Mckenzie2000
Well-Known Member
Theories for the future of the old orangutan house which currently holds the Native exhibition? Particularly interested in suggestions for repurposing the house for another animal.
Agreed, the exhibitions have been great so far, so long may they continue (supposed to be going in March with uni and am eager to check it out). True, pygmy hippos would be great but probably are a pipe dream. Personally, given the size of the house part of the enclosure, I’d quite like something like Pygmy hogs or Indian boar with Asian water buffalo and for the moat to be filled in and the enclosure be divided up into grass and mud with ample space to wallow. Saying that, not sure if the outdoor space is sufficient to hold two species, let alone a large ungulate like water buffalo.The exhibtions so far have seem to done quite well, I haven't visited any of them but they are being advertised a lot and considering they have done multiple I wonder how long they will keep doing them.
I'm not sure how fit the building is for animal usage, but it can't be too unsafe if they are letting people in there.If you were to fill in the moat around the island, its a decent sized space. When thinking of a species that would work there my brain instantly went to pygmy hippos, that would be quite nice but it won't happen.
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Same or if they did house animals in there again, to completely revamp it but I think it’s better housing exhibits at the moment as it’s somewhat outdated for holding large taxa.I almost went past the exhibition last summer, we thought it was the Shark experience that you pay for. When we walked in I was very surprised by what they had done. My boys really enjoyed the models of the sharks and the activities. The videos used were fantastic and gave an experience we couldn't get in the Zoo, any zoo. I was fascinated by the displays but blown away to be in side the old Orang's exhibit. Ithey had painted in well so looked different to the old concrete cell it used to be. I was struck at how small the piece of land was that the Orang's used to play on outside. The last time I had seen this open I had to inform a keeper that one of the Orange had fished out a terrain from the moat and was beating it on the floor.
I think that they should continue to use this area for more exits. I'd rather them build new purpose built areas for new animals.
That's awesome. Thank you very much!jamie779
this was taken in February Native wildlfie Exhibition Chester Zoo 26th Feb 2024 - ZooChat
This was taken with my back facing the eastern side of Lemur Island, the building is to the west of Realm Of the Red Ape. The Red Pandas occupy part of one of the original Orang Utan dens.
Thank youjamie779
this was taken in February Native wildlfie Exhibition Chester Zoo 26th Feb 2024 - ZooChat
This was taken with my back facing the eastern side of Lemur Island, the building is to the west of Realm Of the Red Ape. The Red Pandas occupy part of one of the original Orang Utan dens.
It wouldn't make a bad replacement for the current aquarium building.
It wouldn't but a new purpose built aquarium could be built for the same cost of converting it, so why waste the money on converting an already old building with old buildings problems when you could have a new build
For the very simple reason that with Blue Planet just down the road Chester cannot justify the expense of a new aquarium, and I've had that straight from the horse's mouth. If the old Orang house is structurally sound then there is no reason to suppose that tanks could not be incorporated into it at reasonable cost. I offer you Ilfracombe, in its converted lifeboat house, or Tropiquaria, in its converted BBC transmitting station, as examples of retrofitted buildings now used as public aquaria.