Thousands swing by at zoo - Edinburgh Evening News
Busiest day in 20 years at the zoo...thousands lining up to see the chimps!
Busiest day in 20 years at the zoo...thousands lining up to see the chimps!
Is that person serious do you think?
One comment left at the bottom of this really shocked me
I went to Edinburgh Zoo not that long ago. It was rubbish. The cages are all far too big with way too many plants and bushes etc hiding the exhibits. I could hardly see most of the animals. They should re introduce much smaller cages with bare concrete so we can all get a good view of them. And another thing. Most of the animals were asleep. The park wardens seem to have little to do so why aren't they poking the animals to keep them awake. Who wants to watch a sleeping Polar bear. If I wanted to watch a big fat white thing snoring, I could have stayed at home and looked at my wife.
Just proves how ignorant some people still are about zoos
Their presence tells us something interesting about zoos as a family recreation choice: that the working class hasn't quite got round to feeling dubious about them.
In the classic manual-labour nuclear family, zoos remain on the itinerary of acceptable awaydays and outings, along with safari parks and sea-life centres. Inheritors of Thomas Aquinas's idea that animals are food first and entertainment second, they just don't see the problem.
Further up the socioeconomic beanstalk, though, zoos have accrued something of the mark of Cain, considered to be amalgams of prisons and torture chambers.
I like this bit from the article...
stupid working class people, don't have the brains of the wealthy people to see what's right in front of their faces. Tut tut.
sounds like a joker to me. However, yes sadly, there are people that seriously think like that, even those you would think should know better. English aviculturist writer Clinton Keeling, who used to do a monthly zoo update in a bird magazine (can't remember its name off-hand), once wrote in all seriousness that he disliked the new-fangled tropical houses where you couldn't see the birds properly; he said he would rather see a return to the old-style museum-type displays where individual birds were housed in rows of bare cages, because it allowed one to appreciate the birds better!