Part 1: Entrance and Heart of Africa
Turning into the Zoo's parking lot from Jan Smuts Ave. you enter a 2-leveled parking lot, with sensors above the spaces indicating whether it is open or not by red and green lights.
In the left-top corner of the parking lot lies the Entrance, on which a gift shop has recently been added, Paying the 110 Rand entrance fee ($7,50) you enter immediately seeing the most unneeded part of the zoo. An "amusement park" with carousals and mini-rollercoasters, by the state of these machines, they clearly aren't often used making them affectively useless to the zoo.
Here you have two options turn left, or right. Left will take you to the "Heart of Africa" a central african themed area, right will take you to "Amazonia" a south-american themed area.
Turning left, you will have two simple fence enclosures with a large piles of rocks in the middle, these contain barbary sheep and Marabou stork, respectively.
Continuing straight, you find a row of large aviaries with hideously green mesh.
These contain Blue Crane, Marabou Stork, Red Duiker, Wattled Crane, Saddle-billed stork and Southern Ground Hornbill.
On your immediate left you can turn into a dead-end path, with two overgrown exhibits for Wattled Crane and 4 small aviaries for parrots: Senegal Parrot, Sulphur-crested Cockatoo, Blue-fronted Amazon, Major Mitchell's Cockatoo and Black-winged Jardine. If you look through the holes of a wooden fence you might spot a backstage exhibit for Southern Ground Hornbill.
Back on the main path, you find a large steel aviary, which once housed Siamang, now houses Mantled Guereza! This beautiful exhibit, with a mock rock waterfall and many climbing opportunities, is a perfect home for these african primates.
Scaling the slope next to Guereza enclosure, takes you to a large thatch building overlooking the Western Lowland Gorilla enclosure, This spacious well planted exhibit is home to a 34 year-old lone silverback named Makoko, The zoo is on a waiting list to receive a female.
Exiting the building, down the slope, offers you one last view into the enclosure via a glass window.
Averting from the main path you follow a road with precious gardens on one side and large primate exhibits on the right, these are beautifully planted with large enriching climbing frames.
They contain: Diana Monkey, Mona Monkey, Black-rested Mangabey, Red-tailed Geunon, DeBrazza's Monkey and L'Hoest's Monkey.
All these enclosures also have viewable indoor exhibits of similar size.
Across from these exhibits, is a large building, with a orange concrete exterior. This is the Western Chimpanzee indoor building. It's rock walls and and pebble flooring provide a wonderful atmosphere as if walking through a zoo in the early 1900s.
The relation to the 1900s stops at the exhibits itself, they are tall with many climbing frames, and enrichment opportunities.
There are five of these indoor enclosures, two of them having once been home to sumatran orangutans.
Exiting the building, you can turn immediately left onto a small dead-end boardwalk over a water moat, on one side is a medium sized, well-planted, enclosure with tall orange concrete walls, with patterns of plants and and swirls carved into them. This exhibits contained Sumatran Orangutans until 2015 when the last one died, nowadays it is used as separation for the Chimps.
One the other side of the moat is a sneak peak into the large Chimpanzee enclosure, which we will be revisiting later.
Leaving the boardwalk, you turn onto a path known as the "cat walk" it, which is rather out of placed in this section. Firstly is a rather uninteresting enclosure for meerkats which we'll be moving on from to the small mammal enclosures, these enclosures for carnivorans and small mammals are very large and tall, with much foliage and wooden platforms for climbing. Each of them have indoor viewing and outdoor glass-viewing.
They contain: Fennec fox, Margay, Cape Porcupine, Honey badger, Black-footed Cat, African Wild Cat, Caracal, Ring-tailed lemur and DeBrazza's Monkey.
Turning towards the bird-of-prey sector, you are met with a 1900s style bearpit, which once contained Polar Bears and Snowy owls but now contain Nepalese Red Pandas, this exhibit is definitely not suited for Red Pandas and, seeing that it provides no sun and has no foliage whatsoever.
It would be good if the pandas returned to their previous home in the Carnivore rows.
Past the red panda pit, you see 3 enormous aviaries containing Verreaux's eagle, King Vulture, Cape Vulture and White-backed vulture.
The King Vulture aviary once contained Andean Condor which have since moved to Lory Park Zoo.
At the back of these exhibits you'll see the huge enclosure for Pygmy Hippos, which is more like a English garden then a hippo exhibit, I personally love this style but it is not the most natural, though the controversy it does provide the only underwater hippo viewing in the country. Across from the Pygmy hippos is a beautifully planted exhibit for Dwarf Crocodile. Next to this exhibit is the entrance to the reptile house which we will be visiting in the next part.
Backtracking a bit you reach a spacious lawn with an exhibit for Prevost's Squirrel in the middle of it.
Across from the lawn is the restaurant next the Chimpanzee Exhibit, The restaurant seating provides beautiful views into the Chimp enclosure, via huge glass windows.
Moving left, into a roofed over viewing area, of the gigantic chip exhibit, with large prettily carved orange-concrete walls, it is not the most natural chimp enclosure in the world, but is definitely one of the most beautiful exhibits of it's kind.
Across from the Exhibit, is a small aviary for chattering lourie and a outdoor exhibit for African bullfrog as well as a research and breeding centre for Pickergill's Reedfrog.
Following the path back from we're you came you turn right to a rather unimpressive, Cape Clawless Otter enclosure, It is small, uninteresting, with a tiny mock-rock pool.
Back to the large lawn we enter a forested area known as "The Forest floor" Here lives European Wild boar, Sitatunga, Blue-winged Kookaburra and a male mountain bongo, who has returned to the zoo after not being on display for 3 weeks (I presumed he was dead, until I saw him in late March).
Climbing onto a boardwalk you get a great view of the Bongo Exhibit on one side and the Kookaburra exhibit on the other, At the end of the boardwalk is the European Wild Boar enclosure which once held red rive hogs.
Getting off the boardwalk, you are confronted by a large pond, which is home to a mute swan family, across from them is the Exhibit for Sitatunga, It is natural and large with a spacious water feature.
That's it for the first part of this tour and review! I will be covering the Spice Route section and the reptile house in the next part.
Thank you all for reading!