Your Illustrated Tour of Islands - Part 1
For than three years we have looked at plans and artists' impressions with a mixture of scepticism and anticipation. We have watched strangely shaped new buildings appear on a muddy field. We have imagined and speculated. This weekend Chester members could finally walk up the new path beside the oryx paddock for a preview visit to Islands.
The entrance point is staffed by smiling, blue-shirted zoo guides. They welcome the visitors and give Explorer's Logbooks to children as they enter. But I chose a quiet time when their backs were turned to get this photo.
When we arrived on the first preview morning the sun had burnt off a lot of cloud and the first vista was striking. It is called Coral Sands.
I was born and bred in Cheshire – and it doesn't usually look like this. These are authentic boats from Indonesia and there is a range of replicas and original goods at the 'Islands Supplies' stalls.
Of course this is really a theatre set. It is attractive and it certainly makes a good impression. I think it's nice, but on the other hand, it's not really what I have come to see.
When we cross the Thatched Bridge we can see the boats for the Lazy River Boat Trip leaving the Jetty. Due to technical difficulties, there was a long queue on the first preview morning. Incidentally, there are a lot of bridges in Islands and each one is different.
Notice the background of the image above. This is the Monsoon Forest building, the show piece of Islands, but not on show yet unfortunately.
We are now in Panay, which represents the Philippines. The first animals to live in Islands are the Visayan warty pigs.
This shows a small section of their enclosure and a wall of their house, which is off-show. There is a fenced yard behind the house for isolating individuals and the main paddock is long and shaped like an asymmetrical letter Y, with two sections of riverbank where the pigs can be viewed from the boats. The area of grass, trees and ponds behind this exhibit is earmarked for a possible future extension to Islands. The zoo had originally planned a rather larger development, including exhibits for Malayan tapirs and Komodo dragons, but these have not been built. If Islands succeeds, there is room for more.
to be continued