ZSL London Zoo ZSL London Zoo News 2024

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Some unnecessary thoughts as promised, but as this will inevitably devolve into a rudderless ramble and this is after all the News thread, not "I went to the zoo today and have a few opinions", I'll start off with a few things regulars may find of note:

-The warthogs and hunting dogs were both nowhere to be seen all day
-Despite the gale, all the colobus were out
-Both gorilla babies are doing very well
-A single warty newt is still on display
-The mouse lemurs may be introduced to breed if they haven't already recently
-The Congo Caecilians are 100% no longer visible - the vivarium I found earlier in the day was indeed the one they were previously in
-Both large hairy armadillos are being used in the animal displays again
-As mentioned in the walk-through thread, the three-banded armadillo is now mixed with the spider monkeys

If anyone has anything else they want to know, I did my best to memorise as much as I could given it was all new to me.

So now the vaguely useful stuff is sorted, I will present my particularly hot take of an overall opinion. London Zoo is really very, very good. Fantastic, some might say. I think I might be one of them. I think it helps you're met with a fantastic selection of exhibits and species variety as soon as you enter, but overall I don't think there are any bad exhibits and for the most part the land is very well used. The exception, however, is of course the Mappin Terraces. I've read at this point thousands of messages here and elsewhere saying how the current use of it for emus and wallabies is at best a waste and I can't help but agree. There's undoubtedly reasons for holding species like that there but with such a huge area (for London) it does feel like a bit of a crime. And I'm not entirely sure why but the grass just looks odd. That may just be me.

But aside from that (and even then that didn't detract from the visit at all, it's a very good exhibit for those species), I thoroughly enjoyed everything and saw pretty much the entire on-show collection, minus the dogs, warthogs, javan magpies (not for want of trying), any of the lorises and potto. As I said earlier, SLoRA is superb and every species can be easily seen with a bit of patience. It's especially nice to see a king cobra able to actually stretch out fully, which was pretty spectacular.

I followed the advice given here pretty much to a tee and it worked out perfectly, arriving at Into Africa around 2pm and spotting that Monkey Valley was packed after looping around. It was blowing quite the gale today, but all the colobus were out and really active. I can see why it gets criticism for being quite a situational exhibit, but as my first visit was about as much of a success as you could get my opinion is very much distorted towards the great end of the spectrum. Definitely easier viewing of them than the Longleat boat regardless.

Oni was also lovely to see. Okapis have always been special for me as Marwell was the main zoo I went to when I was younger, and she is a lovely individual with great viewing. According to some of the volunteers she's doing alright since the loss of her daughter, so hopefully a male will come in at some point. I also saw a duiker around 5pm which I was very happy about. Amara and Thug are the most active pygmy hippos I've ever seen, with the former spending about half an hour swimming outside while the latter tried to get through the bars into her side. And then once she stopped, he got in and did the exact same thing. I imagine once they are fully integrated it's not if but when for a pygmy, uh, pygmy hippo to pop out. On the subject of active animals, I'm convinced ZSL mix some strong catnip into whatever they feed the tigers because between the 4 at London and Czar I've never seen any so constantly active through the day, a real joy to watch and a lovely exhibit for them. Bhanu was sleeping outside all day, unsurprisingly, and it was quite fun to listen to everyone wondering where the lions were and then direct them to the livestream of the den. All 3 cubs certainly look healthy, so hopefully that is the case.

Again I have to thank everyone for the suggestions on Night Life + Rainforest Life, as well as the lemurs. It was still busy but less so than other areas of the zoo, and I managed good views of just about everything. I went back a few times to try to see the Aye-ayes and the gentle lemurs (the mouse lemurs were, for want of a better word, zooming), and I did manage to see an Aye-aye midafternoon before it was scared off by a legion of screaming children. I had a nice chat with a keeper about them - apparently the Aye-ayes are the ones people struggle with most, and he told me exactly where to watch for the gentle lemurs. Eventually both got fed, and I got the best views anyone could really ask for of both. So cheers to @JVM and @Kalaw, your advice was spot on. And I remembered the deer!

I was wondering though - do the gorillas have an off-show area? They disappeared midafternoon, which was a tad odd. Oh, and I must have spent all my beginner's luck on the colobus and lemurs because the Indian mongooses were no-shows and their food bowl was untouched all day. I give it a year before it turns out there aren't any and it's just a ZSL conspiracy.

Alright I'll put a sock in it finally, but those were the real highlights of the day. There were others, and I thought all the major exhibits like Tiny Giants were at the very least good. Overall it's a bit hard to compare to other zoos I've visited, the most recent otherwise being Berlin which is obviously a much larger collection. I definitely felt like the zoo could make use of its space better in places, and especially in the nocturnal house perhaps certain duplicate exhibits would be better off with different species instead. But I also know ZSL well enough to know that isn't really what they aim for, and I still went away thinking I'd got my money's worth.

So to summarise - London is a very good zoo, even to an outsider. Therefore we can stop arguing about that (you're all welcome). Clearly there are still spots being developed/going to be developed, the mystery arboreal exhibit, the empty primate exhibit in the gorillas and the old aquarium and tortoises notably. So I will definitely be back, and maybe one day one of us will see those damn mongooses.

Fin.
 
Some unnecessary thoughts as promised, but as this will inevitably devolve into a rudderless ramble and this is after all the News thread, not "I went to the zoo today and have a few opinions", I'll start off with a few things regulars may find of note:

-The warthogs and hunting dogs were both nowhere to be seen all day
-Despite the gale, all the colobus were out
-Both gorilla babies are doing very well
-A single warty newt is still on display
-The mouse lemurs may be introduced to breed if they haven't already recently
-The Congo Caecilians are 100% no longer visible - the vivarium I found earlier in the day was indeed the one they were previously in
-Both large hairy armadillos are being used in the animal displays again
-As mentioned in the walk-through thread, the three-banded armadillo is now mixed with the spider monkeys

If anyone has anything else they want to know, I did my best to memorise as much as I could given it was all new to me.

So now the vaguely useful stuff is sorted, I will present my particularly hot take of an overall opinion. London Zoo is really very, very good. Fantastic, some might say. I think I might be one of them. I think it helps you're met with a fantastic selection of exhibits and species variety as soon as you enter, but overall I don't think there are any bad exhibits and for the most part the land is very well used. The exception, however, is of course the Mappin Terraces. I've read at this point thousands of messages here and elsewhere saying how the current use of it for emus and wallabies is at best a waste and I can't help but agree. There's undoubtedly reasons for holding species like that there but with such a huge area (for London) it does feel like a bit of a crime. And I'm not entirely sure why but the grass just looks odd. That may just be me.

But aside from that (and even then that didn't detract from the visit at all, it's a very good exhibit for those species), I thoroughly enjoyed everything and saw pretty much the entire on-show collection, minus the dogs, warthogs, javan magpies (not for want of trying), any of the lorises and potto. As I said earlier, SLoRA is superb and every species can be easily seen with a bit of patience. It's especially nice to see a king cobra able to actually stretch out fully, which was pretty spectacular.

I followed the advice given here pretty much to a tee and it worked out perfectly, arriving at Into Africa around 2pm and spotting that Monkey Valley was packed after looping around. It was blowing quite the gale today, but all the colobus were out and really active. I can see why it gets criticism for being quite a situational exhibit, but as my first visit was about as much of a success as you could get my opinion is very much distorted towards the great end of the spectrum. Definitely easier viewing of them than the Longleat boat regardless.

Oni was also lovely to see. Okapis have always been special for me as Marwell was the main zoo I went to when I was younger, and she is a lovely individual with great viewing. According to some of the volunteers she's doing alright since the loss of her daughter, so hopefully a male will come in at some point. I also saw a duiker around 5pm which I was very happy about. Amara and Thug are the most active pygmy hippos I've ever seen, with the former spending about half an hour swimming outside while the latter tried to get through the bars into her side. And then once she stopped, he got in and did the exact same thing. I imagine once they are fully integrated it's not if but when for a pygmy, uh, pygmy hippo to pop out. On the subject of active animals, I'm convinced ZSL mix some strong catnip into whatever they feed the tigers because between the 4 at London and Czar I've never seen any so constantly active through the day, a real joy to watch and a lovely exhibit for them. Bhanu was sleeping outside all day, unsurprisingly, and it was quite fun to listen to everyone wondering where the lions were and then direct them to the livestream of the den. All 3 cubs certainly look healthy, so hopefully that is the case.

Again I have to thank everyone for the suggestions on Night Life + Rainforest Life, as well as the lemurs. It was still busy but less so than other areas of the zoo, and I managed good views of just about everything. I went back a few times to try to see the Aye-ayes and the gentle lemurs (the mouse lemurs were, for want of a better word, zooming), and I did manage to see an Aye-aye midafternoon before it was scared off by a legion of screaming children. I had a nice chat with a keeper about them - apparently the Aye-ayes are the ones people struggle with most, and he told me exactly where to watch for the gentle lemurs. Eventually both got fed, and I got the best views anyone could really ask for of both. So cheers to @JVM and @Kalaw, your advice was spot on. And I remembered the deer!

I was wondering though - do the gorillas have an off-show area? They disappeared midafternoon, which was a tad odd. Oh, and I must have spent all my beginner's luck on the colobus and lemurs because the Indian mongooses were no-shows and their food bowl was untouched all day. I give it a year before it turns out there aren't any and it's just a ZSL conspiracy.

Alright I'll put a sock in it finally, but those were the real highlights of the day. There were others, and I thought all the major exhibits like Tiny Giants were at the very least good. Overall it's a bit hard to compare to other zoos I've visited, the most recent otherwise being Berlin which is obviously a much larger collection. I definitely felt like the zoo could make use of its space better in places, and especially in the nocturnal house perhaps certain duplicate exhibits would be better off with different species instead. But I also know ZSL well enough to know that isn't really what they aim for, and I still went away thinking I'd got my money's worth.

So to summarise - London is a very good zoo, even to an outsider. Therefore we can stop arguing about that (you're all welcome). Clearly there are still spots being developed/going to be developed, the mystery arboreal exhibit, the empty primate exhibit in the gorillas and the old aquarium and tortoises notably. So I will definitely be back, and maybe one day one of us will see those damn mongooses.

Fin.

Glad you had a great time! Fantastic write up. It’s unfortunately been a long time since I last got up to London so hopefully I can soon!

Just a quick question, this mystery arboreal enclosure? Where is this if I may ask?
 
Glad you had a great time! Fantastic write up. It’s unfortunately been a long time since I last got up to London so hopefully I can soon!

Just a quick question, this mystery arboreal enclosure? Where is this if I may ask?
Thank you! 1100 words is a tad excessive but I had far more to say than I first expected. If the trains weren't so expensive (and the Great Western Mainline so unreliable) I'd probably plan on visiting quite often from now on, but at least it's easier for me to get to than Whipsnade now.

As for the enclosure - it's at the Casson, I saw it mentioned in the UK walk-through thread and thought it was worth a look - it does indeed look like it's suited for a relatively large arboreal mammal.

Some minor things I forgot to note were that they've replaced the barriers around the sloth with having 2 volunteers always watching. Also, the barrier at the Indian mongooses has been returned. And I completely forgot to check the off-show part of the reptile house for the Congo Caecillians, so hope may not be lost on seeing them!
 
So now the vaguely useful stuff is sorted, I will present my particularly hot take of an overall opinion. London Zoo is really very, very good. Fantastic, some might say. I think I might be one of them. I think it helps you're met with a fantastic selection of exhibits and species variety as soon as you enter, but overall I don't think there are any bad exhibits and for the most part the land is very well used.
Couldn't have said it better myself, and really glad I was able to give you some good advice!

Also wonderful news about the lion cubs -- definitely justifies the emptiness of the exhibit during my visits and how the bridge was shut down.
 
Thank you! 1100 words is a tad excessive but I had far more to say than I first expected. If the trains weren't so expensive (and the Great Western Mainline so unreliable) I'd probably plan on visiting quite often from now on, but at least it's easier for me to get to than Whipsnade now.

As for the enclosure - it's at the Casson, I saw it mentioned in the UK walk-through thread and thought it was worth a look - it does indeed look like it's suited for a relatively large arboreal mammal.

Some minor things I forgot to note were that they've replaced the barriers around the sloth with having 2 volunteers always watching. Also, the barrier at the Indian mongooses has been returned. And I completely forgot to check the off-show part of the reptile house for the Congo Caecillians, so hope may not be lost on seeing them!

Hmm that’s interesting about the enclosure in the Casson. I’m really intrigued now
 
Hmm that’s interesting about the enclosure in the Casson. I’m really intrigued now
-The warthogs and hunting dogs were both nowhere to be seen all day
For future visits, I find the best time to see both species is before the zoo opens, if you take a stroll along the canal. In recent months, I’ve seen the dogs being quite active around 8:30-9:30, and the warthogs are almost always out before the zoo opens too.

On the subject of active animals, I'm convinced ZSL mix some strong catnip into whatever they feed the tigers because between the 4 at London and Czar I've never seen any so constantly active through the day, a real joy to watch and a lovely exhibit for them.
I’m convinced this must have been the result of the wind - every time I’m at London, they’re asleep by the windows.

Regarding the Cassons walkthrough, might it suit bats?
 
Some unnecessary thoughts as promised, but as this will inevitably devolve into a rudderless ramble and this is after all the News thread, not "I went to the zoo today and have a few opinions", I'll start off with a few things regulars may find of note:

-The warthogs and hunting dogs were both nowhere to be seen all day
-Despite the gale, all the colobus were out
-Both gorilla babies are doing very well
-A single warty newt is still on display
-The mouse lemurs may be introduced to breed if they haven't already recently
-The Congo Caecilians are 100% no longer visible - the vivarium I found earlier in the day was indeed the one they were previously in
-Both large hairy armadillos are being used in the animal displays again
-As mentioned in the walk-through thread, the three-banded armadillo is now mixed with the spider monkeys

If anyone has anything else they want to know, I did my best to memorise as much as I could given it was all new to me.

So now the vaguely useful stuff is sorted, I will present my particularly hot take of an overall opinion. London Zoo is really very, very good. Fantastic, some might say. I think I might be one of them. I think it helps you're met with a fantastic selection of exhibits and species variety as soon as you enter, but overall I don't think there are any bad exhibits and for the most part the land is very well used. The exception, however, is of course the Mappin Terraces. I've read at this point thousands of messages here and elsewhere saying how the current use of it for emus and wallabies is at best a waste and I can't help but agree. There's undoubtedly reasons for holding species like that there but with such a huge area (for London) it does feel like a bit of a crime. And I'm not entirely sure why but the grass just looks odd. That may just be me.

But aside from that (and even then that didn't detract from the visit at all, it's a very good exhibit for those species), I thoroughly enjoyed everything and saw pretty much the entire on-show collection, minus the dogs, warthogs, javan magpies (not for want of trying), any of the lorises and potto. As I said earlier, SLoRA is superb and every species can be easily seen with a bit of patience. It's especially nice to see a king cobra able to actually stretch out fully, which was pretty spectacular.

I followed the advice given here pretty much to a tee and it worked out perfectly, arriving at Into Africa around 2pm and spotting that Monkey Valley was packed after looping around. It was blowing quite the gale today, but all the colobus were out and really active. I can see why it gets criticism for being quite a situational exhibit, but as my first visit was about as much of a success as you could get my opinion is very much distorted towards the great end of the spectrum. Definitely easier viewing of them than the Longleat boat regardless.

Oni was also lovely to see. Okapis have always been special for me as Marwell was the main zoo I went to when I was younger, and she is a lovely individual with great viewing. According to some of the volunteers she's doing alright since the loss of her daughter, so hopefully a male will come in at some point. I also saw a duiker around 5pm which I was very happy about. Amara and Thug are the most active pygmy hippos I've ever seen, with the former spending about half an hour swimming outside while the latter tried to get through the bars into her side. And then once she stopped, he got in and did the exact same thing. I imagine once they are fully integrated it's not if but when for a pygmy, uh, pygmy hippo to pop out. On the subject of active animals, I'm convinced ZSL mix some strong catnip into whatever they feed the tigers because between the 4 at London and Czar I've never seen any so constantly active through the day, a real joy to watch and a lovely exhibit for them. Bhanu was sleeping outside all day, unsurprisingly, and it was quite fun to listen to everyone wondering where the lions were and then direct them to the livestream of the den. All 3 cubs certainly look healthy, so hopefully that is the case.

Again I have to thank everyone for the suggestions on Night Life + Rainforest Life, as well as the lemurs. It was still busy but less so than other areas of the zoo, and I managed good views of just about everything. I went back a few times to try to see the Aye-ayes and the gentle lemurs (the mouse lemurs were, for want of a better word, zooming), and I did manage to see an Aye-aye midafternoon before it was scared off by a legion of screaming children. I had a nice chat with a keeper about them - apparently the Aye-ayes are the ones people struggle with most, and he told me exactly where to watch for the gentle lemurs. Eventually both got fed, and I got the best views anyone could really ask for of both. So cheers to @JVM and @Kalaw, your advice was spot on. And I remembered the deer!

I was wondering though - do the gorillas have an off-show area? They disappeared midafternoon, which was a tad odd. Oh, and I must have spent all my beginner's luck on the colobus and lemurs because the Indian mongooses were no-shows and their food bowl was untouched all day. I give it a year before it turns out there aren't any and it's just a ZSL conspiracy.

Alright I'll put a sock in it finally, but those were the real highlights of the day. There were others, and I thought all the major exhibits like Tiny Giants were at the very least good. Overall it's a bit hard to compare to other zoos I've visited, the most recent otherwise being Berlin which is obviously a much larger collection. I definitely felt like the zoo could make use of its space better in places, and especially in the nocturnal house perhaps certain duplicate exhibits would be better off with different species instead. But I also know ZSL well enough to know that isn't really what they aim for, and I still went away thinking I'd got my money's worth.

So to summarise - London is a very good zoo, even to an outsider. Therefore we can stop arguing about that (you're all welcome). Clearly there are still spots being developed/going to be developed, the mystery arboreal exhibit, the empty primate exhibit in the gorillas and the old aquarium and tortoises notably. So I will definitely be back, and maybe one day one of us will see those damn mongooses.

Fin.

The gorillas access their off show area via the overhead tunnel/bridge (the window can be seen as you are walking towards the indoor area). When there in Feb, they also disappeared later in the afternoon.

Great review Glad you enjoyed your visit. I’m looking forward to a visit the week after next.
 
Some unnecessary thoughts as promised, but as this will inevitably devolve into a rudderless ramble and this is after all the News thread, not "I went to the zoo today and have a few opinions", I'll start off with a few things regulars may find of note:

-The warthogs and hunting dogs were both nowhere to be seen all day
-Despite the gale, all the colobus were out
-Both gorilla babies are doing very well
-A single warty newt is still on display
-The mouse lemurs may be introduced to breed if they haven't already recently
-The Congo Caecilians are 100% no longer visible - the vivarium I found earlier in the day was indeed the one they were previously in
-Both large hairy armadillos are being used in the animal displays again
-As mentioned in the walk-through thread, the three-banded armadillo is now mixed with the spider monkeys

If anyone has anything else they want to know, I did my best to memorise as much as I could given it was all new to me.

So now the vaguely useful stuff is sorted, I will present my particularly hot take of an overall opinion. London Zoo is really very, very good. Fantastic, some might say. I think I might be one of them. I think it helps you're met with a fantastic selection of exhibits and species variety as soon as you enter, but overall I don't think there are any bad exhibits and for the most part the land is very well used. The exception, however, is of course the Mappin Terraces. I've read at this point thousands of messages here and elsewhere saying how the current use of it for emus and wallabies is at best a waste and I can't help but agree. There's undoubtedly reasons for holding species like that there but with such a huge area (for London) it does feel like a bit of a crime. And I'm not entirely sure why but the grass just looks odd. That may just be me.

But aside from that (and even then that didn't detract from the visit at all, it's a very good exhibit for those species), I thoroughly enjoyed everything and saw pretty much the entire on-show collection, minus the dogs, warthogs, javan magpies (not for want of trying), any of the lorises and potto. As I said earlier, SLoRA is superb and every species can be easily seen with a bit of patience. It's especially nice to see a king cobra able to actually stretch out fully, which was pretty spectacular.

I followed the advice given here pretty much to a tee and it worked out perfectly, arriving at Into Africa around 2pm and spotting that Monkey Valley was packed after looping around. It was blowing quite the gale today, but all the colobus were out and really active. I can see why it gets criticism for being quite a situational exhibit, but as my first visit was about as much of a success as you could get my opinion is very much distorted towards the great end of the spectrum. Definitely easier viewing of them than the Longleat boat regardless.

Oni was also lovely to see. Okapis have always been special for me as Marwell was the main zoo I went to when I was younger, and she is a lovely individual with great viewing. According to some of the volunteers she's doing alright since the loss of her daughter, so hopefully a male will come in at some point. I also saw a duiker around 5pm which I was very happy about. Amara and Thug are the most active pygmy hippos I've ever seen, with the former spending about half an hour swimming outside while the latter tried to get through the bars into her side. And then once she stopped, he got in and did the exact same thing. I imagine once they are fully integrated it's not if but when for a pygmy, uh, pygmy hippo to pop out. On the subject of active animals, I'm convinced ZSL mix some strong catnip into whatever they feed the tigers because between the 4 at London and Czar I've never seen any so constantly active through the day, a real joy to watch and a lovely exhibit for them. Bhanu was sleeping outside all day, unsurprisingly, and it was quite fun to listen to everyone wondering where the lions were and then direct them to the livestream of the den. All 3 cubs certainly look healthy, so hopefully that is the case.

Again I have to thank everyone for the suggestions on Night Life + Rainforest Life, as well as the lemurs. It was still busy but less so than other areas of the zoo, and I managed good views of just about everything. I went back a few times to try to see the Aye-ayes and the gentle lemurs (the mouse lemurs were, for want of a better word, zooming), and I did manage to see an Aye-aye midafternoon before it was scared off by a legion of screaming children. I had a nice chat with a keeper about them - apparently the Aye-ayes are the ones people struggle with most, and he told me exactly where to watch for the gentle lemurs. Eventually both got fed, and I got the best views anyone could really ask for of both. So cheers to @JVM and @Kalaw, your advice was spot on. And I remembered the deer!

I was wondering though - do the gorillas have an off-show area? They disappeared midafternoon, which was a tad odd. Oh, and I must have spent all my beginner's luck on the colobus and lemurs because the Indian mongooses were no-shows and their food bowl was untouched all day. I give it a year before it turns out there aren't any and it's just a ZSL conspiracy.

Alright I'll put a sock in it finally, but those were the real highlights of the day. There were others, and I thought all the major exhibits like Tiny Giants were at the very least good. Overall it's a bit hard to compare to other zoos I've visited, the most recent otherwise being Berlin which is obviously a much larger collection. I definitely felt like the zoo could make use of its space better in places, and especially in the nocturnal house perhaps certain duplicate exhibits would be better off with different species instead. But I also know ZSL well enough to know that isn't really what they aim for, and I still went away thinking I'd got my money's worth.

So to summarise - London is a very good zoo, even to an outsider. Therefore we can stop arguing about that (you're all welcome). Clearly there are still spots being developed/going to be developed, the mystery arboreal exhibit, the empty primate exhibit in the gorillas and the old aquarium and tortoises notably. So I will definitely be back, and maybe one day one of us will see those damn mongooses.

Fin.
Thanks for sharing this excellent write-up, @cerperal , and it is lovely to hear such a positive first impression of my local zoo. With the recent rate of development, I too have come to a conclusion that it is probably, once again, one of the finest zoos in the country, but feared which that may be more my personal bias speaking than any degree of sense, so it is brilliant to see an outsider who agrees.

As mentioned by @polarbear , the gorillas can climb above visitor’s heads to reach a disconnected offshow area. On my visit, they also disappeared into it late afternoon, so that certainly seems to be something of a trend now.

There was only ever one Laos Warty Newt onshow in SLoRA to my knowledge, but five more offshow (some just about visible through certain windows, I believe) which is presumably where the breeding success mentioned upthread occurred.

Shame about the Congo Caecilians, especially as their offshow enclosure in SLoRA is at a very inconvenient angle, although you never really had a high chance of seeing them anyways - they were worse than the mongooses!
 
Regarding the Casson discussion, something which I found very confusing at first, the discussion is in this thread with the main points being:

There's been a large indoor enclosure for some sort of likely large, apparently arboreal mammal under construction (recently finished) within the Casson for a while, but I'm assuming that's not where they're kept...
On a side note, really quite intrigued by what species they might put in the aforementioned exhibit as it seems like it would suit a number of species I'd love to see back at ZSL but I guess we'll have to wait and see?


I too wondered about what the arboreal enclosure was, and asked a keeper who said that they didn't know - whether or not that was true, or if its future is intended to be secret, is hard to say, but hopefully it will get something exciting. It is the same enclosure that provided the indoor area for the Pygmy Hippos back when they were kept on the Cassons, and at one point in the sixties it even held a Walrus, so there is a lot of history there to say the least! Hopefully we get an exciting inhabitant to live up to said history.
 
Associated wth the Lion exhibit, can anyone tell me how many Hanuman Langurs are in that display now?
Like the previous poster, I have seen four langurs in the exhibit on two separate visits. Three of them largely in the 'Buddhist Temple' section - one was inside but also going outside.

And this is the view of the enclosure from inside casson
Oh, are we able to still go inside of there?
 
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