6. Tierpark Hellabrunn. Of all my zoo visits it's the Munich one I most want to repeat. Not because it's the best - though I hope it'll settle for sixth - but because I wasn't able to make the best of it. I had a bit of a down-swing in my trip that unfortunately coincided with Germany, where I was starting to appreciate that my trip was heading towards its end and, worse, that I wasn't sure how I felt about that. I felt a little off-colour physically, too, in Munich. So I headed straight to the zoo - unfortunately on a public holiday - in case I found myself bed-ridden, and covered it entirely in less than four hours. So I gave it much shorter thrift than one of the most well-composed zoos in Europe deserves. For a long time I had it in my top five, but I've finally dropped it down one notch because there's no one broad category that it truly owns, unlike the zoos above it. Instead there is an immensely satisfying evenness to Munich, with so few nits to pick. It has some delightful field exhibits, such as the chamois and the Pampas, a wonderful flight aviary saved from the usual bin chicken-themed wastefulness by a few macaws, and some stunning carnivore exhibits for wolves, bears and tigers. The Heck breeds are a unique asset, too. Luckily my girlfriend wants desperately to visit Munich, so I'll get a second chance here. One day.
5. Prague Zoo. Aside from free zoos, which are kinda cheating, it's hard to imagine a better value for money pick than Prague, whose entry fee comes out to less than £7, $9 in the US or $13 in Australia. You get an awful lot of zoo for that price, and a lot of it is great. It's true to say that Prague's inconsistent: the tropical house disappointed, it has a very poor polar bear exhibit, and I liked the reptile exhibits in the carnivore house rather more than I liked the carnivore exhibits. The strengths far exceed the weaknesses, though. The Savannah exhibit was runner-up for my Golden Swan: only its limited viewing from one end cost it the win, but I'm hopeful that the path to the new gorilla exhibit will fix that. The lower half of the zoo stars some gorgeous primate islands, a seemingly endless set of generous wetland aviaries and more laughing-thrushes than anyone can reasonably hope for. Topping it all off are those cliff faces for mountain-hopping bovids, which are perhaps the best example of adapting the existing landscape for display that I've ever seen. Prague is the European zoo that most reminds me of San Diego. How's that for praise?
4. Berlin Zoo. Remember how I said in my previous post that the top four had been easy to settle on? I tell a lie, because right at the last moment I compared Prague, which had held that fourth spot, and Berlin, which had had to fight off Rotterdam, Munich and its proletarian sister for a spot in the top five. And Berlin won.
It's the complicated relationship with the Tierpark that made it so hard to settle on where Berlin Zoo fits. Perfectly pleasant - and in occasional cases genuinely delightful - large mammal exhibits suffer from the comparison, because they can't match the sweeping expanses on what was once the other side of the Wall. After my two respective visits I said to FunkyGibbon that the Tierpark was the better of the two, but obviously I've reassessed and changed my mind. The tie-breakers - with both Prague and the Tierpark - are the Zoo's sumptuous Aquarium and bird houses, which make up for any deficiency with a couple of the facilities for larger mammals. The reptile exhibits and some of the habitat fish tanks in the Aquarium are a match for anything else in the continent, including that gorgeous reef tank. The bird collection took up too much of my time, and would have been more delaying still if I hadn't so recently been to Walsrode. I still think, as I said in August, that the Zoo would benefit from taking advantage of the Tierpark's proximity to decrease its collection somewhat, but I don't begrudge its ambition, I only question its necessity. Berlin is one of the very best urban zoos in the world.