Islands Impressions.
My first visit to Chester for many years, since soon after ROTRA was opened in fact. It was time to see everything again(which I did) but Islands was of course the main draw. Just a few personal comments;
I think these type of 'immersive'(sorry Alan/GentleLemur) exhibits are, like the London Lions, going to be seen more and more in our zoos from now on-whether you like them or not, they are the new style. Overall I thought the Islands concept is a good one but I was not so sure about a few things in its execution.
1. It is almost a zoo within itself. The miles of winding pathways must be hard on families with small children with such long distances for them to walk between exhibits, particularly as they will have already walked a long way to reach this area of the zoo.
2. The Boatride- I did it because you could walk straight on- I wouldn't have waited and I saw the signs giving the waiting times on busy days.

After waiting 45 minutes for a 15 minute boat ride you might be a bit fed up as you only have about a couple minutes' worth of actually viewing animals,(warty pigs,banteng, cassowary,tigers,orangutans,macaques- did I miss anything else?) and only then a few seconds going past each, that's provided they are both outside and near the moats/boats. From the boat I only saw(briefly)three species, the Banteng, Tigers and a single Orangutan- so more than good animal viewing it might perhaps serve more as a novelty or pleasant cooling break on a long or hot day's zoo visit.
3. Monsoon House- I liked this part the best. The Orang outdoor enclosures are truly enormous and I wonder how much they will get used. No wonder the live oak tree in one of them has hardly been touched yet. The Orangs I saw outside were on the ground of course.

The indoor areas are superfangled updated versions of Rotra and the old house before that- I liked these a lot but again the viewing windows seem to allow for only relatively small numbers of people at a time to get a good view, which I think at busy times will prove to be an exhibit design fault they have rather replicated again.
I particularly liked the Grosbeak starlings in the Bird area.
The Gharial viewing area seems to create a traffic jam. The Entrance /Exit one way system is obviously designed, as in the other/rest of the zoo houses, to allow free movement flow of visitors but also means to see something again you have to walk miles around( or disobey the signs!)
Someone commented there is now so much to see at Chester its almost impossible to do it all in a day. I think that with the addition of Islands that must be increasingly true, particularly for families with children. I visited all parts of the zoo, including Islands, twice each during the day but was pretty exhausted afterward!