Lafone
Well-Known Member
Interesting thread indeed and some great ideas. Free flight aviaries are well covered already in this thread but I find them a real treat!
I also thoroughly enjoy mixed exhibits, particularly birds, small mammals and primates. Walkthroughs where you can get unparalleled views of the animals without glass / wire are also a real highlight for me - the walkthroughs at Colchester with the small primates for example. Areas with more than one type of lemur are also good to see, for example at CWP and Dudley. The mix of planting, free flight birds and a variety of lemurs in CWP's walkthrough is particularly lovely.
Enclosures with various heights for both visitors and animals so you can see them without the wire and the animals can be up high as they want to etc are also great - Yorkshire Wildlife Park does a great job of this in a lot of their enclosures. Terrain variation also works well for seeing the animals exhibiting different behaviours than when held on the ground with just a climbing frame. YWP and Dudley's baboon enclosures are good examples.
As mentioned above foliage and planting makes a real difference - Shepreth's tiger enclosure for example is not the largest but it is varied and has great planting. There's something quite dramatic about watching a tiger weaving through foliage, seeing that camouflage in action. Similarly, a free flight aviary with interesting and diverse planting gives great viewing and allows the birds privacy when they want it.
Underwater viewing is also something I wish more zoos would have for species from otters to hippos. Colchester has some good underwater spaces. While fairly common for penguins it seems less common for other species in the UK to have an underwater viewing space . I would imagine some collections would be put off by the cost.
I also thoroughly enjoy mixed exhibits, particularly birds, small mammals and primates. Walkthroughs where you can get unparalleled views of the animals without glass / wire are also a real highlight for me - the walkthroughs at Colchester with the small primates for example. Areas with more than one type of lemur are also good to see, for example at CWP and Dudley. The mix of planting, free flight birds and a variety of lemurs in CWP's walkthrough is particularly lovely.
Enclosures with various heights for both visitors and animals so you can see them without the wire and the animals can be up high as they want to etc are also great - Yorkshire Wildlife Park does a great job of this in a lot of their enclosures. Terrain variation also works well for seeing the animals exhibiting different behaviours than when held on the ground with just a climbing frame. YWP and Dudley's baboon enclosures are good examples.
As mentioned above foliage and planting makes a real difference - Shepreth's tiger enclosure for example is not the largest but it is varied and has great planting. There's something quite dramatic about watching a tiger weaving through foliage, seeing that camouflage in action. Similarly, a free flight aviary with interesting and diverse planting gives great viewing and allows the birds privacy when they want it.
Underwater viewing is also something I wish more zoos would have for species from otters to hippos. Colchester has some good underwater spaces. While fairly common for penguins it seems less common for other species in the UK to have an underwater viewing space . I would imagine some collections would be put off by the cost.