Reg Bloom

John Dineley

Well-Known Member
15+ year member
It is with great sadness that it has been announced that veteran zoo-man Reg Bloom has died a few days prior to his 90th birthday.

Reg was a talented and well respected animal man who worked in the zoo world for many, many years which included Chester Zoo and Flamingo Park Zoo aka Flamingoland. He is probably most well know for his pioneering work in the display of cetaceans at Flamingo Park, Windsor Safari Park and and number of other zoos and wildlife parks which later led him to display dolphins on the Clacton Pier in Essex.

His legacy lives on though his two sons that continue to supply animals and expertise to both zoos and parks both in the UK and Europe.
 

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The lack of response to this thread proves that you are a long time dead...as the old football chant goes"if you know your history".R.I.P.
 
I have just returned from my West Country zoo tour, so this is my first switch on since the 7th. What sad news. One of the great zoo men of the twentieth century. Many condolences to his family. I have the privilege of knowing one of his sons, Peter, and having several friends amongst the staff of the company he operates with his brother Anthony, but I never had the pleasure of meeting Reg. I should like to thank him, however, for his part in my happy childhood spent visiting the wonderful Flamingo Park of the 1960s he did so much to mould. As Tim says, R.I.P.
 
I was employed by the family for 8-9 years which started 25 years ago. Much of my work ethics today are from Reg. This news will be a distraction for me for some time I think. Mark Culleton
 
I first met Reg in the mid 1950's,loading animals from the London zoo's quarantine station in Camden Town, on to a train for Chester; I remember rhino and Cokes hartebeest.
The next time was at Chester zoo in 1959 when George Mottershead & Reg interviewed me for a keepers job. Reg's opinion was that as an ex student I wouldn't last a month ; I was still working with zoo animals until 2005.
Reg was very keen on african sunbirds but was a partner of John Seago [Seago & Bloom] who restocked many Zoos with African wildlife in the 50' after the war.
Whilst at Chester he fetched a collection from the Congo including many sunbirds and most importantly 2 Gorillas [Mukisi and Noelle].
He was a hands-on zooman, there were no tranquilisers. Many of us will remember him fondly.
 
I first met Reg in the mid 1950's,loading animals from the London zoo's quarantine station in Camden Town, on to a train for Chester; I remember rhino and Cokes hartebeest.
The next time was at Chester zoo in 1959 when George Mottershead & Reg interviewed me for a keepers job. Reg's opinion was that as an ex student I wouldn't last a month ; I was still working with zoo animals until 2005.
Reg was very keen on african sunbirds but was a partner of John Seago [Seago & Bloom] who restocked many Zoos with African wildlife in the 50' after the war.
Whilst at Chester he fetched a collection from the Congo including many sunbirds and most importantly 2 Gorillas [Mukisi and Noelle].
He was a hands-on zooman, there were no tranquilisers. Many of us will remember him fondly.
 
I first met Reg in the mid 1950's,loading animals from the London zoo's quarantine station in Camden Town, on to a train for Chester; I remember rhino and Cokes hartebeest.
The next time was at Chester zoo in 1959 when George Mottershead & Reg interviewed me for a keepers job. Reg's opinion was that as an ex student I wouldn't last a month ; I was still working with zoo animals until 2005.
Reg was very keen on african sunbirds but was a partner of John Seago [Seago & Bloom] who restocked many Zoos with African wildlife in the 50' after the war.
Whilst at Chester he fetched a collection from the Congo including many sunbirds and most importantly 2 Gorillas [Mukisi and Noelle].
He was a hands-on zooman, there were no tranquilisers. Many of us will remember him fondly.

Did Mr. Bloom have involvement with Twycross in its very early days when it first opened advising Miss Badham and Miss Evans on running a "full size" zoo after they moved here from Hints?, I was once told that he did but nobody has been able to verify this since.
 
Would it have been Reg Bloom [and his wife Margaret?] who gave a talk one evening at an Avicultural Society gathering in London in 1978? Subject was the Green-headed Olive Sunbird. I was there.
 
Reg was very keen on african sunbirds but was a partner of John Seago [Seago & Bloom] who restocked many Zoos with African wildlife in the 50' after the war.
Whilst at Chester he fetched a collection from the Congo including many sunbirds and most importantly 2 Gorillas [Mukisi and Noelle].

That is interesting. I believe they imported the Black Rhino pair 'Willie' and 'Stephanie' to Bristol Zoo in the mid 1950's. That pair still have descendants among the large group living at Port Lympne in Kent.

Mukisi and Noelle were obtained by the collector Charles Cordier- they are mentioned in Schaller's Book 'Year of the Gorilla.' Presumably Reg Bloom went out to get them from him.
 
Reg did go to twycross for a short time- there was a personality clash with Molly & Nat, so he moved on.
Noelle and the Cordiers are featured in the National Geographic magazine of January 1960, which is on their CD . I am sure there is also a shot of Mukisi. Its a great piece of history .
 
Reg did go to twycross for a short time- there was a personality clash with Molly & Nat, so he moved on.
Noelle and the Cordiers are featured in the National Geographic magazine of January 1960, which is on their CD . I am sure there is also a shot of Mukisi. Its a great piece of history .

Thanks for the clarrification regarding Twycross.
 
It is with great sadness that it has been announced that veteran zoo-man Reg Bloom has died a few days prior to his 90th birthday.

This is Reg's biography produced by his family for those who may not have known him or his work within the zoo world

Reg Bloom 1922-2012

He was born in Walton-on-the-Naze in 1922 into a famous Lifeboat Family.

He was the sixth of seven children and is the last of them to pass away.

He hated school and would much rather be out fishing with his father or taking wealthy London charter parties up the Stour and Orwell rivers.

When he was very young he took his father’s shotgun without permission and went out on the saltings and shot a goose but realising the goose would give the game away he left it. His Dad was waiting when he came back and beat him for taking the gun and then beat him again for not bringing back the goose!!

He was a fine amateur cricketer and sailor and came back to sailing in later life getting tremendous enjoyment from just being on the water.

He fibbed about his age and joined the Navy serving in Minesweepers throughout the Second World War.

After the War he was a professional yacht skipper but then travelled to East Africa with his wartime captain for a lark as he didn’t fancy an English winter on the yacht.

They started a business collecting and transporting animals and birds back to Britain, Europe and the USA when Zoos were restocking after the war. They were pioneers of their day with their animals being caught from open moving trucks with rope lassoes on bamboo poles. But what fun they had and what stories he told!

Reg met Margaret in the Reptile House at London Zoo and after they married in 1953 she went out to Africa and spent the next three years alongside him. On their first night under canvas they collected the largest Puff Adder ever recorded which had sloughed its skin on their tent pole. It went back with a returning Colonial Officer the same day so arrived just 48 hours after Margaret had left the Zoo! Among their achievements they bought back the first White Rhinos, Jumping Hares and Naked Mole Rats and quite possibly saved the Mackinders Eagle Owl from extinction.

Reg had an instinctive empathy for the needs of wild animals and birds brought into human care. Couple this with a far sighted and practical approach to the design of their enclosures, based on his African experiences and observations, and you have the ingredients of his future working life.

Wanting to start a family they returned to England where he began life in the Zoo World by becoming Curator of Chester Zoo. Three children later they moved on to build and open Twycross Zoo in a partnership with Mollie Badham and then on to Flamingo Park Zoo in Yorkshire.

Reg relished starting new projects. He was a not an easy man to work for as he drove his staff as hard as he drove himself but if you did get through the first few months then you had, quite literally, a friend and mentor for life. None of this would have been possible without Margaret who was a perfect match for him. She calmed him down, ran the office, hand reared all the zoo’s orphaned and rejected babies, soothed the owners of the Zoo, and persuaded indignant staff to stay on even though Reg had repeatedly called them a lazy, useless etc etc..!

When Reg did try get away and take the whole family with him, those times were memorable… Like spending one whole summer camping on a beach in the Isle of Man while he laid out and built the Curraghs Wildlife Park. Not content with just sitting on the beach after work he had the whole family making long lines with about 50 fishhooks on each that were then set along the beach at low water. So successful was this fishing effort that all the locals were doing it within a week and you couldn’t walk safely on the beach anywhere below the high water mark!

Then there was the time he had the Zoo carpenters help him convert an old Fish and Chip van into a Camper. He then took the family on a gentle European Road trip covering 12 major Zoos in Holland, Belgium Germany and Switzerland in 12 days!

Wanting to work more with the family he went into partnership with the owner of Clacton Pier to convert their Olympic pool into a dolphinarium. This operated successfully for many years until a severe easterly gale cracked the pool and emptied the water into the sea. In a blizzard the Clacton Lifeboat crew helped evacuate a Killer Whale and the dolphins out of the empty pool, onto trucks, and away to safety.

With Peter and Anthony totally involved from the mid-1980’s Reg was able to step back but, of course, continue to benignly interfere. He kept his hand in by training Parrots and Macaws for Parrot Displays and bought a boat and start sailing regularly although his much abused body was starting to rebel and he suffered more and more from arthritis in his legs. Each decline in mobility was fought against but once the inevitable was grudgingly accepted then the new mode of transport was exploited and once again he would be seen around town. So legs gave way grudgingly to a bike then a trike then assorted motorised buggies and finally wheelchairs.

Reg and Margaret had a long and happy marriage and Margaret has been a rock in the last few years as Reg became increasingly lame and frustrated with his lack of mobility. Without her he could not have died at home which was very important to them both.
 
Many thanks for posting this very interesting biography John. What a wonderful book could be written about Reg; as I said earlier he was a great zoo man.
 
Among their achievements they bought back the first White Rhinos, Jumping Hares and Naked Mole Rats and quite possibly saved the Mackinders Eagle Owl from extinction.
can someone explain the bolded bit for me?
 
I didn't understand the MacKinders bit either; I know London Zoo were breeding them in the sixties [knew someone in Ipswich who bought one of the young birds for 15 pounds], but as for saving the species?
 
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