Good/bad guidebooks and labelling

SHAVINGTONZOO

Well-Known Member
10+ year member
This should prove controversial! :)

Thoughts on what makes a good guidebook; what makes good labelling.

My two all-time favourite guidebooks are:

Regents Park c.1964 - more of a text book than a guidebook but taught me an awful lot about the principles of taxonomy, which is a good starting point for any understanding of the natural world.

Edinburgh c.late 80s (I think) - combined descriptions of species (and the threats they faced) accompanied by outlines of how they were managed at Edinburgh. A good combination of species description together with what you would see on the day.

What don't I like? The guidebook which is basically "some colour photos of some ABC animals we may - or may not - have, captioned with Name; Scientific Name; Diet; Number of young; Gestation" or similar. Has anybody ever been inspired to a lifetime interest by a childhood discovery that the gestation length of species A is 76 days, but only 64 days for species B? Thought not ...

I'll turn to labelling in a separate post.
 
P.S. I also had a fondness for the old Chester arrangement of a traditional guidebook allied to a monthly Zoo News containing ... news ... and a couple of feature articles.
 
I just want a good guide book from Chester! I only have the Cotswold and Whipsnade guide books so something along the lines of them would be nice but I think Cotswold's book with it's talk about the history of the zoo mixed with a more modern style could work greatly for Chester!
 
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