: my favourite walkthroughs are bats h
Something I've also notice at Dudley is how the exhibit is divided between the ring-tailed, black-and-white ruffed and black lemurs, each clearly has it's own space and they defend them nosily.
WMSP has open one this year, apparently the largest in the UK and also based on a former walk-though. Going to see it next Sunday.
The best lemur walk-through for me is the one at Woburn Safari Park. Here you are actually permitted to stroke the Ruffed Lemurs, which is a wonderful experience. They don't mind, but give every indication of liking the attention, and move off once they have had enough. You have probably inferred, quite correctly, that I am more than a little fed up with all the health and safety precautions in zoos these days. The lemur walk-through at Dudley Zoo is very good too, and you can get very close to the Ring-tailed Lemurs, particularly if, like me, you make a point of leaning on the wooden rail along which a lemur is walking, so that it has to hop over you, brushing your face with its tail as it does so, but, unlike at Woburn, touching of the lemurs is forbidden and can earn you a sharp rebuke from the member of staff on duty.
They tend to spend the day a sleep inside their house!I do remember stroking one called Yoda at Dudley, the immediately putting my hand in lemur leavings. Never been more glad of handwash stations.
I haven't seen the collared lemurs for quite some time.
Dudley was the first walkthru I ever saw and was amazed by it. It probably is the best in my opinion, although I never saw the former one at Cricket St Thomas which was by all accounts massive and contained 7 or 8 species. Its a shame it no longer exists. Paignton's seems to be very large but has anyone ever actually seen a red-fronted lemur outside the house?! It somehow doesn't seem to work as a walkthru, and it think it's down to specie choice - red fronted lemurs are a shy specie, ruffed and ringtailed are a bit more brazen and might be bettre for the exhibit. Southlakes have free range lemurs, but zoochatters on here have reproted seeign remains of lemurs in big cat enclosures so there are definately limits as to how free lemurs should be kept.
The area of woodland between regents canal, the clore house and the 2 bridges at london zoo would make a good spot for a free range lemur exhibit, if the fence along the canal was hotwired. They could be viewed from the path along the front of the clore. Thoughts?
Paignton's seems to be very large but has anyone ever actually seen a red-fronted lemur outside the house?! It somehow doesn't seem to work as a walkthru, and it think it's down to specie choice - red fronted lemurs are a shy specie, ruffed and ringtailed are a bit more brazen and might be bettre for the exhibit.
It's the current pair of Red-Ruffed that I haven't seen at large!