I visited Otorohanga Kiwi House this morning, my first visit since 2012.
The most immediately apparent change was the presence of a predator-proof fence around the site, which means you have to go through a double gate system from the carpark to get into the entry building. I'm not sure what the exact purpose of this is, but presumably they plan on having some more species free-range within the park.
The old kiwi house currently holds two pairs of North Island brown kiwi, with one enclosure on display in the morning and the other in the afternoon. I stuck around to see both of these enclosures, which are a nice size, but didn't see any kiwi here, despite seeing the 10.30am feeding. The nearby 'Kiwi Night Zone', which has replaced a series of relatively small and dark aviaries that mostly held birds of prey. This new house is very nice, also with two kiwi enclosures, separated by a low fence, although both are on display all day and smaller than the enclosures in the old house. The first holds the little spotted kiwi (40+ year old male), while the second has a young pair of browns. During the 10.30am feeding talk, the keeper fed both enclosures, and the little spotted immediately came out and ate before retiring back to his burrow. He was out for a couple of minutes, but was clearly visible and great to see (an exciting new species for me!). The browns didn't show here either.
The rest of the park hasn't changed much. There is a nice new aviary for Antipodes Island parakeets between the two kiwi houses, and I hadn't seen the nice new morepork aviary (bigger and more suitable than the old one) or the walkthrough yellow-crowned kakariki and kereru aviary (functional, but quite attractive) before.
The waterfowl ponds look a little unloved and are beginning to look a little dilapidated, these need something done to them - I think this is partially because of all the trees, opening it up a little might help. I wonder if the addition of the predator-proof fence will result in opening up some of these spaces too. The reptile exhibits also look a little unloved, and those in the rock garden area need replacing. The kea and kaka also need new aviaries, I think the latter could go in the walkthrough dome aviary, and the former could use something much larger.
In contrast, a number of exhibits look great, especially those for New Zealand falcon, morepork, sacred kingfisher/brown teal, bar-tailed godwit/pied stilt, blue duck/bellbird, spur-wingled plover/Australian shelduck and little owl. The other exhibits are generally ok.
Overall, a great visit, and Otorohanga is certainly showing some solid improvements, although there is still work to do.
@Najade has posted a range of photos from their recent visit in the gallery, but if anyone wants any photos of specific species/exhibits I can post them.