ZSL Whipsnade Zoo My visit to Whipsnade

Shirokuma

Well-Known Member
I went to Whipsnade today for the first time. Although I have mixed feelings about some elements of the park, this is a very nice zoo with some enormous enclosures.

Firstly I found the map to be a bit vague, this style seems to work for London but for somewhere on the scale of Whipsnade it was rather confusing and I like to think I have a good sense of direction. It was a very quiet day and in some areas I was the only person around.

It felt a bit nostalgic visiting the zoo, it feels old-fashioned in a way, very British and a bit make do and mend and mustn't grumble if that makes sense! Expected there to be bunting and a cake sale with people doing the hokey cokey somewhere.

Maybe this is due to the somewhat utilitarian feel of the park and a no-nonsense approach to the enclosures.

The first exhibit I saw - or entered was the ring tailed lemurs. This was nice and I liked the set-up here, I'm not always a fan of getting close to things that jump around a lot but it was great to get so close to them and see them hopping around. I noticed what looked like Lubetkin's elephant house nearby and intended to go back for a closer look but I forgot.

Next the chimps. This is a nice moated enclosure but not especially outstanding for what seemed a small group. It appeared that despite the large amount of land at Whipsnade that the enclosure isn't much bigger than Gorilla Kingdom in Regent's Park.

It was great to see the European bison close up although I was annoyed by a man talking about the 'millions' it cost to save animals from extinction and how he thought it could have been better spent. First experience of the ubiquitous mara (rabbits or deer to some visitors around me but fair enough, you can't know everything) getting chased away by the bison
who were noisily eating from big heavy metal dishes which they dragged around as they ate.

I was impressed with the brown bears exhibit, an excellent example of a good basic enclosure that takes advantage of what is already there. One bear was determined to get an apple from under a large rock even though others were scattered nearby.

The deeper penguin pool had been drained and was very smelly.

Luckily some wood was burning nearby and the autumnal smell was nice on a gloomy morning. Equally gloomy was the bongo house. I'll talk about buildings later on but this long, narrow corridor was quite spooky and not at all a nice place to view these wonderful antelope via mesh covered windows. Fortunately most of them were outside.

The male white rhino was inside his barn which was good as all the others were far away and difficult to see. I like Whipsnade's 'who's who at the zoo signs which help identify many individuals.

I went back to see the reindeer and many more mara before walking around the rhino and antelope paddock to the scimitar horned oryx and kudu and the hippo house.

I'd like to see this area on a warm summer's day. All the hippos were fed which allowed me to see the pygmies outside of their Anderson shelters and get a look at their massive teeth.

Great to see common hippos inside their house - they seem to be unusual in the UK for some reason. A cabbage was thrown in and I got a bit splashed with hippo bath water which is a brown soup with plenty dung. Yuck. Although the outside enclosures were nice, from an aesthetic point of view I hated the hippo house, I just felt it was unattractive with murals on the walls and planting which just lacked something for me. Not unpleasant for the animals but just not particularly attractive.

I understand that Whipsnade is not about buildings but the buildings which are there aren't at all attractive. I understand that many buildings are amazing looking but totally unsuitable for their occupants - as London knows only too well - but I wish there could be a happy medium. It's great that the Asian one-horned rhino house is so environmentally friendly but it is ugly and pedestrian in design from the outside and not very inspiring inside in terms of design elements beyond those serving the needs of the rhinos which I'm sure are excellent.

I've seen attractive, simple buildings in many zoos, it doesn't have to be like a Copenhagen elephant house but why not be a bit more aspirational? It's fine if it's just a stable in the distance but if it's open to the public I think things should be a bit more ambitious.

Copenhagen's (new, I admit) giraffe house is simple, elegant and functional. Whipsnade's is depressing - like the bongos, the animals are viewed through mesh covered windows from a dreary corridor with an artex ceiling. seriously ugly. But - and here I fear is the controversial bit - I think this reflects a different attitude towards prioritising design in these countries and the average sitting room in the UK and Denmark would have exactly the same comparison.

Anyway, I'm not being deliberately provocative, it's just that my visit today highlighted to me how design is viewed in this country and made me think about the many discussions I've read on here about how to balance practicality, animals' needs and making things pretty, natural looking or immersive.

Ok,more to come later about the rest of my visit including the lion and cheetah exhibits which seem to signify a change in exhibit design at Whipsnade.
 
I'll try to get it done this evening. I think I spotted 5 females and the male, they were the most active lions I've ever seen, great to watch.
 
Thanks for your review, it was very interesting and you made some very true comments about the buildings and presentation of the zoo. As you said its a very "traditional" zoo that tries to keep things natural and not too modern and high-tech. Personally I like it that way, it shows you how zoos used to be before all this modern technology nonsense. Also your map comment I very much agree with, something a bit more detailed would be much more appreciated to a person who has never visited the zoo before. Thanks again :)
 
I thought the lion enclosure was great, the theming based on the Serengeti wasn't at all over the top and the viewing shelter was effective and attractive. The large windows provided an excellent opportunity to watch a very active group of lions enjoy - or try to get at - some enrichment objects including frozen blood ice lollies. The use of reddish sand on the ground makes a big difference in the public areas in creating an African feel without too much effort and the structures around the meerkat exhibit also contributed to the atmosphere. I think some bird exhibits would add to this area greatly.

I'm not usually thrilled with lions and meerkats ( I guess I'm a bit contrary and only like animals if your average member of the public can't name them) but this was an excellent exhibit and I spent some time here.

Nearby was a massive paddock with grevy's zebra which made me more convinced than ever that the Regent's Park zebras should be moved and a nice wooded pen for red river hogs which froze completely as I approached, only moving once they had established I didn't pose a threat. It was great to see animals notice my approach from a distance, the kudus' ears pricked up and they all watched me from some distance as I walked towards them. This just isn't possible on the whole in a crowded city zoo.

I liked the theming and moats at cheetah rock but the enclosures themselves weren't that spectacular, I'm guessing there are extensive off-show areas in addition to the two yards with cheetah on display.

As I was on foot - by the way, I think an excellent idea would be to have bicycles available to hire - I couldn't go into the Asian ungulates area. I saw Arabian oryx in the middle distance behind some low trees which weren't on the map, this was behind the nile lechwe paddock which couldn't be seen as they have been moved to allow the field to recover.

The area around the waterfowl lake and a very pink flock of Caribbean flamingos had a cafe and picnic area with other visitor facilities. This whole are leading up towards the entrance is a bit like Nairobi village at San Diego Wild Animal Park in some ways. I was disappointed with a rather shabby aviary housing egrets next to the cafe. I had brought some bagels and fruit so I can't report on the cafe.


Next up I went to tiger falls, it seems I didn't go through the way you are supposed to but this was a nice exhibit which took advantage of the natural vegetation, the pine trees really add to the atmosphere, would be great to see it in the snow. The vaguely generic Asian entrance area (which I saw last) felt a bit random but the viewing from various levels was excellent.

The only gaur in the UK were great to watch, the male in a small hardstanding attached to the stable and the female in the paddock. The male was very close, almost posing for pictures but turning away the minute I took a picture. Later on the female was very animated, running around and bellowing in the paddock. Onager can be seen in a big paddock here.

I was getting tired but was excited to see so many of one of my favourite animals, the Asian greater one-horned rhino in the Rhinos of Nepal complex. Maintence work was taking place in one of the larger paddocks so some of them were confined to the small yards viewed from a bridge. I think this is the one area that would definately benefit form some more adventurous lush planting and landscaping, maybe some more water features too. This was the only place where I thought, amazing animals but basically they are in a farmer's field. Nothing wrong with it from a welfare point of view - except perhaps more water - but aesthetically it didn't do it for me and I didn't like the building at all as I said above. Still, it was fantastic to see five rhino and the information signs were excellent.

More to come.
 
I felt like giving a lecture on the history of European bison preservation but thought it best to hold back on this occasion.
 
Shirokuma; Still said:
They are fine except the photos and names of the two mother rhinos are, I think, wrongly matched up...

Also the new building has a design problem, the females won't enter the indoor bathing areas.
 
Maybe they should build another rhino house and move the hippos in the existing one, the pools seems larged enough to me for hippos...
 
That's very interesting to hear, the house was empty and the bathing areas drained when I was there.

Well, that's an interesting development... I wonder if they are just changing the water(the bull rhino does use it apparently and it was dirty when I went, so some Rhino must use it sometimes) or making a moe significant alteration

I was told they couldn't afford to alter it at the moment (the access is probably too steep). That was just a few weeks ago.
The cheapest thing would be to make a shallower ramp into the water at one side of each stall so they can get in without the steep drop...
 
Maybe they should build another rhino house and move the hippos in the existing one, the pools seems larged enough to me for hippos...

I would of thought that if it was too steep for Indian Rhino's then Hippo's would have a harder time of it trying to get in and out.
 
Maybe they should build another rhino house and move the hippos in the existing one, the pools seems larged enough to me for hippos...

I'm sure that would never happen- this House was built specifically for the Rhinos. Also remember that in the Wild, Asian(Indian) Rhinos are almost as fully Aquatic in their habits as Hippos, they wallow almost fully submerged during the hottest hours of the day. So in captivity they really should have decent access to water. Some Zoos still don't give them enough..
 
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