I went for another of my morning exercise visits to Colchester Zoo today - these are the new things I noticed:
Births
Developments
On the subject of the master plan, I noticed this news article from a couple of days ago - Colchester Zoo have put in an application to remove 500,000 tonnes of sand from an area to the southeast of the zoo that currently contains a rectangular field used for farming, plus areas currently used for overspill parking. This is the initial enabling stage for the zoo's expansion. The material will be moved across the road to Stanway Quarry, if the application is approved.
Plans to offload 500k tonnes of sand from site as part of Colchester Zoo expansion
Births
- I managed to see both the fledgling crowned pigeon and one of the crested wood partridge chicks mentioned in the post above.
- I also saw a quite well-grown crowned crane chick in Edge of Africa, which I don't think has been mentioned anywhere yet.
Developments
- The Barbary macaque enclosures have been split up, with the elevated opening between the old colobus/patas enclosure and the lion separation display now boarded up. All the macaques I could see were in the lion separation area.
- The old hunting dog enclosure developments are nearly finished, with the enlarged viewing area now having benches present that you can access and sit on. The signage has been changed from being 'closed for essential maintenance' to 'this enclosure is currently empty', which makes me hope that news of what will go in there will be released soon. The updated signage also mentions that this is part of the new overarching master plan.
On the subject of the master plan, I noticed this news article from a couple of days ago - Colchester Zoo have put in an application to remove 500,000 tonnes of sand from an area to the southeast of the zoo that currently contains a rectangular field used for farming, plus areas currently used for overspill parking. This is the initial enabling stage for the zoo's expansion. The material will be moved across the road to Stanway Quarry, if the application is approved.
Plans to offload 500k tonnes of sand from site as part of Colchester Zoo expansion