Day 46: Highland Wildlife Park (c.1990) - European Wisent; An Explorer's Guide
Page count: 34 pages (including inner front and rear covers)
Photographs: c.50
Illustrations/diagrams: c,30
Layout: General introduction, followed by discussion of species held in the drive-through reserve and a range of geological, topographical and botanical features found within, a general overview of the species found in the various sections of the walk-around reserve, and supplementary sections relating to the RZSS and the importance of zoos,
Map: Three maps; double-page map of entire collection, single-page map of walk-around reserve, map, road-map of collection on rear cover.
A pretty significant guidebook today; to wit, the very first guidebook in my collection, purchased by my parents at the time of publication, during my very first visit to a zoo! As such, this particular item holds a lot of sentimental value to me; however, as I intend to demonstrate, it is also an extremely good guidebook in its own right, with a great deal of interesting and informative content. The Highland Wildlife Park which I visited as a small child was a very different collection to the one which exists now, as I have mentioned in a prior post; the species collection was restricted to current and historical native species of Scotland, and many of the exhibits and enclosures were unrecognisable from their current form, where they existed at all; however, it was still a rather good collection - with a few major shortcomings, such as a Brown Bear exhibit which was verging on unacceptable even by the standards of the time - and one which I fondly remembered for over two decades before my return.
The guidebook opens with a general introduction to the collection, as is the case for many of the zoo guides I have covered in this thread thus far; however, it should be noted that this introduction displays one key feature which marks it as rather unusual where English-language zoo guidebooks are concerned, to the point that offhand I cannot recall any other guidebook published by a UK zoological collection having done something of this sort - to wit, the introduction is presented not only in English, but also in French, German and Italian. Several of the guidebooks within my collection published in Germany, Czechia or elsewhere on the continent provide multi-lingual content, whether this is throughout the main body of the text or limited to the introduction, but barring the Welsh-language content in certain guidebooks published there, the same cannot be said for any other UK items in my collection. Beyond here, a section containing a variety of general remarks about the upkeep and management of HWP - discussing matters such as the management structure, the feed schedule and the various key members of zoo staff - is presented prior to the main body of the text.
It is worth noting here that due to the large A4 format of the guidebook, this is another occasion where I have found it difficult to satisfactorily scan images, and have therefore also taken digital photographs of those double-page spreads which needed to be presented in their entirety. The first major section of the guidebook comprises several pages discussing the main drive-through reserve at HWP, starting with a double-page spread showing the various species present within the reserve at the time of publication - Soay Sheep, Roe Beer, Red Deer, Highland Cattle, Przewalski Horse and European Wisent - in scale both to one another and a diagram of a human, followed by the above very attractive illustration of the drive-through reserve, and by extension the collection as a whole.
One of the particularly interesting aspects of this map, and something which is replicated throughout this section of the guidebook as I shall relate anon, is the fact that rather than focusing solely on the animals displayed within, it also makes note of various land features within the reserve; some of the most important features are discussed in greater detail elsewhere within this section within three double-page photographs of the reserve, labelled with photographic annotations, with the overall titles of "Glaciation", "Land Use" and "Focus on Trees" as noted on this map. This represents one of the most interesting and unique aspects of this guidebook as a whole; the fact that the main body of the text in this section does not merely restrict itself to discussion of the species held within the collection at the time of publication, and their role in the primeval ecosystems of the Scottish Highlands, but also makes detailed note of the wider geological and botanical context in which these ecosystems existed, along with the effect which humans have had on the landscape.
For instance, the above double-page spread discussing the lasting impact which the retreating glaciers left on the Scottish Highlands at the close of the most recent ice age 12,000 years before the present day uses a black-and-white photograph of the main reserve in order to directly point out the various glacial features which can still be seen within Highland Wildlife Park and its environs, such as the bare and denuded rock of the surrounding Cairngorms, and the drumlins and morraines which are scattered throughout the drive-through reserve; having grown up visiting the Scottish Highlands and the Lake District, I have long been interested in the geological and geographical impact of the most recent glacial period on Great Britain, quite apart from my interest in the wildlife which inhabited much of northwestern Europe in the millennia that followed the retreat of the glaciers. As such, these double-page images provide a very interesting and valuable insight into the geographic context of the zoological collection under discussion, of the sort that one rarely finds within a zoo guidebook.
Along with these discussions, there is of course substantial material dealing with the various species located within the drive-through reserve, often reaching very high levels of detail; for instance, the double-page spread relating to the Red Deer at Highland Wildlife Park - which, incidentally, have long-since comprised a captive herd occasionally supplemented by wild individuals from the surrounding countryside jumping over fences and barriers in order to join their kin - features a large amount of information on the ecological niche of the species, their behaviour and their annual life cycle, the last of these points illustrated by an excellent annotated diagram showing key points in the year both biologically and behaviourally. Similarly, several of the species displayed within the drive-through reserve are discussed in relation to their status as Ice Age or Neolithic inhabitants of Scotland - or, in the case of the Highland Cattle and Przewalski Horse, their role as a "stand-in" for the extinct aurochs and tarpan respectively. As is the case for the entirety of this guidebook, this section is lushly-illustrated by both photographs and diagrams, helping to enhance the overall impact of the text rather well.
The discussion of the species displayed within the drive-through reserve is followed by several sections relating to the central walk-around portion of Highland Wildlife Park; it is this portion of the collection which has perhaps changed the most in terms of the captive husbandry and exhibit standards visible within since the time of publication, incidentally. As the above map shows, this area covers a smaller area than the modern-day walk-around reserve, with several areas which now contain large exhibits remaining untouched, and others containing several exhibits where now only one or two are present. As before, this map is very attractive and conveys a very good impression of the general "feel" and atmosphere of this portion of the collection.
As was the case for the species accounts previously discussed within this guidebook, those sections relating to the various species displayed within the walk-around reserve are rather excellent both in terms of the detailed information presented, how well-illustrated they are, and the way in which the guidebook consistently ties the overall discussion into the larger context of the various natural biomes found within the Scottish Highlands, and Scotland in general. Once again, this latter point includes discussion at several points about those species which have been lost from the British Isles over the millennia, such as Brown Bear, Eurasian Lynx and European Wolf, and the key ecological role which they have left vacant in the modern-day Scottish Highlands. One section which I found particularly interesting, not only for the content presented within but also due to how seldom such information is presented within a zoo guidebook - or indeed educational signposting within a zoo - was a collection of annotated diagrams discussing the behaviour and body language of wolves; for instance how they display submission, aggression, greet one another and so forth.
The various species accounts within this latter half of the guidebook are generally speaking, divided into particular biomes except where a greater level of detail is desired - for instance, in the aforementioned discussion of the European Wolf - or where a wider educational point (such as comparing the ecological roles of reindeer and red deer as prey species, the Eurasian Lynx as a predator species, and the Brown Bear as a generalist) is possible. As such, there are distinct sections for the discussion of those species which occur in wetland habitats, the tundra, moorlands, native broadleaf woodland, and the ancient Caledonian forests, with each of these sections going into detail about the behaviour, ecological niche, and historical status within Scotland of the species in question; the below image showing the aforementioned discussion of those species native to the Caledonian forests gives a fairly good impression of the general format and content found within these species discussions.
Interspersed throughout the discussion of the walk-around reserve at Highland Wildlife Park, there are also several sections discussing the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland and its work at both Edinburgh Zoo and HWP, and most interestingly a comprehensive discussion on the important role which zoological collections play in the modern world. This latter segment, despite being over 30 years old, has not aged all that much at all; put quite simply it represents
precisely the sort of succinct but detailed argument in favour of zoos, wildlife parks and other such collections which should be made more often in the present day, both in zoo guidebooks, at the collections in question and in the wider media.
In conclusion - although the strong sentimental value this guidebook holds both as a souvenir of my first ever visit to a zoological collection and the first such item to enter my personal collection cannot be denied, I feel I have demonstrated rather comprehensively why it is also an extremely good zoo guidebook in its own right; the detail and breadth of the content presented is exceptional, especially for a guidebook published in more modern times. containing not only information on the zoological collection in question but also the context in which it is located, the guidebook is illustrated attractively throughout by a wide selection of photographs and diagrams, and the general format and design of the guidebook makes it feel very accessible and easy-to-read. As such, I think it is safe to say that this is one of the best guidebooks published by a UK collection within my lifetime.