Let's move on to Whipsnade. I first visited in 1971 or '72. I had already visited Chester, London, Bristol and Burford (then newly opened) but I remember seeing many species for the first time including Cape buffalo, musk ox, European bison, moose, swamp deer, hog deer, great Indian rhino, Cape hunting dogs, mountain zebra, spectacled bears, Thomson's gazelles and mara (I've probably missed some). There were also plenty of cranes and waterfowl.
The basic layout of the zoo is largely unchanged, but almost all the enclosures have changed their names. I think their old names were the names of the fields in the original Hall Farm, for example I think the European bison were in Chartley Paddock, where the Przewalski's horses are now (if I've got that wrong, I'm sure Pertinax will correct me
).
The brown bear enclosure is unchanged, except that you used to be able to walk towards the escarpment along either side of the enclosure. The path on the side nearer the main entrance (the north-east) went through a wooded area between some small enclosures for lynx and jaguars and several paddocks for cheetahs, ending up at a very small cage for the spectacled bears (the male was a nice specimen but the female was very small and very stereotyped). The penguin enclosure is still in the same place a little further on, but it was rebuilt several years ago.
The other bears were also badly housed. The polar bears lived further around the escarpment, on a small patch of grey concrete surrounded by thick black bars bent over at the top to make a row of forbidding black spikes pointing down into the enclosure. The Kodiak bears lived nearby in a bare concrete pit, it was very ugly, but I remember seeing four cubs playing happily there with their mother.
The old lion pen had the same nasty bars; it's still there, but it was used for anoa the last time I was there. At least it is a fair size, and the tiger pen was similar.
Many animals have been moved and new houses have been built since that time. But the giraffes are unchanged and the hippos are still in the same pools, although their house is new. The chimp house is much the same too, but the new paddock is on the site of the old cheetah enclosure.
The basic layout of the zoo is largely unchanged, but almost all the enclosures have changed their names. I think their old names were the names of the fields in the original Hall Farm, for example I think the European bison were in Chartley Paddock, where the Przewalski's horses are now (if I've got that wrong, I'm sure Pertinax will correct me
The brown bear enclosure is unchanged, except that you used to be able to walk towards the escarpment along either side of the enclosure. The path on the side nearer the main entrance (the north-east) went through a wooded area between some small enclosures for lynx and jaguars and several paddocks for cheetahs, ending up at a very small cage for the spectacled bears (the male was a nice specimen but the female was very small and very stereotyped). The penguin enclosure is still in the same place a little further on, but it was rebuilt several years ago.
The other bears were also badly housed. The polar bears lived further around the escarpment, on a small patch of grey concrete surrounded by thick black bars bent over at the top to make a row of forbidding black spikes pointing down into the enclosure. The Kodiak bears lived nearby in a bare concrete pit, it was very ugly, but I remember seeing four cubs playing happily there with their mother.
The old lion pen had the same nasty bars; it's still there, but it was used for anoa the last time I was there. At least it is a fair size, and the tiger pen was similar.
Many animals have been moved and new houses have been built since that time. But the giraffes are unchanged and the hippos are still in the same pools, although their house is new. The chimp house is much the same too, but the new paddock is on the site of the old cheetah enclosure.