I would do a mega jump for the Bristol Wildlife Conservation Park.![]()
You and me both, unfortunately I seriously doubt that it will be that. I'm already sold on the fact that it probably won't happen.
I would do a mega jump for the Bristol Wildlife Conservation Park.![]()
You and me both, unfortunately I seriously doubt that it will be that. I'm already sold on the fact that it probably won't happen.![]()
I got criticised here a while back - by a poster whom I suspect was without much idea of the raw facts of life facing UK zoo funding - for suggesting that Bristol should just concentrate on opening Hollywood Towers with some relatively inexpensive exhibits - rather on the lines of Marwell 40 years back.
I know this might be a touch radical but why doesn't Bristol sell the crowded city centre site to developers and use the funds to set up the park, albeit in a more general form?
They would be able to hold the 'charismatic megafauna' they lack, as well as an existing base to operate from and a seed stock to build on.
It's a sad day when a zoo has to turn visitors away because their car park is not big enough-I bet the disappointed people vote with their feet and the money goes to another, undeserving (IMO), local collection.
I don't think this would be practical (besides the fact you'd be wrongly destroying one of the oldest zoos in the world):
I know this might be a touch radical but why doesn't Bristol sell the crowded city centre site to developers and use the funds to set up the park, albeit in a more general form?
They would be able to hold the 'charismatic megafauna' they lack, as well as an existing base to operate from and a seed stock to build on.
It's a sad day when a zoo has to turn visitors away because their car park is not big enough-I bet the disappointed people vote with their feet and the money goes to another, undeserving (IMO), local collection.
An article about gorilla Salome's early life
Hand-reared gorillas: are the breeding prospects of female hand-reared gorillas better than males?
I remember Ron Smith at ZSL but would never have recognised him from these photos of him now! Interesting how the article describes him as being made 'redundant' at 60 from the Zoo- that was probably during the 1990 'bottleneck' era when a number of older staff were swept aside.
The article also says Salome went from London to Bristol 'two years later', whereas in fact she went to Chessington then and didn't arrive at Bristol till 1998, but accuracy is probably too complicated for the story.
And for the record Salome's mother 'Lomie' later became an excellent mother (at Howletts) after her first two infants, which were both born at ZSL where she had no companionship/support from other Gorillas whatsoever. She had good maternal instinct even with Salome, and struggled to look after her for about 3 weeks before it all broke down and she was removed to be handraised,- hardly surprising under the circumstances.
The main problem with hand raising is NOT the handraising itself - the deciding point is when the young is put back in contact with adult gorillas. If that happens early (before the age of 3), the chances for both male and female infants to become totally normal gorillas are great. If it hapens later, the chances are still good, but it will be extremely stressful for the little one. If the young males (as currently done in Europe) go into a bachelor group after their time in the Stuttgart kindergarten without ever seeing an adult female gorilla during adolesence, their chances of breeding are very very poor, I`d say far under 50% (closer to zero...).
Who was Salome's father?, did Lomi come to Regent's Park pregnant. I recall in 1976 there was an article in the national press that stated Guy had attacked Salome when an infant, I think he took the baby to the top of the climbing frame and threw her to the ground,
Salome's father was the Bristol male 'Samson' Her mother 'Lomie' was sent to Bristol for mating on two occassions after it became apparent that 'Guy' would never breed with her. Each time she went back to ZSL to have the baby. The first baby was Salome (owned by ZSL) the 2nd was 'Saul' (owned by Bristol.) He was handraised also, then sent down to Bristol and later to Singapore(where he died young)
I am 99.9% certain 'Guy' was never put with Lomie or her babies in the short time they were with her, so I think that story is inaccurate.
It may have been just a publicity story but it was definitely reported at the time, it was definitely 1976, the year the new Lion Terraces opened, ..... but I couldn't imagine London Zoo just making the story up just to get a bit of publicity for the zoo at the time.