Chester Zoo Chester Zoo Spring 2015

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Bornean Male Orangutans at Chester Zoo;

Before 'Tuan'- 'Sibu'

Before 'Sibu'- 'Anak'.

In the more distant past. 'Dennis' 'Barry' 'David' (not all kept as adults though). Also 'Kimbu' (came with Martha)- died as young animal.

Sumatran males;

Before 'Puluh'- 'Oscar' (father of Emma & Subis.)

Before 'Oscar'- 'Jimmy' & 'Paul' (one- probably 'Paul' -was the father of hybrid 'Rajang' at Colchester)
 
Out of interest the ramp you mention visible near the caecilian tank, did this lead to the door in the Aztec style wall at the back of the caiman pools?

No, the ramp zig-zagged and the entrance to the nocturnal section was roughly above where the door to the capuchin enclosire is.
 
No, the ramp zig-zagged and the entrance to the nocturnal section was roughly above where the door to the capuchin enclosire is.

I don't actually remember the nocturnal section, when did it close? but I do remember the ramp, did you used to be able to go up the ramp to view the alligators?
 
I don't actually remember the nocturnal section, when did it close? but I do remember the ramp, did you used to be able to go up the ramp to view the alligators?

Yes you could see the alligators from the ramp. The nocturnal section closed in 1979. All I can remember of it was seeing Cairo spiny mice, rock Hyrax and Siberian Chipmunks.
 
I spent a lot of time in the Tropical House last Summer especially upstairs. I was amazed at how close some of the free flying birds would get if I sat quietly. I'm resigned to this building going sooner or later and I know that would be the Chester Zoo way. Still disappoints me that they have a fabulous building full of history that with a little TLC could be restored to former glories.
 
Still disappoints me that they have a fabulous building full of history that with a little TLC could be restored to former glories.

I think in its time Chester's Tropical House was as innovative and ground breaking as their 'Islands' development will be (or indeed 'Heart of Africa' if they can ever do it) The first time I ever set foot in there it was a real eye-opener. Gorillas and Orangutans displayed in a warm humid 'tropical' atmosphere, waterfalls splashing, birds zooming all around.

I'm sure these days its a rather tired reminder of its former glories but it will be sad if it does eventually go.
 
I'm sure these days its a rather tired reminder of its former glories but it will be sad if it does eventually go.

I wouldn't say "rather tired" is a particularly fair assessment - granted I never saw it during the glory years, nor even when the full range of reptile enclosures were on display to the public, but even so I still think it is one of the highlights of the zoo. It will be demolished eventually - none of the zoo is safe from this bar Oakfield Manor and the surrounding stable blocks - but until this happens it should not be looked upon as a crumbling reminder of the past.

In my eyes, we're talking about a spacious and lofty tropical house with over a hundred free-flying birds of about twenty different species, with vegetation which due to the age of the building has reached a level of maturity which is seldom found in houses such as this - and which despite the loss of the great apes once held within, still displays a rather impressive array of other taxa.

Put it this way; not to give out "spoilers" for when my German trip report eventually reaches Leipzig, but in my opinion the Tropical House at Chester beats the much-vaunted "Gondwanaland" hands down.
 
Ickbur is quite right. It is the Chester Zoo way to build relatively quickly and cheaply and to accept that their buildings have relatively short lifetimes. I am sure that this a very sensible policy: zoo animal husbandry has developed so much that old-fashioned buildings are often worthless encumbrances - I only have to mention the word 'Casson' to prove that point.
The Tropical House (I try not to use the R-word) is coming to the end of its usefulness: the old chimp dens and the reptile corridor are defunct, the top gallery goes nowhere, the roof is fragile and heating is limited. There is a lot happening off-show, which will have to be moved to new purpose-built accommodation eventually - some of which could be on-show. The site is obviously an important one in the zoo and some of the structure could be refurbished: but I think the concept of a generalised tropical exhibit is out of date now, any new structure will not house tuatara, Galapagos giant tortoises, dart frogs and hornbills together.

Alan
 
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I wouldn't say "rather tired" is a particularly fair assessment - granted I never saw it during the glory years, nor even when the full range of reptile enclosures were on display to the public, but even so I still think it is one of the highlights of the zoo. It will be demolished eventually - none of the zoo is safe from this bar Oakfield Manor and the surrounding stable blocks - but until this happens it should not be looked upon as a crumbling reminder of the past.

In my eyes, we're talking about a spacious and lofty tropical house with over a hundred free-flying birds of about twenty different species, with vegetation which due to the age of the building has reached a level of maturity which is seldom found in houses such as this - and which despite the loss of the great apes once held within, still displays a rather impressive array of other taxa.

Put it this way; not to give out "spoilers" for when my German trip report eventually reaches Leipzig, but in my opinion the Tropical House at Chester beats the much-vaunted "Gondwanaland" hands down.

I am afraid this is a case of too rosy eyeshades / specs! ;) With all good respect tropical rainforest halls like Leipzig's - Gondwanaland and Arnhem's - Burger's Bush really give the historical / classical Tropical House at Chester Zoo the merry go around! Which to me is no surprise given its age and state of repair of the building.

I am sure that most people at Chester Zoo agree with me that eventually it will go and be replaced with a state-of-the-art new Tropical Hall that can rival some of the above mentioned continental Tropical Halls.
 
I wouldn't say "rather tired" is a particularly fair assessment - granted I never saw it during the glory years, nor even when the full range of reptile enclosures were on display to the public, but even so I still think it is one of the highlights of the zoo.

Last time I was in there, a few years ago now, it did strike me as 'rather tired' compared to how it used to be. And as GL says, parts of it are now defunct. But that's not say its not still an impressive building and among the highlights of the Zoo.
 
I am sure that most people at Chester Zoo agree with me that eventually it will go and be replaced with a state-of-the-art new Tropical Hall that can rival some of the above mentioned continental Tropical Halls.

As noted, I fully agree that it will eventually go and be replaced - but I certainly hope it's replaced by something far better than Gondwanaland rather than merely something which rivals it; your mileage may vary but Gondwanaland was *terrible* as far as I was concerned.

In any case, I'm not so much contesting that the Tropical House is of equal quality to recent constructions on the continent, and more that despite its age it is still a) better than any other tropical house in the UK barring, possibly, the one at Paignton and b) one of the best parts of Chester Zoo.
 
I would imagine there are many birds fitting that description - care to either elaborate or explain where that non-sequitur came from? :p
 
and more that despite its age it is still a) better than any other tropical house in the UK barring, possibly, the one at Paignton and b) one of the best parts of Chester Zoo.

It is still both. It is on a completely different scale to Paignton's so I think a lot better because of that. I should have added that it is still a good building.;)
 
While I dearly love the old TH(R), we do need to bear in mind that talk of Chester building a new tropical house is not hypothetical - one twice the volume of the current house will be opening within the next six months. And I really think the current building is going to look very much the poor cousin once Monsoon Forest is on the scene.

I do like the idea of making it a temperate house - means that heating is not so much of an issue, the tuataras can stay by the entrance and the rest of the house given over to something along the lines of the Szechuan Pavilion at Prague. Just depends how firm the structure is.
 
Does anyone know what happened to the Hyacinth macaw that was being handreared? This was a few months ago. I think they named him/her "Jesse" due to not knowing the sex of the bird. I did ask on the FB page but got no response and other people were interested too.
 
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