As always, a very thoughtful post, containing a great deal of good sense.
I visited Marwell very soon after it opened. I remember being excited by the herds of Grevy's zebras and scimitar horned oryx, and I am delighted that they are still flourishing.
Without wanting to put words into your mouth, this feels like an articulation of the feeling that Marwell has somehow betrayed its roots. It was, in the past, different, and spectacular, and those of us who visited in the 70s and 80s (such as Pipaluk, above) may feel that the zoo has now become rather more ordinary than was once the case.
My criticism would be that the other species seem fairly incidental alongside the cats and ungulates: just a few birds, some lemurs, marmosets and monkeys (and the siamangs), a few reptiles and a few small carnivores.
Wholly agree. A real lurch in the wrong direction came when those cages were put on the back lawn for marmosets in the late 80s. They looked amateur and half-hearted (and still do!), and added nothing to the "Marwell experience". Also, the (now thankfully gone) concrete open-pit thing for meerkats (and, once, skunks and I think dwarf mongooses) near the tigers - just so badly done. Always reminded me of the puddings in an Indian restaurant - there because someone felt they should be, rather than because anybody wants them or knows what to do with them - and consequently pretty grim.
Unfortunately even the nicest species can be very hard to see, it's quite possible to find the snow leopards lying doggo, the lemurs and fossas asleep, the ocelots and sand cats invisible and the okapi in their stalls.
This isn't their fault, I suppose - although the choice of species might make such inactivity inevitable.
a few need to go - particularly the bat shack.
Again, wholly agree. The bat enclosure is quite appalling as a visitor experience, and does nothing to discourage the "bats are gross" response from 99% of the public. I cannot see any way at all in which this exhibit has any merit. I wouldn't expect Marwell to be emulate Chester, but 80 miles along the coast, at Drusillas, is a very nice bat exhibit which works very well.
I think that the entrance area and the 'Australian' area need spicing up with alternative species, preferably active ones, and more imaginative displays.
Alan
The entrance area has long been a dog's breakfast. The gate itself is particularly uninviting, and the immediate prospect upon passing through it (many pounds lighter!) is pretty unattractive. In the past there was a rather nasty little "fun" (sic) park on the left, and then the old cafe - amongst the worst in any zoo, anywhere (and that's quite some claim). The penguins then follow - very nice, although needs some rebooting, I think, and then that long straight road, with, on the right, a pretty featureless paddock featuring capybara and flamingoes behind several thousand wire fences. I'm losing the will to live by this stage. There was talk, once, I believe, of re-alligning the zoo and having the entrance elsewhere. Does anyone know if this is / was a serious prospect?
And as for the Australia thing.... Blimey, it's bad. Poor, thoughtless design; unimaginative species held; a cafe called "Bushtucker Bites", which is oh-so-wrong in oh-so-many ways.
I thought the African Valley was one of the nicest parts, but felt that there could have been more in it.
For what it's worth, I think the problem here is one of unrealised potential (as is the case for much of the park). Viewing of the whole 'valley' is quite limited, and much of it is from the terrace of the cafe (and this isn't massively capacious). A properly designed and landscaped pathway, enabling carefully-managed views into the enclosure, would be needed to lift this enclosure from the humdrum, I feel.
Ive only been a couple of times, but I went round the whole lot in less than 2 hours (I'm usually an opening till closing person).
Much as I'm disappointed by Marwell, I
do think it'd take more than two hours to walk around. Mind you, this is to damn it with faint praise, perhaps. How is the zoo? Well, it
did take four hours to get around....