Prochilodus246
Well-Known Member
As @Springbok is interested in seeing some of my other verdicts on different zoos I thought I'd just make a topic relating to the zoos I have visited and will update the thread when I visit a new or previously not reviewed zoo.
Collection: Exmoor Zoo, UK
Date of Visit: 27/10/2022
Reason for Visit: Rarities
As a collector of species photographs much like @Sicarius Exmoor was high on my wish list of zoos to visit due to its immense amount of rarities this collection has to offer. Below is my review of the collection:
We arrived at Exmoor on an overcast October morning at the very beginning of opening to make the most of the day. We queued for a short while and then we entered the park! Although the queue seemed large people filtered out quickly and the park felt very quiet throughout the entirety of our visit. We followed the map numerically as we saw that the rarities were spread all across the zoo and thanks to reading other ZooChatters’ comments and sending the zoo an email prior to our visit we decided to revisit the enclosures of some species that didn’t appear on our first circuit round notably the ringtail, honey badgers and clouded leopards.
The park had a good layout to it and we occasionally stumbled upon enclosures we had missed by going down a wrong turn and this was a pleasant surprise. Although it was overcast and had a slight nip in the air most if not all species, I had anticipated in seeing were active or at the very least photogenic and viewable. At the time of my visit the lake was being refurbished so species such as the Pink-backed pelicans were not on exhibit and the recent death of the zoo’s melanistic leopard left that enclosure empty as well but this didn’t in any way spoil my visit.
We felt that almost all enclosures were suited well to the residents with good climbing opportunities for the clouded leopards and cougars to the well planted aviary for the shoebill. I personally found enclosures for the black & white ruffed lemurs a tad on the smaller side compared to the expansive enclosure for the Ring-tailed lemurs. Our favourite exhibit would have to go to the sitatunga which although minimal in terms of infrastructure it offered so much for this species due the naturally boggy valley at this end of the zoo and the large size of the paddock as well.
Now, on to the rarities. You wouldn’t think a small zoo just outside the Exmoor National Park would be heaving with such a wide range of taxa that are only held in a handful or the only European public collection, would you? The soul animal that made me decide that Exmoor was in need of a visit desperately was the recent addition of the first shoebill in the UK for over 50 years and we were worried her stay may only be a fleeting one so a couple of days after she had been made public, we booked ourselves a holiday in the South West of England.
After having a very successful day closing time neared. We made our way back to the enclosures of the species which had been no-shows and they didn’t disappoint. The ringtail was happily out of its den sitting patiently in its indoor enclosure awaiting its evening meal and the clouded leopard was active and walking the beams of its enclosure.
A truly fantastic collection packed full of rarities making it a zoo nerds paradise and we left the collection feeling that we would have to come back at some point and possibly visit the other zoos that this part of the country has to offer!
No. Species Seen: 81
No. Lifers: 29
Collection: Exmoor Zoo, UK
Date of Visit: 27/10/2022
Reason for Visit: Rarities
As a collector of species photographs much like @Sicarius Exmoor was high on my wish list of zoos to visit due to its immense amount of rarities this collection has to offer. Below is my review of the collection:
We arrived at Exmoor on an overcast October morning at the very beginning of opening to make the most of the day. We queued for a short while and then we entered the park! Although the queue seemed large people filtered out quickly and the park felt very quiet throughout the entirety of our visit. We followed the map numerically as we saw that the rarities were spread all across the zoo and thanks to reading other ZooChatters’ comments and sending the zoo an email prior to our visit we decided to revisit the enclosures of some species that didn’t appear on our first circuit round notably the ringtail, honey badgers and clouded leopards.
The park had a good layout to it and we occasionally stumbled upon enclosures we had missed by going down a wrong turn and this was a pleasant surprise. Although it was overcast and had a slight nip in the air most if not all species, I had anticipated in seeing were active or at the very least photogenic and viewable. At the time of my visit the lake was being refurbished so species such as the Pink-backed pelicans were not on exhibit and the recent death of the zoo’s melanistic leopard left that enclosure empty as well but this didn’t in any way spoil my visit.
We felt that almost all enclosures were suited well to the residents with good climbing opportunities for the clouded leopards and cougars to the well planted aviary for the shoebill. I personally found enclosures for the black & white ruffed lemurs a tad on the smaller side compared to the expansive enclosure for the Ring-tailed lemurs. Our favourite exhibit would have to go to the sitatunga which although minimal in terms of infrastructure it offered so much for this species due the naturally boggy valley at this end of the zoo and the large size of the paddock as well.
Now, on to the rarities. You wouldn’t think a small zoo just outside the Exmoor National Park would be heaving with such a wide range of taxa that are only held in a handful or the only European public collection, would you? The soul animal that made me decide that Exmoor was in need of a visit desperately was the recent addition of the first shoebill in the UK for over 50 years and we were worried her stay may only be a fleeting one so a couple of days after she had been made public, we booked ourselves a holiday in the South West of England.
After having a very successful day closing time neared. We made our way back to the enclosures of the species which had been no-shows and they didn’t disappoint. The ringtail was happily out of its den sitting patiently in its indoor enclosure awaiting its evening meal and the clouded leopard was active and walking the beams of its enclosure.
A truly fantastic collection packed full of rarities making it a zoo nerds paradise and we left the collection feeling that we would have to come back at some point and possibly visit the other zoos that this part of the country has to offer!
No. Species Seen: 81
No. Lifers: 29