Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust Jersey Zoo

Hiya all,

This year Durrell celebrated their 50th anniversary, the main website (which doesn't seem to be linked so far!?!) is the best place to find out what we've been doing, Wiki, is somewhat lacking!!!

Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust - Protecting Endangered Animals Worldwide

You can also see Blog updates into insitu conservation efforts, this feature is relatively new but a fantastic means of bringing our work to the masses, and has proven incredibly popular so far :)

Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust ? Official Blog
 
JerseyLotte, a question to you, has the new aviary for Madagascan birds opened yet?

P.S Welcome to zoochat.
 
Hiya :)

No it hasn't and when building work does begin it will be a major build operation so I would imagine something of a wait before seeing that one come to fruition :)
Due to the site geography work has to take place in a particular order, freeing up areas for the next stage of work.

2009 has brought us "Discovery Desert" the new Meerkat Exhibit with Cape Porcupines and Mongoose. Situated between the Entrance to the Herp house and the Dodo restaurant.
The new Red River Hogs exhibit also opened behind/next to the Gorilla house.

Work is currently taking place in the Walled Garden area next to the manor house to create a new lemur and bird area :)
 
JerseyLotte;229824 The new Red River Hogs exhibit also opened behind/next to the Gorilla house. [/QUOTE said:
Is this a temporary exhibit. i.e. are Jersey still planning to build a 'Bai' style exhibit with mixed species and will the Red River Hogs be mixed with(or just kept near)the Gorillas then?

Have you got a male Red River Hog yet?

Is there any sign of any current breeding in the Gorilla group at all?
 
Is this a temporary exhibit. i.e. are Jersey still planning to build a 'Bai' style exhibit with mixed species and will the Red River Hogs be mixed with(or just kept near)the Gorillas then?

Have you got a male Red River Hog yet?

Is there any sign of any current breeding in the Gorilla group at all?

My apologies, I'm unable to answer about current breeding with the Gorillas for the simple fact, I haven't a clue! I work in Herps :)

As for the Hogs enclosure. I'd guess that it is as suggested previously a semi temporary enclosure, it is fairly large and looks to be a versatile enclosure that could indeed be used in many ways in the future.

Lola and Lara proved to be a slightly nervous pair to begin with as expected, a male was always going to be a later addition once the females had had a chance to settle in :)

Patience my friends! :D I often think the tedious nature of export/import planning, permits, CITES permits, transport arrangements and then quarantining time is forgotten by excited zoo lovers ;) It was only 2008 when the plans were unveiled, I'm personally suprised we've done as much as this already! :D
 
Lola and Lara proved to be a slightly nervous pair to begin with as expected, a male was always going to be a later addition once the females had had a chance to settle in :)

Patience my friends! :D I often think the tedious nature of export/import planning, permits, CITES permits, transport arrangements and then quarantining time is forgotten by excited zoo lovers ;) It was only 2008 when the plans were unveiled, I'm personally suprised we've done as much as this already! :D

I can understand the import difficulties, especially to an island like Jersey. If you hear where a male is coming from eventually. I'd be interested.
 
Didn't want a new thread for this, so I thought it could go here: The website now has webcams to view the fruit bats and the Kirindy forest exhibit (amongst others). It is interesting how unlike alot of zoo's the webcams dont particularly focus on the large and well-known animals (that being said there is a meerkat cam):

Durrell Animal Webcams
 
There has been a lot of discussion on this thread about exactly which species Jersey Zoo/Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust has kept in the past. Having made a special study of this subject over many years, I can certainly confirm that the zoo has kept Chimpanzees, both African and Asiatic Lions, penguins (African Black-footed and Humboldt) and Cheetah - but never elephants! Over the years I have compiled a long, long species list in which I have tried to date exactly when the first individual of each species arrived and when the last individual died or was sent away - no easy task. The list is not complete (I'm having great difficulty finding any references to what fish species were kept in the early Sixties - yes, Jersey Zoo did have a small aquarium at one time) and some of the dates are only approximations, but I'm happy to share the results of my researches with anyone interested. I have thought of publishing it, but am hesitant while it is still a work in progress, even though some of the dates (particularly some of the "exit" dates) may never be known.
 
Hello zooman64,
Your project is a commendable one and I really appreciate it since I have a personal interest in it. Actually I was obsessed with this subject at one point of time and had a record of all the animals mentioned in Gerald Durrell's books.

A lot of the old animals are mentioned in Gerald Durrell's book Menagerie Manor. Apart from the animals you mention, Jersey Zoo had a Mynah called Tuppence(Maybe it was a Common Mynah?)

Chimpanzees yes, one of them reportedly threw a handful of excreta at David Attenborough.(Lulu and Chumley). Lions of course, the famous Leo of Menagerie Manor. Cheetah yes. Woolly Monkeys. Guinea Pigs(as mentioned in Menagerie Manor).

They had a couple of Binturongs too. Also two Gharials. Geoffroy’s Cat.

Indeed Jersey Zoo had an aquarium when they started, this has also been written by Gerald Durrell.

Some other interesting animals they had : Snow Leopards, Fonga and Stasik, Malabar Giant Squirrel Milicent and Black and White Colobus Monkeys.

They had Galapagos Giant Tortoises. Volcano Rabbits. Babirusas. One Capuchin Monkey(Brown Capuchin I think he was) who lived for more than 30 years. The Brazilian Tapirs of course, Claudius and Claudette. Peccaries Juan and Juanita. Barbary Macaques. Dingoes. Flying Squirrels.

You are right, they never had elephants but their USA trust was involved in supporting some Asian Elephant work in india.

You may be interested to know that a friend of mine named Pradipta Ray from Kolkata is a great Gerald Durrell expert. He has reviewed many of his books including the Douglas Botting biography. Also written on Edward Whitley who wrote the book 'Gerald Durrell's Army'. I met Edward Whitley and his family in 1999.

I was in regular touch with their education officer Philip Coffey as a young Dodo Club member. I also met the old boys of Durrell : Jeremy(Malllinson), John(Hartley), Simon(Hicks) and Tony(Allchurch).

Gerald Durrell came to Kolkata in 1978 with a Greek animal welfare worker named Alexandra Mayhew. They visited the zoo and Durrell talked at the British Council. Many of my colleagues attended the talk. He went to Assam and Meghalaya and wanted Pygmy Hogs.(He did not get them, one pair was sent to Zurich Zoo). He also visited Bhutan.

There is an unconfirmed report that Gerald Durrell came to India sometime in the 1960s with a German animal dealer named Heini Demmer and visited India's oldest zoo in Kolkata called Marble Palace Zoo(I have visited this place and it is a private property). But I doubt he came to India anytime apart from 1978. Also, the place where he was born has no memorial to him whatsoever, Jamshedpur. The director of Jamshedpur Zoo is a former colleague of mine, I have requested him to look into the possibility of building a memorial to him in Jamshedpur Zoo, he is considering the proposal.

It appears that Jersey has dropped the word 'zoo' from their institution. Gerald Durrell's books have been republished by Westland publishers and there was a 'Gerald Durrell' festival last month organised by Crossword Bookstore.

My obituary of Gerald Durrell as published as a school student in 1995 in The Statesman in Kolkata was reproduced in 'Solitaire' their newsletter last year.

I have also written a short memoir of my time in Jersey as part of a book. also have read a lot of the work of his former Curator of Mammals Stefan Ormrod, who wrote the book 'The Last Great Wild Beast Show' with Bill Jordan.

I recently got hold of some unpublsihed photographs of Gerald Durrell during his first British Cameroons expedition with Kenneth Smith. Have read his brother Lawrence Durrell too although he is a bit heavy.

It is a pity I could not meet Gerald Durrell and very unfortunate he died in such agony. He would have lived longer had he led a more temperate lifestyle. My favourite Gerald Durrell picture is the one where he is surrounded by Ring Tailed Lemurs and Ruffed Lemurs.(Cover of the SAFE campaign : Save Animals From Extinction).

My project leader Rob Laidlaw of Zoocheck Canada has also been to Jersey and has mentioned the place in his book 'Wild Animals in Captivity'.


I also met Jersey's former director Mark Stanley Price who was in New Delhi last year. He was part of the 'Compassionate Conservation' conference organised by WildCRU of Oxford University and Born Free Foundation two weeks ago. I interviewed both Mark Stanley Price and Lee Durrell for my Masters thesis on British zoos for the University of Westminster in 2004.
 
This was my tribute to Gerald Durrell in The Statesman, an abridged version of which was published in 'Solitaire' last year.

Missing Gerry

When a normal child studies in class IV or V, there are endless squabbles over who is going to read a Hardy Boys, a Famous Five, an Asterix or a Tintin but when I was that age I could not be bothered to read them, because I knew what I was going to do. I was going to read a book about animals.

I have been fascinated by animals ever since I can remember and I got to know of Gerald Durrell from a Bengali book. Since that day I yearned to read his books and I really pined when I could not lay my hands on them. My first meeting with Durrell took place in the school library(how well I remember it) when a friend handed me a copy of Three Singles to Adventure. The joy of having a Gerald Durrell in my hands! I kissed the book, held it firmly between my hands and ran about muttering to myself.

On reaching home, once the tutor had left, I jumped at the book. I had the joy of journeying to British Guyana with my hero. I went past magical rain forests full of birds and beasts of every colour and description and embarked on the collecting spree. I was with Durrell when he caught teguxins(a sort of lizard), sloths, eels, iguanas(another sort of lizard), and of course, Amos, the Giant Anteater.

Seven days seemed too short a period with Durrell but that was the introduction to a friend – who would be my hero, mentor, guru and guide for the next six years until death put an end to our strange and wonderful relationship on Tuesday, January 31, 1995.

As I grew up, to the consternation of my parents and relatives my interest in animals, far from abating grew stronger by the day and with it grew the friendship with Gerald Durrell. No school exercise book could remain free from my ministrations and any blank space had to be filled with my hero’s name. I slowly got hold of more Durrell books and my addiction grew. I made friends with many other colourful characters as well ; the Magenpies(magpies), Roger(his dog), Ulysses(the Scops Owl) and Quasimodo(the pigeon) in My Family and Other Animals, Hiawatha(the Hoopoe) and Esmerelda(the Dormouse) in The Garden of the Gods, Trumpy(The Grey Winged Trumpeter), Claudius(the Tapir), Leo(The Lion), Whiskers(the Emperor Tamarin) and Binty(The Binturong) in Menagerie Manor., Nandi, Npongo, Jambo(all Gorillas) and Oscar(the Orang Utan) in the Stationary Ark. The list is endless and includes humans like Larry, Leslie, Margo and Mother(My Family and Other Animals), Coco(The Whispering Land) and others.

Gerald Durrell wrote some books which shifts the focus from animals to human beings. Who can forget the hilarious Fillets of Plaice, or The Picnic and Suchlike Pandemonium? Being reminded of Mr Romilly or his girlfriend Ursula provides heart chuckling pleasure. I feel that Gerald Durrell portrayed the human race as and how it looked to him and did not try to make it fall into his own line of thought. Perhaps that is what made his books so enjoyable. His last book, Marrying off Mother, was sentimental but it still provides us with a fine picture of human nature. He not only loved animals but enjoyed life and wanted us to enjoy it with him.

Then I got a new English teacher whom I regarded as an inexhaustible supplier of Gerald Durrell books. She is one of the very few teachers with compassion and understanding. I had one more dream to fulfil that was to get associated with his zoo, the Jersey Wildlife Preservation Trust. That dream was realized in October, 1991. Since then the bonds between us strengthened and have not loosened with his death. He is really a part of me. Gerry, the little boy in golden Corfu, I hope you can hunt for dung beetles in heaven.
31 March, 1995, VOICES, The Statesman in School.
 
That's the crux of it- a rather innaccessable location. Jersey has always been an expensive place to get to- things don't seem to have changed any. In retrospect it wasn't an ideal place for Durrell to start his Zoo. Originally he wanted to locate it in Bournemouth (where his family lived) but he was turned down- bad mistake by the Council as the town could have benefited hugely from the fame/prestige angle. Bournemouth's loss was Jersey's gain but it hasn't done the zoo any favours being where it is.

This is a very valid statement but at one point of time I believe Jersey actually gained from the location. Having lived there for three months, I could see the geographical constraints. Most British tourists nowadays prefer places like Majorca because they give more value for money. Gerald Durrell is no longer there and public perceptions of zoos are changing in UK, something which Durrell himself recognised in his later years.
 
Gerald Durrell's life celebrated in India :

Eunice de Souza has introduced many to the delights of the English language and writes on books, reading and writing
Gerald Durrell’s zoo story

The writer was not just a gifted story-teller but a major force in wildlife conservation and even established his own zoo

Eunice de Souza

Posted On Wednesday, September 15, 2010 at 06:36:52 PM

In his introduction to The Ark’s Anniversary, Gerald Durrell writes, “I do not think it possible for many people at the age of six to be able to predict their future with any accuracy. However, at that age I felt confident enough to inform my mother that I intended to have my own zoo and, moreover, I added magnanimously, I would give her a cottage in the grounds to live in. If my mother had been an American parent, she would probably have rushed me to the nearest psychiatrist…”

Gerald Durrell?s zoo story, Specials - Views - Bangalore Mirror,Bangalore Mirror
 
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I am surprised, having had a look at the Jersey Zoo website, how few animals they seem to keep nowadays.

I haven't visited for about 10 years (last time I was on the island), but it seems to have shrunk even further, and then it had decreased from my previous visit.

I was told by someone who visited this year how disappointed they were.

It seems a shame that a lot of species have been dropped-I'm not suggesting Jersey should be an ABC zoo, but surely a few charismatic species will increase the visitors through the gates? And God knows, there are enough endangered ones to choose from!

Is the contraction a sign of the recession or something else? Comments invited.
 
It was a mistake to get rid of the Snow Leopards and Cheetahs a few ago back. Whilst it is true the Zoo/Trust brought in some Maned Wolves at about the same time, these aren't are charismatic or "showy". That said, I do think the collection is more diverse and interesting than it has been for many years. The place now has Red River Hogs and has greatly increased its collection of passerines. I haven't seen the new Kirindy Forest exhibit in the walled garden yet (hope to soon), but it sounds very good. The Jewels of the Forest walk-through aviary is excellent. It is a shame though that many of the arrivals in the last ten to fifteen years have been of species which are not particularly rare, viz. Ring-tailed Coatis, Short-clawed Otters, Meerkats (is there an unwritten law somewhere that states an animal collection open to the public must have Meerkats?), Yellow Mongooses, Crested Porcupines, et al. The Black Howlers, again not in imminent danger of extinction, are a good attraction.
 
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