I visited the zoo on Tuesday and was able to see both the baby vicuña and both of the snow leopards (I would’ve said something on here had I known neither had been announced yet

). The chimp enclosure was strange without William and I do wonder what will happen with Peter and Tommy now, both seem very placid.
It was good to see the old chimp enclosure being used for l’hoest’s monkeys, with a few still in the old bonobo house. I also noticed a few beams on the climbing structure in the old bonobo outdoor area that looked rather new.
The new mini monkeys house was nice and I did notice a rope leading from the emperor tamarin outdoor area to the trees across the path, does anyone know when they’ll have access to this? The door was closed and the trees were not hot wired on Tuesday however there was a board for the species on the grass and I believe the area is signed on the map.
I had a walk around the gruffalo area for the first time and while it isn’t really for me, I found the aviaries and the butterfly house really quite nice.
The zoo on a whole still feels a bit disjointed, very little has changed since I last visited 17 months ago, other than the gruffalo area, so I do really hope we start to see the new science centre and ape accommodation being started soon.
The empty and disused exhibits were quite obvious, with the old lemur walkthrough sticking out like a sore thumb.
The bottom end of the zoo behind the bush dogs is also pretty dire, with the longhouse, the old marten, seriema and pelican enclosures just being left. This means that while that area of the zoo is still open to walk around, there’s absolutely nothing there - why not just close the path behind the bush dogs and simply leave the one between the owls and rhinos?
What confuses me even more about the empty exhibits, is that there are some enclosures that have animals in that you can only partially view. For example, the monkey enclosures by the entrance clearly used to have indoor viewing, as you can still see the viewing windows and corridor whenever a staff member opens the door, why not open this to the public again? The second bonobo group is only viewable from inside, despite that enclosure having viewing windows all the way around, why not just open a path up around there? Then the rhino enclosure in the trees at the back, why isn’t there some sort of viewing for that? I could see the male in there, why can’t you view that from where the mini monkeys are? Also, on the point of where you can and can’t access, there are still some fences up from the one way system of covid times, meaning in some instances you have to walk quite a distance to see a species’ indoor and outdoor spaces, when there’s a path that leads straight there with a big random wooden fence in the way.
Some enclosures are starting to look really quite outdated now aswell. The orangutan enclosure is now the worst in the country, following Dudley’s expansion. While the indoor space works for a small number of orangs, the outdoor space does make me feel rather uncomfortable. I worry for when they have to start separating orangutans again for whatever reason, as it’s bad enough as it is with 3 of them sharing the space.
The gorilla enclosure is not much better. While the indoor enclosure works quite nicely for gorillas, there’s no denying it’s quite small, and then the outdoor space just feels so unsuitable - a little grassy hill with a couple of wooden platforms (that a young male was literally bending with his hands) and a concrete pool (why?). Again I worry about what would happen should individuals need separating.
On the other hand, I actually think the Amur leopard enclosure isn’t that bad for one individual. I know it gets a lot of criticism on here, including from myself from when individuals were separated into one or two cages each. They are now down to just the one male though and he had the run of the full thing and utilised it. I think that the tight, dense nature of the row suits the species quite well, with the mesh acting as something of a canopy, giving the leopard that element of safety (similar to how a gorillarium works for gorillas), hence the leopard(s) at Twycross historically showing quite well. Obviously when multiple individuals are kept here space really does start to become a problem, but when all the doors are open I don’t think it’s too bad for one leopard (or maybe even a non-breeding pair).
I wasn’t intending for this post to be so long and such a review, but I think there’s some interesting discussion points.
Should also point out - I’ve gone in a bit hard with the criticism but I do actually really like Twycross zoo
