept (at many places) as it reduces queue times and gives the zoo (or museum or gallery or theme park etc etc) a rough idea of likely numbers on any given day.
Its very sad to see a major zoo which was once held up as one of the top zoos in such decline, I have been following this for years and its disheartening.Next instalment
After the Colobus exhibit I crossed the bridge again and went through the west tunnel heading for the tigers, passing the currently closed (understandably) Bird Safari. Was pleased to see 3 very active tiger cubs in with both parents in the indoor area, shame the weather wasn't better!
The gibbons were also sheltering indoors so I moved on hoping to see the Babirusa- no chance, tucked away inside the currently closed Casson Pavilion (another black mark!). Next a quick walk through the children's zoo, a former aviary by the Coati another empty enclosure. Next the bird house which was good as ever, so glad that the path towards the lions has been opened again so all outside cages are on show! Next stop Land of the Lions - no need to add anything to what I have said previously, I really dislike this area, waste of money to build it, total waste of space that could be used animals used for gimmicks like the street market etc. Next the disaster area that was once used for decent anteater and Vicuna enclosures but subsequently used for golf and dinosaurs - it now stands derelict - pathetic!
The new male gorilla arrives towards the end of November. The plan is to introduce him to the whole group in time, including Gernot. His arrival will feature on the above TV show all being well.
Couple of updates. Channel 4 are filming a "London Zoo at Christmas" one off show for airing next month, filming now looking at the build up to Christmas at the Zoo. Featuring Whipsnade too.
The new male gorilla arrives towards the end of November. The plan is to introduce him to the whole group in time, including Gernot. His arrival will feature on the above TV show all being well.
I believe most of Londons problems comes down to the mindset of the managementI’ve known London Zoo most of my life (well over the half century) and had a real barometer of its overall decline last month, when I visited Basel Zoo for the first time. Also an inner city zoo, Basel manages to show a lot more large species without seeming crowded. Almost all the enclosures appear to offer ample space for their inhabitants. Highlights are Great Indian Rhinoceros (breeding, mixed with Asian Short-clawed Otter, Visayan Warty Pig and Muntjac), both Hippopotamus species, hundred-strong Greater Flamingo colony (thirty plus young reared this year), African Elephants (which have bred), breeding King Penguins, Sable Antelope, American Bison, Mouflon, good sized breeding groups of Western Lowland Gorilla, Chimpanzee and Sumatran Orangutan, African Wild Ass, Plains Zebra, Social Weavers sharing their huge communal nest with Black-cheeked Lovebirds, Okapi, Snow Leopard, Brush Turkey, large group of White and Dalmatian Pelicans, Black and Rufous Sengi, state of the art bird house under construction, restaurant with a good range of food, excellent gift shop. Icing on the cake would be the many free flying White Storks, whose nests are everywhere. However, in October they were wintering elsewhere, and the only one I saw was in a nearby park. A few don’t migrate, and winter locally.
About time! Any further info-name, previous zoo etc?
I’ve known London Zoo most of my life (well over the half century) and had a real barometer of its overall decline last month, when I visited Basel Zoo for the first time. Also an inner city zoo, Basel manages to show a lot more large species without seeming crowded. Almost all the enclosures appear to offer ample space for their inhabitants. Highlights are Great Indian Rhinoceros (breeding, mixed with Asian Short-clawed Otter, Visayan Warty Pig and Muntjac), both Hippopotamus species, hundred-strong Greater Flamingo colony (thirty plus young reared this year), African Elephants (which have bred), breeding King Penguins, Sable Antelope, American Bison, Mouflon, good sized breeding groups of Western Lowland Gorilla, Chimpanzee and Sumatran Orangutan, African Wild Ass, Plains Zebra, Social Weavers sharing their huge communal nest with Black-cheeked Lovebirds, Okapi, Snow Leopard, Brush Turkey, large group of White and Dalmatian Pelicans, Black and Rufous Sengi, state of the art bird house under construction, restaurant with a good range of food, excellent gift shop. Icing on the cake would be the many free flying White Storks, whose nests are everywhere. However, in October they were wintering elsewhere, and the only one I saw was in a nearby park. A few don’t migrate, and winter locally.