The first thing I noticed is that have only one white rhino left (a male). He still lives in the large paddock in front of the mansion house with the Chapman's zebras. I've always thought that the rest of Cotswold's hoofstock collection is a bit under-represented given the availability of flat grassland they have on the site. Six scimitar-horned oryx (including one young) were in their paddock (ISIS list 10). There are no other antelope or deer: the blackbucks have recently been moved to another UK collection, and their paddock will be given over to the ostriches. No info on what will go in the old ostrich paddock. I'm surprised Cotswold don't have giraffes.
The row of aviaries visible from the car park will be demolished shortly and the birds re-housed elsewhere on the site. Nearby, the new walk-through Madagascar exhibit is taking shape. It's a large netted enclosure (the walk-through area) with a couple of smaller steel-framed enclosures (although these were hard to get a clear view of). Planting and theming was well underway and is up to the usual high Cotswold standards: bamboos, palms, miniature trees, a waterfall and rocky area and a rock archway. There didn't appear to be many sturdy looking trees for the lemurs to climb. Five species of lemur will go inside: ring-tailed, black, black-and-white-ruffed, collared and mongoose. The blacks and ring-taileds are currently sharing an enclosure in the walled garden, and the black-and-white-ruffeds are in the quarantine area. The exhibit will also feature Madagascar teal, a species of tree duck and radiated tortoises. It looks similar to Edinburgh's walk-through Alaotran lemur exhibit but on a much bigger scale.
The walled garden was looking superb and the recently refurbished tropical house looked very impressive too. Much more 'immersive' than Twycross's recent effort for something of comparable size. Recent arrivals in the walled garden include Alaotran gentle lemurs and jaguarundi. For those hornbill fans out there, they keep a pair of great indian hornbills and a pair of crowned hornbills. You can get much closer to the great indians here than at Chester, for example, really impressive birds at close range.
The large aviary between the walled garden and the house currently houses black stork, black-crowned night heron, little egret, hamerkop and waldrapp ibis. In the pheasant aviaries one of the white-cheeked touracos had escaped and was flying around in the tree directly above the enclosure.
Apart from the lemurs already mentioned, the primate collection comprises siamang, white-handed gibbon, squirrel monkey, spider monkey, emperor tamarin, cotton-top tamarin, red-handed tamarin and pygmy marmoset. It would be great if Cotswold could acquire one of the great ape species in the future.
There was a bit of renovation work going on in the reptile house too - some of the displays were boarded up.