Possibly the same picture in John Edward’s book ?I believe I may have one- two ewes and a ram on a sort of sloping rock with barred fencing behind- but there is no species ID.
Possibly the same picture in John Edward’s book ?I believe I may have one- two ewes and a ram on a sort of sloping rock with barred fencing behind- but there is no species ID.
Not sure as I haven't seen that... the ram's horns in the postcard look like Bharal though.Possibly the same picture in John Edward’s book ?
YesPossibly the same picture in John Edward’s book ?
I would very much like to see HWP with a herd of Bharal- a very distinctive and showy species and right up their street. None in this country (have there ever been, maybe at ZSL in the distant past
Worth adding there were also bharal at Woburn; the Duke of Bedford records them in his autobiography "Years of Transition". (Incidentally he spells "bharal" as "burrhel".)London Zoo first acquired a bharal (blue sheep) in 1877 and the species bred regularly there between 1882 and 1908.
Pity they don't have them now. Anybody know exactly why they lost them?I remember the bharal at HWP.
The Royal Zoological Society of Scotland’s (RZSS) Highland Wildlife Park is celebrating the birth of a vicuna cria, the first one ever to be born at the park.
Born to parents Coco and Austria on Wednesday 23 October, keepers at the wildlife conservation charity say the female youngster is doing well and will be named soon. Visitors will be able to spot her exploring the drive-through reserve with mum close by:
Highland Wildlife Park celebrates birth of first ever baby vicuna