Lafone
Well-Known Member
I am surprised that given the biographies above, there would be any expectation that any of the above would be known beyond Britian.
Attenborough may be famous today, but as a child I knew him from two volumes of Zoo Quest in the local library. I found him less engaging than Durrell.
Scott I knew of through reading Durrell, and from reading about Slimbridge in various zoo books.
I was aware of the Norfolk Wildlife Park and the Pheasant Trust (I kept pheasants) and given the context Wayre's name is familiar.
Yes, now you mention it, I have seen Keeling mentioned around here, but not in threads I have followed intensively.
The others are completely new to me. Not that they don't sound like interesting characters.
For me growing up it was names like Fleay, Worrell, Serventy, Pizzey and Butler, amongst others, who thrilled and inspired me. At various times, they would all have been household names in Australia. Not, of course, that I would have expected you to be aware of any of them.
I would be surprised if some of them were known in the U.K. except among people with particular interest in this as a subject, though no doubt they did good and indeed influential things.
With TV channels being far more limited in the past than now some people of an age would have a recognition of some programme on Anglia TV (a regional channel) but even then it would be fairly niche.
I’m also a fan of the equestrian sport of eventing and could name amazingly influential people in the sport (men and women) that despite Olympic medals and an degree of global attention I doubt people would have heard of. Attenborough and Scott scale up to a level lots of regional people don’t. But the regional people are still influential it just shouldn’t be a shock few people know about them.
If you have an interest in these things they would be more known of course but even then someone running a local trust and commenting on sheep herding isn’t really a global thing. If you’re an age to have known about ‘one man and his dog’ then more so but even then I’d suspect not many people would be able to name the commentators.
You certainly see more about Scott at the WWT venues themselves particularly Slimbridge where there are free tours of his house and lots of interesting signage about his tower bird hide etc. But the trust spends as much and more time talking about the environment and wetlands and the amazing wildlife and it’s importance - in my mind rightly so. The organisation is more than its founder. Or it would have died with him.
On the wider subject of this thread there’s a reason Jersey zoo rebranded and that’s because Durrell as a personality cannot be the only thing used to appeal to a modern audience. Not to discount his contribution of course. Given it did so in 2017 it seems a bit strange to be still debating it or suggesting it’s novel to have done it.
There isn’t such a hard link between his personality and attraction in the case of the zoo any more and there’s a bit of ‘not like in my day’ going on to imagine it would be a driver. And it’s true it isn’t like it was but to carry on it needs to make itself a modern attraction. If there aren’t enough tourists (and let’s face it they are also not going to make a great deal of money from fans of zoos and Durrell who haven’t visited for 10 years) then there’s probably a fundamental question on how they make the zoo pay as a local destination and whether that’s achievable. That’s the task facing the management team. I don’t think the Durrell name alone cuts through, though the conservation message is fantastic.
Most zoos make a lot of their money from people with kids going for a day out. And that’s who they need to get through the gates in the right volume. Obviously zoos have lots of missions but they can’t do them without funding. There are also corporates and sponsors and supporters etc and for them the Durrell name probably still has rightly strong associations that drive funding in and that’s a good thing (and a source many zoos don’t have) but it won’t be the first reason most people take their kids.