I visited the Domain of the Caves of Han on Sunday and am now reporting on my experiences. I only visited the wildlife park on foot as I did not have an interest in the wildlife park by Safari Car (and you have to chose between those two anyway, you cannot do both with a standard ticket), the Caves or the museum spaces PrehistoHan and Han 1900. I took the long hiking trail (5.5 kilometers) through the wildlife park.
I previously visited the Domain of the Caves of Han in August of 2008 (when I did also visit the caves). At that time the hiking trail through the wildlife park had not yet been developed (or only partially) and at that time I visited the park by Safari Car. Since 2008 the park has gone through quite a few attractive developments, both in terms of the development of the hiking trail and in terms of new and updated animal habitats.
There were quite a few people hiking through the wildlife park but due to the size of the domain that was not really an issue, unless in some viewing areas and in the area around the brown bear exhibits , where the Safari Car passengers de-board for a short time to view the bears, and in this zone face masks were recommended, though only worn by a minority of visitors including myself.
In my opinion the park did quite well with the Covid-19 safety measures. As Gorilla Gust already said above the entrance area was moved from the Domain's building in the Han-sur-Lesse village center to the Dry Hamptay zone (according to the domain's website it is Dry Hamptay, not Dry Hampton as above in Gorilla Gust's post) just outside of the Han-sur-Lesse village center, and this is a large enough open area to allowing separation and channeling of visitor movements, although it was quite busy and had long queues for the caves when we returned from the wildlife park. There were also quite a few hand disinfection stations and small but clear signage on the safety measures throughout the wildlife park, and most staff we saw wore face masks.
Most viewing areas that were closed at the time the park reopened after the lockdown have since reopened with safety measures such as single file traffic and only one family or group being allowed in at a time and asked not to linger to allow others to get a view also. Unfortunately those measures were not followed well by all visitors. Two areas in the park had young women wearing a shirt from the domain (possibly students during a holiday job) keeping an eye on things and trying to enforce the safety guidelines.
Since Gorilla Gust's post a new trail has been opened for wildlife park walking visitors to return to the Han-sur-Lesse village, however it is a difficult trail with very steep slopes so after the wildlife park trail we did not want to take it and returned by tram. In the tram face masks are mandatory, only one family or group is allowed to sit in a booth in the tram and plexi panels have been put up between the booths. The tram ride wasn't very pleasant though, to be honest, as the old trams provide for a shaky ride and their brakes make a very loud and highly unpleasant grinding sound.
The 5.5 kilometer long wildlife park trail is not a very easy trail as the terrain in Han-sur-Lesse is quite rugged with some areas with rocky ground and quite a few upward and downward slopes, some of them quite steep. The trail however does take you through a beautiful area with a lot of forests and some impressive landscape views. I enjoyed the trail very much. It is however not easy and not really recommended for those who are not at least a little bit fit and/or used to somewhat longer walks on somewhat difficult terrain.
We ate in the restaurant Tivoli in the forest zone, 2.3 kilometers into the trail, and the food was rather enjoyable. One of the only downsides I can think of is that all restrooms in the wildlife park were either small dark cabins or port-a-potties.
With regards to seeing animals a wildlife park is always a little bit of a gamble, but we saw most species. In the meadow area in the valley zone we did not see any Heck cattle, mouflon or roe deer, and we also could not find any of the Alpine chamois in the ravine forest area. That perhaps was the biggest miss, as I cannot remember having seen chamois before. We did however see a wolverine (but not the cubs born this winter) and the Alpine marmots quite well.
On the grounds of the wildlife park I also saw a wild common wall lizard (I think, have yet to check), my very first ever wild reptile (at least as far as I can remember).
One of the three owl aviaries was being renovated so we only saw the Eurasian eagle owls and Eurasian great grey owls, and not the snowy owls.
I am planning to post an extensive photographic overview of the wildlife park and its surroundings, and I have already had a gallery for the Domain of the Caves of Han added here on ZooChat. I am probably also going to post some of my pictures from 2008 as I have recently watched them again, and some of there are quite nice.
To ZooChat members in, near or visiting Belgium or looking for different places to visit in Belgium I would definitely recommend a visit to the wildlife park in Han-sur-Lesse.