Colchester Zoo visit.
A few notes and impressions from my recent visit, the first for about four years;
I think they should call Colchester the 'Bamboo Zoo'( or Zone?) - I have never seen so much of the stuff- they could feed a pair of Giant Pandas with it! The Siberian Tiger areas are so full of it, just a sea of Bamboo now, that the cats are virtually invisible- it actually looks quite good- though arguably Siberians aren't the most suitable species to show in this setting- but it does make viewing them very difficult- a few cleared patches to give some open areas too, would definately help here.
Bamboo is now very evident in the old Tiger valley too- now an effective Lemur area. It seemed to be closed as a walkthrough though.
Sun Bears- new outside enclosure is a true Colchester-style 'Rock-fest' (celebration of fake rock

). But roomy and does the job.
Orangutan 'Forest'. Doesn't get any better with age.

They should roof the outdoor enclosure, add hanging strapping ('vines') etc and make the visitor viewing at ground level, so you look up, not down. But with only single males there is little to see in there anyway. Tiga and Rajang were again seperate- is this becoming a permanent arrangement now?
Mangabeys- see above- they appear to have exchanged some females born in the group for 3 new unrelated ones. Currently the two groups are held seperately- as 2.2 and 0.3. Indoor area of 'Mangabey Forest closed and being renovated.
Geladas. Currently 12 animals(7.5) 2 adult males, 4 females, 6 younger ones(5.1). Skewed toward males.
Mandrills. About 25. I noticed at least 6-7, maybe more, adult or near-adult males in the group. I wondered if apart from one obvious dominant male, whether the others have been castrated to allow them to stay in the group longterm, as most of them didn't look quite 'right' somehow. Maybe this is the way some Gorilla groups will look in the future.
L'Hoest's monkeys are now in the large enclosure in the Africa area, where the Colobus used to live. Unfortunately there is no indoor viewing of their house, so if indoors(as they were) Mr Average visitor won't ever see them. But they were up by the small windows of the house soaking up the sun and I could see the new baby. I think maybe the Colobus made a better display here.
Philippine Deer/Warty Hogs. Four of each (they are mixed again). The Deer have lost their nice grassy enclosure because of the Pigs' rooting activity. Its now been completely covered in dry bark material instead. The two species seemed compatable though I felt sorry for the deer with no grazing whatsoever now. I don't think these Deer(1.3) have ever bred here, at least successfully anyway, as I have never seen a young one.
Leopards-enclosure has already 'matured' and with the rocky areas blended in. Its smaller than I expected it would be, but its okay. Prefer it to YWP's for example.
Francois Langurs- will be moved to the Wilds of Asia enclosure (currently still housing Lion-tailed Macaque) after its been renovated. I presume LTM will leave the collection- I saw only one and they don't seem to be labelled any more.
Chimps-no change to enclosure outdoors until after Francois Langurs move.
Pygmy Hippos- probably the smallest/poorest enclosure for these in UK. Pool is tiny, as is the landspace.
Wolves- still just about the best viewing anywhere I know of for this species, though enclosure isn't large even for the three(?) that remain.
Elephants- despite there being four(?) I only ever seem to see one or two of them. I presume breeding them is now a thing of the past here.
Likes; Sheer Size and variety of collection.
Inside display areas for reptiles, fish etc scattered all about.
Attempts at naturalised enclosures.( I can even live with the fake rock

)
Labelling, Information and education displays.
Playa Patagonia( Sealion area)
Dislikes; Automatic Doors everywhere.
Herbivores in bare surroundings without any grass-e.g. Rhino, Zebra, Phillipine Deer, Gelada etc.
'Musak'- though much reduced nowadays.
Cluttered design in the old part of Zoo and steep paths/dead ends etc- but you can't change the old layout of course.
Orangutan 'forest'.

Indoor viewing of the large African' ungulates- such ugly holding areas.

Smelly-looking lake-it needs better drainage I think.
Last point-first impressions and that- the entrance drive from the Main Road to the Car Park must be one of the poorest for a large Zoo in the UK- it remains unchanged over many years of my visits- potholed and scruffy- they should resurface the road and tidy this area up.