My Most Awesome World Zoo Tour

@Chlidonias and Zooish, thanks for the tips on birds - will look out for those species.

@Hix, thanks for that suggestion :D I looked up the book and it sounds really good. Don't think I can afford it at present however.

I have a couple more questions about the Singapore Night Safari: Can you walk on the tram roads or are they just for trams? Do the trams go quite slow and offer a decent view of the animals or am I likely to feel rushed? Are the Thamin visible from any walking tracks or just the tram? The Creatures of the Night show also appears to present a number of species not on display at the Night Safari, e.g. wolves, puma, raccoon, are these species held off-display or simply missing from the map?

Thanks for all you guys' help!
 
Welcome to Sweden

Very welcome to Sweden and Scandinavia. Unfortunately for you, many Swedish zoos stay closed during the upcoming winter (for example Parken Zoo, Borås Zoo and Kolmården) and do not open until April/May. Some of them tend to be open during the school holidays though, so you might be able to see a few of them after all. But there’s also many zoological attractions open all year round, mostly indoor institutions and zoos with native wildlife that cope with the cold.

Will you stay in one city for all three months and make out-and-back trips from there or will you travel around a lot?
 
Very welcome to Sweden and Scandinavia. Unfortunately for you, many Swedish zoos stay closed during the upcoming winter (for example Parken Zoo, Borås Zoo and Kolmården) and do not open until April/May. Some of them tend to be open during the school holidays though, so you might be able to see a few of them after all. But there’s also many zoological attractions open all year round, mostly indoor institutions and zoos with native wildlife that cope with the cold.

Will you stay in one city for all three months and make out-and-back trips from there or will you travel around a lot?

Hi Jodea, thank you for your welcome and interest:D

For the first month or so (December), we will be travelling around a lot, visiting Stockholm/Uppsala, Kiruna, Copenhagen and Malmo. During this month I hope to visit the Copenhagen Zoo and Skanes Animal Park. In Jan/Feb I hope to find a job, and work if possible, although I am not sure where in Sweden yet. The only other zoos I was planning on visiting in Sweden are Kolmarden and Boras, but I realise I will need to wait until the warmer months to see these. We plan on returning to Sweden later in 2012 so this should be fine. What other zoos would be open during December that you would recommend I visit, especially in Stockholm/Uppsala and around Malmo? Are there any other good zoos I should visit in the rest of Scandinavia?

Thanks for your help!
 
Well, you should not miss Skansen while you are in Stockholm. Technically Skansen isn’t a zoo, it’s an open air museum showing the ways of living in the past Sweden, but with a zoological part of the park with native fauna.

Of course you must visit Skansen Aquarium at the same time. It’s a private owned tropical house located within Skansens premises. Thus, an extra entrance fee is charged, but it’s definitely worth it. Despite the name the marine aquariums only makes up a smaller part of the collection which also contains many mammals (mostly smaller monkeys) and a lot of reptiles.

In Stockholm you will also find Aquaria Water Museum. A small but very nice aquarium.


Other good institutions I can recommend:

Nordens Ark. Located on the west coast. A great zoo which you have to visit. Focus on threatened species from the northern hemisphere and mountain areas.

Universeum. A large indoor science-center in Gothenburg with a zoological section with a big rainforest, aquariums and reptiles.

When you return later in the year you shouldn't miss Parken Zoo in Eskilstuna. It’s a relatively small zoo but with high quality. They focus on threatened species from South America, Asia and Africa.

Also Orsa Bear Park, Järvzoo, Tropikariet i Helsingborg might be considered.
 
Well, you should not miss Skansen while you are in Stockholm. Technically Skansen isn’t a zoo, it’s an open air museum showing the ways of living in the past Sweden, but with a zoological part of the park with native fauna.

Of course you must visit Skansen Aquarium at the same time. It’s a private owned tropical house located within Skansens premises. Thus, an extra entrance fee is charged, but it’s definitely worth it. Despite the name the marine aquariums only makes up a smaller part of the collection which also contains many mammals (mostly smaller monkeys) and a lot of reptiles.

In Stockholm you will also find Aquaria Water Museum. A small but very nice aquarium.


Other good institutions I can recommend:

Nordens Ark. Located on the west coast. A great zoo which you have to visit. Focus on threatened species from the northern hemisphere and mountain areas.

Universeum. A large indoor science-center in Gothenburg with a zoological section with a big rainforest, aquariums and reptiles.

When you return later in the year you shouldn't miss Parken Zoo in Eskilstuna. It’s a relatively small zoo but with high quality. They focus on threatened species from South America, Asia and Africa.

Also Orsa Bear Park, Järvzoo, Tropikariet i Helsingborg might be considered.

Thanks for that comprehensive reply Jodea, hopefully I will make it to at least a few of those places. Sorry I did not reply earlier, I have been very busy organising the trip and various other things I had to do before I left (graduation, etc).

I have now embarked on MAWZT, and have spent my first day in Singapore, where I visited the Underwater World and Dolphin Lagoon on Sentosa Island. Reasonable aquarium, a lot of interesting new species: horseshoe crabs, naultilus, spider crabs, jellyfishes, coconut crabs, gar, and many other fish. Vert-wise there were a few sea turtles, a 'rainbow python' outside to hold - and an albino version, don't know what species this was, the dolphins (accommodation and presentation very average), South American Fur Seals, and an unlabelled turtle that someone suggested was a 'snout turtle'. Will look up wikipedia soon on that and the python. Singapore Zoo and then Night Safari are on the agenda for tomorrow, YAY! Hopefully it doesn't rain too much. I have seen little wildlife, except one gecko, some mynas (Indian?), pigeons and some black birds that make an interestng cawing sound, but are smaller than the crows they semi-resemble (they probably are not crows at all, I really have no idea what they are). Anyway, bit jetlegged and want to be very ready for a full zoo day (and night!) tomorrow, so over and out.
 
Its been raining every single day in Singapore for the past month (monsoon season). Try to start the day early as it almost always rains in the late afternoon.

A little off-topic: If you're heading to Universal Studios, the Transformers 3D ride will be making its world premiere on Dec 3. In the days leading up, the ride will be selectively open to visitors for "technical rehearsals". Just in case you're interested ;)
 
zooboy28 said:
....some mynas (Indian?), pigeons and some black birds that make an interestng cawing sound, but are smaller than the crows they semi-resemble (they probably are not crows at all, I really have no idea what they are).
both common and Javan mynahs are common introduced birds throughout Singapore (basically commons are brown with a black head, Javans are black and grey with a small crest). The crows are house crows, again very common introduced birds there.
 
Its been raining every single day in Singapore for the past month (monsoon season). Try to start the day early as it almost always rains in the late afternoon.

A little off-topic: If you're heading to Universal Studios, the Transformers 3D ride will be making its world premiere on Dec 3. In the days leading up, the ride will be selectively open to visitors for "technical rehearsals". Just in case you're interested ;)

Yea, it rained the first three afternoons, but the mornings have been good. Except for today, which was the reverse. Only went to the Zoo on day two, but it was great! Saw almost everything, although missed the red-ruffed lemurs, emu (sob:D), sugar glider, golden-handed lion tamarin and the giant squirrel. I also only saw the free-ranging Saki Monkeys, so any other free-range animals were missed. Did see a large wild skink on the path, will post photo for hopeful ID later. And no colugos sadly, although there is still time for that!

Did Universal Studios yesterday, pretty awesome, with the Transformers ride probably the best - went twice :D. So stoked to find it was open when all the signs said that I would miss it by a day.

This morning I went to the Jurong Bird Park, again a great colection, so many firsts: hornbills, toucans, birds of paradise, shoebills, vultures, as well as many new waterfowl and other species. Very cool park, although I missed most of the species in the African Aviary, including the touracos and cranes. Did see a crane at the Zoo though, would that have been a East African Crowned Crane? Signage at the bird park was pretty average though, many species did not have signs, or did not match signs. Will take me a while to figure out what I actually saw.

After that I checked out the Live Turtle & Tortoise Museum, which had a pretty decent number of species and individuals, although I was surprised it was the worlds biggest collection. Animals were mostly housed in bare tanks, which made them easy to photograph and see, but gave no indication of natural habitat. Signage was mostly good though, although figuring out the species was not always easy. There were so many Pig-nosed Turtles there, each kept in a separate tank, I think they must have taken up almost half the tanks in the covered section. Very unusual place I guess, but I am very glad I visited.

Tonight I am visiting the Night Safari, so fingers crossed I see the colugo! As well as all the other animals of course :D.
 
This morning I went to the Jurong Bird Park, again a great colection, so many firsts: hornbills, toucans, birds of paradise, shoebills, vultures, as well as many new waterfowl and other species. Very cool park, although I missed most of the species in the African Aviary, including the touracos and cranes. Did see a crane at the Zoo though, would that have been a East African Crowned Crane? Signage at the bird park was pretty average though, many species did not have signs, or did not match signs. Will take me a while to figure out what I actually saw.

Tonight I am visiting the Night Safari, so fingers crossed I see the colugo! As well as all the other animals of course :D.

Yeah, the one at the Zoo is an East African Crowned Crane. The walk-thru aviaries at Jurong generally have poor signs; they only highlight key species. I guess the reason is that many of the smaller birds die off quickly if they don't breed enough and signs become obsolete.

Pity the pangolin exhibit at Night Safari is closed for renovations.
 
Germany will not be part of the "Eastern Europe" leg, although the Czech Republic and Austria probably will be. The zoos I have thus far put on the to visit list (in this part of the trip) are: Vienna (Austria), Prague & Pilsen (CR), Wroclaw Zoo (Poland), and maybe the Nyiregyhaza Zoo (Hungary). As we are not visiting Russia, Moscow is not an option sadly (maybe next time). Please let me know of any other zoos worth a visit in this area, including Slovakia, the countries of the former Yugoslavia, Greece, Romania and Bulgaria. Especially if they have any species not on display elsewhere. I am also interested in spotting native wildlife, so if there are any places I should especially visit for this purpose (during spring) please let me know. I am already planning to see the Olm in Slovenia.


For Eastern Europe, try to include Dvur Kralove especially if you like ungulates. Zagreb Zoo is a descent zoo I would recommend. My experiences in Romania and Bulgaria are quite bad although I haven't visited any zoos their lately. In Greece try to go to the Attica Zoo in Athens. It is difficult to reach but it s a quite nice park. Wroclaw Zoo is very nice, but maybe you can also visit the Poznan Zoos. In Hungary Budapest is quite nice.

If you need any help later on Western Europe just drop me a message. If you are in to wildfowl then you should go as well to the WWT in Slimbridge. If you have nothing to do in London you can also go to their area in London. It's not a zoo but anyway a nice place to go for a walk.
 
zooboy28 said:
Did see a large wild skink on the path, will post photo for hopeful ID later.
that would probably be a many-lined sun skink Mabuya multifasciata which are very common throughout Singapore (the Asian Mabuya have been split into a separate genus but I can't remember what it is off the top of my head)
 
so its been a month and a half since the last post on this thread....what's that about, zooboy28?! Where are you and what are you doing?
 
so its been a month and a half since the last post on this thread....what's that about, zooboy28?! Where are you and what are you doing?

Yeah, have been a bit slack on the ZooChat front, but I have been pretty busy actually :D. So a bit of a recap of what I have done so far:

-Singapore Night Safari was great, although we did miss the show. Highlights were the Spotted Hyenas and Civets, and it was great how active everything was. Lowlight was definitely missing the Pangolins, I was so gutted when I saw their exhibit was boarded up :mad:. Saw most other things though, lots of firsts, although didn't see any Flying Squirrels or Colugos.

-If I was trying to make my "zoos visited" list look impressive, my next zoo was Changi Airport Butterfly House, which was very good, although disgustingly hot.

-Next stop was the London Sealife Aquarium (I wanted to see one Sealife), which wasn't too bad. I really liked the exhibit on the freshwater fish of the Thames. The Gentoo Penguin exhibit was bizarre though, all the lighting was red. Was it a penguin sex club? And ridiculously expensive too, especially for one who is not a huge fish fan.

-London Zoo was the only other live-animal attraction we visited in the UK (unless the Tower's ravens count), and it was amazingly interesting. The mix of great modern exhibits (Penguin Beach), awful old exhibits (Gibbons) and historical buildings made this the most interesting zoo I have visited thus far. Plus there were a few cool new species (King Vulture, Gentle Lemur, Armadillo, Giant Anteater, Okapi). Overall, London Zoo had a bit of a feeling of decline, a place well past its prime which is facing a long slow death. Clearly the bleak early December weather didn't do it any favours. Much of the zoo appears to need major renovation - new gardens and paths, spruced up or new exhibits, etc. I found it very cluttered, I think better use of available space can be made though, to give it a more open feel. If they keep up the standard of new exhibits though, the zoo should be world-class again eventually.

-We then flew to Stockholm, Sweden where we visited Skansen and Skansen Akvariet. Skansen was a small collection of Nordic animals: reindeer, moose, bear, wolf, lynx, wisent, etc. The exhibits had a rather 'old' feel to them, again not helped by the weather, although they were all of an excellent size. Most impressive was the Red Fox exhibit, a pair had a huge exhibit that I think was for the bears when they were not hibernating. A walk-through aviary for Great Grey Owls was also impressive. Overall, perfectly suitable exhibits that looked a bit past it.

-Skansen Akvariet, nearby but separate, was a collection of smaller, tropical species. There were a few outdoor exhibits, including a very cool rocky cliff with crashed jeep for Hamadryas Baboons, but these were empty. Inside was an impressive reptile collection, some big Cuban Crocodiles, several small primates and a few aquariums. This was very good, all the enclosures were adequate - most interesting was a multi-species desert exhibit featuring birds, tortoises, beaded lizards and ground squirrels, with much interaction. Labelling of species was a bit poor for some exhibits though.

-We didn't go to another zoo for a while, although we did go to a "Sami Camp" to feed some reindeer, and on a Moose-spotting safari, which was good. Our next destination was Denmark, where we visited Copenhagen Zoo. This was very cool, with mostly good exhibits (Elephant house, Savannah) although the all-indoor Chimpanzee exhibit was terrible. One of the most unusual things we saw was a whole dead Llama being fed to the Lion pride. Sadly we somehow missed the nocturnal house...

-Back in Sweden for Christmas, we visited Skanes Djurpark on Boxing Day. This was another Nordic animal collection, although much larger than Skansen. This was pretty good, highlight were watching a mother bear and three cubs, and patting a Przewalski's Horse and a Moose. Other new and exciting animals included European White Stork, Beaver, Golden Eagle and Wild Cat. Missed the Badger and Raccoon Dogs though. Later that day we went to a local bird park, Fagel Parken, which was a free-entry, side-of-the-road job, with basic pheasant, pigeon, parrot species, and Rhea.

-We then popped over to Norway for a couple of days, as you do, and visited the Bergen Akvariet (first zoo of 2012). This included an all-outdoor exhibit for Gentoo Penguins, a tiny pool for a pair of Common Seals, a great snake collection, some big-ass Nile Crocs in a tiny exhibit underground, and a large group of Common Marmosets. Oh, and there were some fish too. And a shark 'tunnel', which was more of a shark 'doorway' really as it was very short. Overall a nice place, which is currently building a new Californian Sea Lion/Gentoo Penguin exhibit complex. Hopefully this will be followed by improved Common Seal and Nile Croc exhibits.

-Back in Sweden, we spent a day in the western city of Goteborg, where we visited a free, public zoo in the centre of a central city park: Slottsskogen. Here was a huge exhibit for Common Seals, a smaller one for Humboldt Penguins, and a few domestic species, in very spread out exhibits. There was also a large herd of Fallow Deer, and pools for waterfowl (first being Eider Duck and RInged Teal). Good for a free zoo. We then visited the Universeum, a large and expensive science museum. Inside was a large 'Swedish countryside' exhibit, with free-flying tits :eek: and exhibits for native fish, herps (mostly hibernating) and a Great Crested Grebe! This was followed by an excellent marine aquarium (Sawfish!!!), and a small collection of poisonous reptiles. Then there was an excellent multi-storey tropical rainforest, with small primates, small birds and a few fish and frogs, Dwarf Caiman and Anaconda. Very impressive, if a tad bare animal-wise.

-Leaving Sweden, we took the ferry to Finland, where we avoided Sealife Helsinki, and instead visited a tropical reptile house set in a basement, called Tropicario. This had a great collection of snakes and monitor lizards, plus a few other lizards, crocodiles, frogs and a lonely looking Silvery-cheeked Hornbill with behavioural issues. And there were no live plants anywhere, just fakes, which was a bit weird. Exhibits were all good to great, except those for large constrictors, which tended to be too small.

-The next day we visited the Helsinki Zoo. This was done in ridiculously cold temperatures and while it was snowing so we were basically the only people there. Many terrible old exhibits, although many of them empty; many newer exhibits which were acceptable but not impressive; and a bizarre but understandable complete lack of African ungulates (none at all). Highlights were Markhor, Kulan, Takin, Skunk, European Mink, Elephant Shrews and anywhere warm. There was also a very functional big cat breeding complex, with exhibits for 7 feline species, which was most interesting.

-Two days later (today in fact;)), we visited the Tampere Aquarium, a small attraction within the local amusement park (which also includes the world's most northern dolphinarium - closed for renovation). While small (26 tanks), this had an excellently diverse and healthy collection, with easily the best signage I have seen in any aquarium. Well worth a look, the aquarium focuses almost entirely on fish (one iguana, four tortoises, and a few inverts), and has some really magnificent looking tanks. Heavy focus on tropical freshwater, although there were a couple of tropical marine tanks and one one 'Finnish Coast' tank too. The simulated thunderstorm over the South-east Asian mangrove tank every half-hour was a nice touch.

So that sums up the trip so far (from the zoo-perspective). Tomorrow we are going to Tallinn, Estonia, where we plan to visit Tallinn Zoo, and anywhere else we can find, and then on to Poland (Warsaw and Krakow only probably), and then Prague, Czech Republic. Any suggestions for these countries, plus Austria and Slovenia, are very much appreciated. Sadly, it doesn't look like this trip will be for a full year, but hopefully I will still make it to the major collections in Germany, Netherlands, Belgium, France, Spain and the UK as well.

Interestingly, I still believe that the highest quality zoo I have visited (in terms of exhibit suitability and animal welfare, not species number) is Auckland Zoo, followed by Taronga Zoo. None of the zoos I've been to in Singapore or Europe have a higher overall exhibit quality.

Thanks for reading!
 
an excellent recap there and much appreciated, especially as I know that when travelling its not always easy to be spending money on internet cafes!

(I'm jealous that you have seen moose!)
 
Warsaw Zoo is good for winter visit. There are several pavillons with access for visitors:
bird house (with free flight hall), elephant house, hippo house (with underwater viewing and ...shark section), giraffe house, ape house (gorillas and chimps), reptile house and small aquarium.
Kraków Zoo is rather for spring or summer visit. But even now you can find it interesting: good ungulates enclosures, new big cats complex, good collection of small carnivores (some of them in bad, old fashioned cages). Only some indoor places: tiny noctural house, monkey house (rather poor) and terrarium/aquarium. Zoo is located outskirts of the city, in big forest on hill. From city center you can get there by bus direct to zoo gate.
In city center (between royal castle and jewish quater) you can find Aquarium. Nothing special: several tanks, good reptile collection. But there is also best preserved wooly rhino in the world. Complete skeleton, taxidermiet body (without hair). Really worth a visit.
Try to find time for Wrocław Zoo (you can travel from Kraków to Praha through Wrocław - almost shortest way). Absolutely best collection in Poland full of historical buildings from XIX c. and rarities.
In Czech Rep. Praha Zoo is really great zoo - one of the best I ever seen. But also other zoos are very good. I recommended Dvur Kralove (on the road from Wrocław to Praha) and Plzen (about two hours by train from Praha).
 
Just wanted to say all the best on your journey. I am also slowly but surely traveling the world visiting zoos, but not in one journey lol. I also blog about my zoo visits if your interested let me know. I highly recommend the Bronx Zoo if you go to New York. It's fantastic and a note if you want to see the gorillas go there first so you don't miss out as they close early.
 
Warsaw Zoo is good for winter visit. There are several pavillons with access for visitors:
bird house (with free flight hall), elephant house, hippo house (with underwater viewing and ...shark section), giraffe house, ape house (gorillas and chimps), reptile house and small aquarium.
Kraków Zoo is rather for spring or summer visit. But even now you can find it interesting: good ungulates enclosures, new big cats complex, good collection of small carnivores (some of them in bad, old fashioned cages). Only some indoor places: tiny noctural house, monkey house (rather poor) and terrarium/aquarium. Zoo is located outskirts of the city, in big forest on hill. From city center you can get there by bus direct to zoo gate.
In city center (between royal castle and jewish quater) you can find Aquarium. Nothing special: several tanks, good reptile collection. But there is also best preserved wooly rhino in the world. Complete skeleton, taxidermiet body (without hair). Really worth a visit.
Try to find time for Wrocław Zoo (you can travel from Kraków to Praha through Wrocław - almost shortest way). Absolutely best collection in Poland full of historical buildings from XIX c. and rarities.
In Czech Rep. Praha Zoo is really great zoo - one of the best I ever seen. But also other zoos are very good. I recommended Dvur Kralove (on the road from Wrocław to Praha) and Plzen (about two hours by train from Praha).

Thanks very much for this advice, followed most of it so far!
 
Just wanted to say all the best on your journey. I am also slowly but surely traveling the world visiting zoos, but not in one journey lol. I also blog about my zoo visits if your interested let me know. I highly recommend the Bronx Zoo if you go to New York. It's fantastic and a note if you want to see the gorillas go there first so you don't miss out as they close early.

Thank you! Probably won't be going back via the US, although it is a slim possibility... Although even if we did I think it would be a stopover in California.
 
an excellent recap there and much appreciated, especially as I know that when travelling its not always easy to be spending money on internet cafes!

(I'm jealous that you have seen moose!)

Patted moose too, and ate some a bit later...
Guess you will have to pop down to Fiordland and find some there?

Glad you appreciate the update, will try and keep this thread up-to-date with my progress, I will be needing some help soon for ideas on which zoos to go to (or rather which zoos I will have to come back to later, sob) over the next wee while.
 
Ok, so here is the actual update:

-Leaving Finland, we headed down to Estonia, where we visited Tallinn Zoo, which was very cold, quiet, and had no food outlets open! Cold and hungry for 5 hours. But there were highlights: Pere David's Deer, great collection of mountain goats and sheep, and lots of pheasants, eagles and owls. Much of the zoo was quite nice, obviously the newer half of the zoo, with Central Asian ungulates, pheasantry and Alpinarium (mountain goats, sheep, snow leopards), but some of the older exhibits, including the elephants, were very nice too. Some exhibits were downright disgusting, especially those for the polar bears. Definitely eye-opening. The zoo appears to be on the right track however. (Also found a pet shop in Tallinn, where I saw my first Degu!)

-After a horrific 18-hour bus ride through the Baltics, we arrived in Poland, where our first stop was Warsaw Zoo. I could put this as my entry on the 'most difficult zoos to find' thread, cos it took us over two hours to reach it. And it was about 2km from our hostel. Stupid trams. Anyway, this was an averagely nice zoo, with quite a few warm houses, which was good. Highlights were nice, modern Chimp and Gorilla exhibits, nice bird house, giraffe house and a Cheetah exhibit with a dangerously low glass wall. There were few 'unacceptable' exhibits, though those for the Snow Leopards would definitely be in this category.

-Next stop was Krakow, where we skipped the zoo and instead spent an enjoyable couple of hours at the Natural History Museum and Aquarium, which was a two level building featuring an awesome Woolly Rhino skeleton & skin, a basic aquarium and insect display, and a nice reptile collection upstairs.

-And then today we visited Wroclaw Zoo, which was the most stressful zoo visit of my life so far (and hopefully ever). This was because, despite having got up at 5am to catch a train from Krakow, we didn't actually arrive at the zoo gates until almost 1.30pm, which meant I had barely 2.5 hours to see Poland's best zoo. So we rushed everywhere. Highlights were the Reptile House, Madagascar House, African Desert House, and the interaction between Red Panda and Indian Muntjac. Lowlights were missing the animals (mostly ungulates, primates and fossa) which were indoors for winter, as well as the whole corner of the zoo with deer, goats and owls, as we were so pushed for time. But anyway, this was a great zoo, and I'm really glad we made the effort to come here.

So thats it for now, tomorrow we are off to the Czech Republic, where I have been limited to two zoos (maybe I should have come on this trip alone...). These will be Prague Zoo, and either Dvur Kralove (Are the Northern White Rhino on-display in winter???) or Plzen (probably the latter), although I would really appreciate any advice. Then Austria, where the only zoo I know of is Vienna Zoo, and then Venice, which will probably be a zoo-free visit. Then we have Germany and maybe Switzerland to do. And I'm really not sure about which zoos to do in Germany, we will probably only be able to visit three cities (one being Berlin - will do both Zoo & Tierpark), but I don't know which other two cities to visit yet - advice definitely appreciated.

Thanks for reading!
 
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