OK, time for another brief update, given its been a month or so since the last:
-From Poland we went to the Czech Republic, first stop Prague, where we of course visited Prague Zoo, which was amazing, a very nice collection and some great enclosures. Some pretty terrible ones too though, and most of the waterfowl were off-display and the Cat House was closed.
-A day trip to the Plzen Zoo followed, which had a most spectacular collection, so many new birds and (mostly small) mammals! Certainly the most speciose zoo we have visited, although rather lacking in reptiles. The highlight was patting the friendly Indian Rhino, great experience.
This point marked the end of the cheap zoos, all since have been expensive, sometimes excessively so.
-In Austria, we only had time for one zoo, and of course this was Vienna Zoo, a rather eclectic mix of old and new, beautiful and deplorable, but overall most interesting. Apart from the Pandas, the most interesting thing was the historical signage, which was most informative. Best exhibit was the Indian Rhino paddocks, which also featured Nilgai, Blackbuck & Chital.
-Italy was amazing, and we decided we couldn't not go to Rome afterall, and while there (in some of the first snow in 40 years) visited the Rome Bioparco. Some nice enclosures, especially the newer ones (lions and chimps very good), but most of the exhibits were below average, and some terrible - the tigers had just a small rocky cave, which was horrible. A few new species though, Addax and I think European Buzzard (unlabelled).
-We then took a cheap flight to Barcelona, where my partner banned zoos, and then a train to Valencia, where we visited the stunningly modern Valencia Oceanografic. For a place with so few higher vertebrates, I saw so many new species, Beluga & Walrus were huge highlights. There were almost no negatives, even the dolphin show was great. Bizarrely they did insist no food was brought in and x-ray your bags, but we managed to smuggle tuna sandwiches and mandarins in for a cheap lunch.
-The next day was spent at Valencia Bioparc, a brand-new zoo focusing on African fauna with an almost Disney-style approach to theming. Split into four zones, three (Madagascar, Wetlands and Savannah) were brilliant and of a hugely high standard, with the exception of the small yard for Dromedaries. The fourth zone, Equatorial Forest, was best in terms of species, but one was hard-pressed to imagine a forest anywhere, none of the enclosures had any vegetation cover, meaning many species were huddled in the shade of rocks, fences or indoors, which was a bit of an oversight by the designers methinks.
-Next up was the capital, and the large Madrid Zoo, with a huge collection of mega-fauna, including six bear species! Pretty light on birds though, and some of the signage was bare or even non-existent. Needs a lot of work to bring it up to the standard of a capital's zoo, but still very nice and the newer enclosures were quite good. Maybe they should clean up the surrounding areas too - the hookers on the corner might deter (or possibly delay) some visitors.
-From Madrid we went to Paris, which was a very brief visit, barely 24 hours - most spent at Disneyland to compensate for too many zoos, and then we popped over to Switzerland, as you do, where we visited the Zurich Zoo. Mostly excellent, although the Black Rhino's indoor house was atrocious, they barely had room to turn around. Highlights were the Geladas, Mongolian Wolves, and Masaola Hall, which was so huge. We even saw a lemur in there! Best exhibit has to go to the gigantic Spectacled Bear enclosure, part of an expanding and excellent South American precinct.
-Then we headed back north through France, and stopped off at Belgium, which was a waste of time, Brussels was not nice at all, and I am very glad there is no zoo there, the air pollution was dreadful. After Belgium we headed up to Amsterdam (and another sort of air pollution), and today we visited the Royal Artis Zoo, which took 30 minutes to get into the queue was so big. However it was mostly very nice, and certainly worth the wait. Highlight was definitely the Small Mammal House, the first we have really seen, which had an awesome wee collection - best was the Yellow-bellied Martin, hugely active, inquisitive and friendly. It also featured the first South American small cat we have seen on the trip so far (Margay), I was certainly expecting to see more such cats, at least Ocelots, so had been disapointed thus far. Overall a great zoo, with a lot packed into a smal space.
So that brings us up to date, next stop is Germany, where we will be based in Berlin (for Zoo & Tierpark), and will hopefully manage a daytrip down to Leipzig as well. Then a zoo-free week or two in Sweden, before wrapping up MAWZT in the UK, although I'm not sure quite how many zoos will feature in that 3 week period, only Edinburgh and Chester will be definites, and we expect to be pretty broke by then anyway.
My partner is getting pretty sick of zoos now, and might not visit all the German ones, and even I am noticing a lot of repitition, not only among species, but also enclosure design and even species-mixes (every zoo seems to have a guanaco/llama/vicuna+tapir+rhea+giant anteater+mara/capybara+seriema/screamer South American paddock, for example).
Thanks for all the advice that has been given, really appreciate it, and thanks for reading.