Isle Of Wight

Shorts

Well-Known Member
15+ year member
The week before last I was lucky enough to spend a week on the delightful Isle of Wight (ten miles, twenty minutes and thirty years away as one ZooChat member once succinctly and perfectly put it). Obviously I visited all the major animal collections on the island (sorry butterfly farms and tiny aquariums and bird of prey centres don't do it for me) so I thought it appropriate to post a few thoughts and updates relating to them.

I also visited Marwell on the way down but I'm saving my thoughts on that for another day/post (my home internet's down at the moment and I've drove twenty miles to work to do a little work and a lot of ZooChat catch-up reading and need to leave soon to meet my wife for lunch).

Isle Of Wight Zoo
Enclosure-wise there seemed to be no major changes since my last visit three year's ago but there has been ongoing improvements to current enclosures which are still in progress. If you've never visited the place before it's like a more dynamic and larger (enclosure and probably area-wise) version of Linton with a couple of elaborately designed/themed enclosures thrown in. It has a certain rustic charm (I've got a soft spot for the place) and the animals there always seem fairly active (especially the primates, despite seeing them for years at Twycross I've never seen Spider Monkeys interact and vocalise so much before). The labelling here is comprehensive and good There's a nice new, large, Meerkat enclosure which is shared with Crested Porcupines -it's probably the largest enclosure for the latter species I can recall in the UK. They've now got a fairly sizable lemur collection (Ring-tailed, B&W Ruffed, Red Ruffed, Black, Mongoose, Brown White-fronted & Grey Mouse. New species wise they've added Racoon and, saving the best till last, a Geoffroys Cat which was completely elusive over two visits and is apparently a seizure.

Seaview Wildlife Encounter
It's not really changed in three years except there are now even less fractionally interesting species than before. On the plus size they still have three species of flamingoes (Lesser, Chilean and a large, breeding, Caribbean group) and super friendly wallabies in their hands-on feeding demonstration.

Amazon World
It's fairly recently acquired a chunk of adjoining land and this seems to have spurred improvements all around the place (which is good as on my last visit (three years ago) there was negligible change from my previous visit two or three years earlier and the place needed change). There's still some way to go but I can't fault a place with below average enclosures that shows momentum and change. Switching to bullet points for speed (don't wanna be late for lunch):

1. 9 Banded Armadillos no longer held :(:mad:;
2. Prehensile Tailed Porcupines not on show (didn't ask if still hold);
3. Desert Zone has effectively become an Armadillo (only) House :) housing 3 Banded, 6 Banded, Greater Hairy and Lesser Screaming Hairy (sod's law, last one a no-show over 2 visits and multiple viewing attempts);
4. They seem down to three Plains Vischaca (larger than I remembered which are very difficult to see in the glass-fronted enclosures at the side of the Desert Zone;
5. Sloth carrying youngster;
6. Old (very poor) otter enclosure has been knocked into an adjacent enclosure (still not massive) and includes a bizarre mix of birds (flamingos, ibis, night herons, oyster catchers, stilt);
7. In new grounds were the following:
a. Mixed South American exhibit (including usual suspects (Tapir, Rhea, Capybara) and a pair of (no show) Paca;
b. Red Panda enclosure (reminiscent of Banham's, perhaps a tad smaller);
c. Meerkat enclosure (backing onto Red Panda enclosure with similar sized "footprint";
d. Ruffed Lemur enclosure;
e. New (sorely needed) penguin pool -not yet opened, not huge but nicely designed and OKish;
f. New wallaby enclosure -not yet opened, wallabies in there "acclimatising" prior to walk-through experience"
8. Keeper told me the plan is to overhaul the Nocturnal Zone next.

Overall, still got some very nice species (though less than before) and good to see it moving forward.

Owl & Monkey Haven
This place is great and the one place I would recommend above the others to non-zoo people. It's all so well done, looks great and all the animals are active. Three or four new enclosures (including a particularly good one for Barbary Macaques) since I last visited (all good for their inhabitants) and plans afoot for further building per staff member I spoke with. The labelling is great and tells you information about both species and individual animals -I'd never picked up what langur meant before my visit:o. A nice touch is that a guide book is given as part of the entrance fee. Given enough visitors and funds this place could grow into something very special.

Hawk Conservancy
I know it's not "technically" in the Isle of Wight but thought it worthy of a mention as I visited on my journey home (and others may choose a similar option on route to/from the island). I'd never visited before and I was very impressed by the place, it's up there with the very best bird of prey places in the UK. It's got a great species selection, good enclosures, excellent demonstrations (one including a Secretary Bird, something I'd never been lucky enough to witness before, excellent) and a gift shop that only seems to stock merchandise relating to species held (I'm always moaning about places having stuffed animals they don't have:):o). Big news is they (frustrating for me) no longer hold the Great Bustards -they've gone to Birdworld (Farnham) for breeding purposes.

Sorry for spelling mistakes/poor grammar. Any questions?

Rushing to that lunch (late) now.
 
1. 9 Banded Armadillos no longer held :(:mad:;

Did you ask a keeper to ascertain this matter? On my last visit the 9-banded were unlabelled and sharing an enclosure with the Screaming.

2. Prehensile Tailed Porcupines not on show (didn't ask if still hold);

Last I heard, still in collection and sporadically breeding.

4. They seem down to three Plains Vischaca (larger than I remembered which are very difficult to see in the glass-fronted enclosures at the side of the Desert Zone;

Unless you saw only one adult, there may be more than three as I know twins were born a fortnight or so ago.

Owl & Monkey Haven
This place is great and the one place I would recommend above the others to non-zoo people. It's all so well done, looks great and all the animals are active. Three or four new enclosures (including a particularly good one for Barbary Macaques) since I last visited (all good for their inhabitants) and plans afoot for further building per staff member I spoke with. The labelling is great and tells you information about both species and individual animals -I'd never picked up what langur meant before my visit:o. A nice touch is that a guide book is given as part of the entrance fee. Given enough visitors and funds this place could grow into something very special.

I thoroughly agree with your sentiments on this collection :) do they still have the elderly Whiteside's Guenon?
 
Great Bustards.

Big news is they (frustrating for me) no longer hold the Great Bustards -they've gone to Birdworld (Farnham) for breeding purposes.

That is interesting news. Do you know how many the Hawk Trust still had? Probably not given they had gone.... Initially it was two adult males, including one called Fergus. One of these(not Fergus, it was a bird from captivity in Belgium of the Spanish race) later died, but then several more were added(presumably ones that got injured/not suitable, from the release Project).

Birdworld initially had a pair, and recently on their site advertised they had got a third, but no details are given about it. I wonder if this was a survivor from the Hawk Trust, the others having died, or from another source i.e. the release project.

It would be interesting to know how many the Hawk Trust still had before their move and consequently how many (three, or is it more now) are actually at Birdworld/Farnham now.

Birdworld are now heavily involved in the scheme and will be attempting to hatch eggs brought over, for later release. Presumably they hope to breed from the captive adults also.
 
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There was only one Great Bustard at the Hawk Conservancy last summer when I visited.
 
There was only one Great Bustard at the Hawk Conservancy last summer when I visited.

Thanks. I guess this is the one that has now joined the two at Birdworld then.

I think the Hawk trust had 4-6 birds in all( but not all at the same time.) Maybe the others died- there was never any news they had been returned to the Project and as they were injured, they couldn't have been released.
 
Birdworld only has 1.1 Great Bustard on site (Nelson and Morgana). I don't think the Hawk Conservancy has had any Great Bustards since last September - November. It's true Birdworld are heavily involved in the project, and chicks are being hatched and sent to GBG for eventual release.
 
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Did you ask a keeper to ascertain this matter? On my last visit the 9-banded were unlabelled and sharing an enclosure with the Screaming.

Yes, spoke to keeper during 3 Banded Armadillo presentation.

Last I heard, (Prehensile Tailed Porcupines) still in collection and sporadically breeding.

That's very good (if true) but unfortunately not much use to visitors if offshow. Have any youngsters survived, do they still hold them or have they been transferred out?

Unless you saw only one adult (Plains Viscacha), there may be more than three as I know twins were born a fortnight or so ago.

That is brilliant news, I just wish this great species were displayed better.

I thoroughly agree with your sentiments on this collection (OWl & Monkey Haven) :) do they still have the elderly Whiteside's Guenon?

Yes (though labelled as Red-tailed Guenon).
 
Birdworld only has 1.1 Great Bustard on site (Nelson and Morgana). I don't think the Hawk Conservancy has had any Great Bustards since last September - November.

Birdworld's website definately says they were joined by a third bird (no other details given) If its not there now I wonder what has happened to it.
 
@Shorts do you have any pictures of your IOW zoo tour? Particularly interested in the developments at amazon world.

Thanks
 
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