zoogiraffe
Well-Known Member
And thats enough said!!Hehehe indeed we can!
And thats enough said!!Hehehe indeed we can!
But here's the frightening thought: imagine doing this just to find your species of choice was off-exhibit on the day you visited
~Thylo![]()
For instance, any Spix's Macaw kept at that time would very likely have been kept as a lone specimen, quite possibly chained to a perch. And I don't imagine that many of us would relish an inspection of any Ape House before 1950.
Or worse still, it died the day before. Imagine going to Hobart Zoo on 8th September 1936....![]()
If I had a second go I'd probably go to London sometime during the early 1870's so I could see both their Warrah and Javan Rhinoceros.
Or imagine visiting on September 7th instead and finding it died moments before your arrival!
~Thylo![]()
If I had a second go I'd probably go to London sometime during the early 1870's so I could see both their Warrah and Javan Rhinoceros.
If I'm not mistaken this could also give someone an Indochinese Sumatran Rhinoceros (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis lasiotis) so quite the opportune time to go.
I´d love to visit so many!
London Zoo in the 60s for the birds of paradise
Would love to see it change, year by year, from a typical 1960s resort-zoo into a conservation centre.
I was hitherto unaware that Pedro had spent time in the walled garden, so I've learned something there. If you saw colobus monkeys then your visit would have been no earlier than 1965, as the first colobus monkeys (a group of 7) was brought back from Gerald Durrell's Sierra Leone expedition in May 1965.