Lets wait and see how they get on with the Tigers before we go jumping the gun with them getting Elephants!!!!!!!!!!!If they do get elephant were will they come from? the elephapt trade from asia and africa has basically stopped and theres no zoo with surplus elephants are their??
I really think this place could create serious competition problems for Bristol's new planned conservation park. The two places will be so close together and I wonder if Bristol and the surrounding area's population can support both, as well as Bristol Zoo. Noah's Ark may be tatty and with some poor planning etc but its already established and with the arrival of Tigers it could well take over as the main place to see big animals in the area. I'm sure it will also remain cheaper for a family to visit than the alternative(s) too.
Any photos or news on Giraffes? Surely they know about the Bengal-hybrid issue?
Thanks for the info though, did you get any pics?
I really think this place could create serious competition problems for Bristol's new planned conservation park. The two places will be so close together and I wonder if Bristol and the surrounding area's population can support both, as well as Bristol Zoo. Noah's Ark may be tatty and with some poor planning etc but its already established and with the arrival of Tigers it could well take over as the main place to see big animals in the area. I'm sure it will also remain cheaper for a family to visit than the alternative(s) too.
well its simple, weve mentioned on the big animals thread that a tiger,leopard, giraffe or sun bear enclosure could be somewhere elso on the bristol zoo sight
Much of what they have at Noah's Ark is designed for families with young children , the same group that seem to make up a large part of Bristol's customer-base , there are always push-chairs everywhere . Noah's Ark is not particularly cheap , £10.50 for adults , £8.50 aged 2 - 16 with small reductions for family groups . However groups of 100+ only pay £5.00 each !
Unless they import some pure Bengal tigers - though I do not know where these would come from - they will be breeding from the non-pure UK stock which the likes of West Midland SP call Bengals .
It sounds simple but I would bet you that Bristol Zoo will take no active measures to build new enclosures for larger animals on the existing Zoo site in order to actively compete with Noah's Ark. They will just ignore it and put any efforts in that direction into the new park, and that's still only in the planning stages.
So Noah's Ark have a head start as they've already got a wide range of large animals on show..
overall this place seems a mess, the enclosures seem poorly designed and built, the tiger plans are rediculous and the seem quite badly looke dta by the zoo community. how can they be taken seriously as a place of conservation and education when they plan to breed tigers of mixed subspecies is beyond me!![]()
ps haven't posted in a while and because of work and so might be rather absent for quite a while![]()
If the two zoos/parks are so close (Bristol and Noah's), wouldn't it make sense for them to form some sort of allience? At least that way they could swap expertise and benefit each other by sending people around (guests from NA to Bristol, guests from Bristol to NA).
Of course, in a dream world, Bristol Zoo could take over Noah's Ark and convert it into their planned Conservation Park![]()
As for Noah's Ark taking on hybrid tigers, it's not a bad thing unless they start misleading the public by claiming that they have pure Bengals and pure Siberians. The hybrids have got to go somewhere so they don't get in the way of pure bred breeding programmes; though places like NA are not experienced, at least by keeping the hybrids, Noah's Ark would be gaining said needed experience (hopefully) by keeping the hybrids, and doing other (more reknowned? reputable? conservation orientated?) zoos a favour by taking on the animals that are ineligible for breeding. We've just got to hope they've got space, tiger-proof fencing and sense.