In addition to the farm zoo, the owners also run a fishing lake that can be visited for free by zoo guests (and against a fee by non-zoo guests).
These lakes are called "put & take" in Danish - i.e. you pay a fee for fishing in the lake, but in return there's a huge chance of catch since rainbow trout are regularly released into the lake - but I don't think that's the English term since nothing came up on a Google search. Thus I'll just call it a fishing lake.
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Enghave Dyre- og Naturpark (Enghave Wildlife and Nature Park) is a small farm zoo near the town of Brørup in southern Jutland, Denmark. It keeps around 40 species of animals, mostly domestics, but also raccoons, coatis, and a few species of exotic birds. It's not a licensed zoo, but rather a "besøgslandbrug" ("visitor farm"), meaning that they can only keep species that are allowed to be kept in private hands.
While the exhibitry standard is mostly fine, the collection is very generic, and you can walk through the park pretty quickly, so it's not really anything to go out of your way for.