Yep... work on Durrell Wildlife Camp is going full speed ahead, bookings are being taken now and the launch is being planned! It's really exciting!
That was the Lac Aloatran Gentle Lemurs going into the West side of 'Lemur Lake', the East side has black and white ruffed lemurs, some very comical ring tailed lemurs and the red fronted brown lemur 'Sam' that I posted a pic of to the Durrell gallery a while back.
To the rear of the lookout platform in the video will be some red ruffed lemurs, and on the public side of the fence the planters are full of wild strawberry plants - Lemur Lake is going to be an amazing place to sit and take pics. I really like that the gentle lemurs will have their own little 'marsh'!
There are two baby ring tails clinging to their mum in the Kirindy Forest exhibit, baby meerkats in 'Discovery Desert' too.
There's a few other things that I wish I could tell you, and later this year or possibly early next year there will be much more of a Durrell media presence in the UK if all goes to plan.
The Trust is more committed than ever to it's mission of saving species from extinction.
'Durrell Day' this year centres on an attempt to break the Guiness World Record for recycling the most aluminium cans in an 8 hour period. The money from the cans will be used to plant trees as part of the IPE/Durrell 'tree corridor' project - with the sincere hope that fragmented sections of Brazil's Atlantic rainforest can be 'connected' to allow black lion tamarin populations to find each other, and preserve some genetic diversity.
Tougher tree species will be used at the edges of forest fragments - 'green hugs' - to prevent desiccation effects, and further habitat loss. Every 50 cans will plant a tree, and it's hoped there will be 250,000 cans collected... so if you are in Jersey, please save your cans and take them up on the Sunday of Durrell Day weekend (14th and 15th of July).
Also, Chester Zoo are very lucky! They have some great former Durrell people on their way to them!