Maisie
Well-Known Member
Back in 2006 I stayed in Angouleme with my family and, on a whim based on finding a brochure, visited Zoo de la Palmyre in Royan. I enjoyed my visit, especially the hands-on access to the animals. This was before joining Zoo Chat and getting a better insight into zoos.
This year Chris and I went on a road trip to Angouleme for the historic Circuit des Remparts classic car races. As we would be within reach of Royan we decided to visit Palmyre, but since we'd be spending the trips to and from the ferry port on the road and would have literally all day each way, we picked two other zoos to visit to make into an impromptu zoo tour - Zoo Spay (aka Spaycific'Zoo: based on spotting a map label "Jardin des Oiseaux" ("bird garden")) near Le Mans which was on our route South and Zoo de la Fleche, located via ZooChat's satellite map on the way back to Caen.
Spay Zoo
========
Apparently a new one for ZooChat! A very small zoo, based in woodland. Based on the website (Zoo Spay - Spaycific'Zoo : un zoo pas comme les autres a 10km du mans (sarthe)) I was expecting a reasonably small collection and it took a while to work out using Google that Spaycific' Zoo was actually the same thing as the Jardin des Oiseaux on the map. The map led us to believe that it would be mostly birds, whereas the zoo website (assuming it was actually the same place) promised more.
Since it was Friday, the zoo was deserted apart from one other couple and the lady on reception. On arrival we greeted the red macaw outside the entrance building and visited the toilets (a little run down, but proper loos and not a hole in the ground to squat over!) and then paid the 9 Euro per person entry. We were handed two paper bags: one of millet for the Australian walk-through aviary, and one of standard animal pellets for "everything else".
According to the brochure, the zoo is 6 hectares. The layout consists of three "circuits": red, green and blue, with a suggested route starting with the red route, then onto green with the blue beginning halfway through the green route. You are issued with a guide showing a map of the zoo with a numbered key and each enclosure has an obvious corresponding large number on it so that it's impossible to not know what you're looking at.
On the map there are "games" marked at intervals - more of these later
The RED ROUTE begins at a pool containing European ducks and geese, which will mug you for food, then goes past a raptor aviary, a dingo enclosure and various exotic bird aviaries. The bird aviaries are standard size wire aviaries and the dingo enclosure is a good size and, even better, it's equipped with a (scarily-laddered!) photography platform that lifts you over the height of the fence to enable better pics without the wire in the way.
About halfway round the red route is a walkthrough Australian aviary with a few rosellas, some cockatiels and a large flock of budgies who are all over you as soon as they catch sight of the millet bag. Great if you like birds (which we do
)! On leaving you pass some more birds (small doves, kea, kookaburra, mynah, cranes), Japanese racoon dogs, Asian short-clawed otters, Parma wallabies, Porcupines and tortoises before arriving back at the gate that leads to and from the red route.
Onto the GREEN ROUTE... Geoffroy's marmosets and cats, Japanese and Korean squirrels, various pheasants (Lady Amherst's, Golden) and yellow mongoose, then onto the BLUE ROUTE
Canadian enclosure (racoons/skunks), cranes, peccaries and coatimundis, bush dogs, ring-tailed lemurs, white-handed gibbons and African grey parrots lead to a mini farm (pass through quickly, bribing the goats with food pellets to leave you alone) and onto an enormous and very impressive walk-through African aviary with egrets, Marabou storks, pelicans, cormorants etc (and side aviaries off this with various other African birds).
This brings you back via red-ruffed lemurs in a nice large enclosure to the second half of the green route. There is another walkthrough enclosure with an odd mix of tamarins and various small parrots and agoutis, then it's onto jaguarundis, macaws and chipmunks and into another walkthrough with weaver birds and touracos and into the "Exotarium" - armadillos, reptiles, cappucins, ring-tailed lemurs and a nice nocturnal section with three-banded armadillos, nocturnal wallabies, douroucoulis, spring hares and bats. Quite a few species I hadn't seen before.
About the last thing you come to is a building housing amethyst starlings, finches, tortoises and armadillos.
Overall this is a small zoo that punches above its weight. The species mix is interesting and unusual. I loved the various photography outposts, even if the ladders are steep and tricky to climb with a lot of equipment! The signage is excellent with a lot of stimulating and educational information and quite a few flip-up question-and-answer type signs. Additionally, this zoo markets itself as being "for children". There is a stage in the main building where there are educational shows put on. Throughout the zoo there are the games that I referred to earlier. These include, for example, a set of stilts which you can use to compare yourself to a crane, and a long-jump pit to compare yourself to various jumping creatures. Several of these games would never pass a UK health and safety inspection, but I think it's great that they're there!
Overall I would definitely recommend the zoo for a visit. I will be uploading photos at some point.
Next... Zoo Palmyre
This year Chris and I went on a road trip to Angouleme for the historic Circuit des Remparts classic car races. As we would be within reach of Royan we decided to visit Palmyre, but since we'd be spending the trips to and from the ferry port on the road and would have literally all day each way, we picked two other zoos to visit to make into an impromptu zoo tour - Zoo Spay (aka Spaycific'Zoo: based on spotting a map label "Jardin des Oiseaux" ("bird garden")) near Le Mans which was on our route South and Zoo de la Fleche, located via ZooChat's satellite map on the way back to Caen.
Spay Zoo
========
Apparently a new one for ZooChat! A very small zoo, based in woodland. Based on the website (Zoo Spay - Spaycific'Zoo : un zoo pas comme les autres a 10km du mans (sarthe)) I was expecting a reasonably small collection and it took a while to work out using Google that Spaycific' Zoo was actually the same thing as the Jardin des Oiseaux on the map. The map led us to believe that it would be mostly birds, whereas the zoo website (assuming it was actually the same place) promised more.
Since it was Friday, the zoo was deserted apart from one other couple and the lady on reception. On arrival we greeted the red macaw outside the entrance building and visited the toilets (a little run down, but proper loos and not a hole in the ground to squat over!) and then paid the 9 Euro per person entry. We were handed two paper bags: one of millet for the Australian walk-through aviary, and one of standard animal pellets for "everything else".
According to the brochure, the zoo is 6 hectares. The layout consists of three "circuits": red, green and blue, with a suggested route starting with the red route, then onto green with the blue beginning halfway through the green route. You are issued with a guide showing a map of the zoo with a numbered key and each enclosure has an obvious corresponding large number on it so that it's impossible to not know what you're looking at.
On the map there are "games" marked at intervals - more of these later
The RED ROUTE begins at a pool containing European ducks and geese, which will mug you for food, then goes past a raptor aviary, a dingo enclosure and various exotic bird aviaries. The bird aviaries are standard size wire aviaries and the dingo enclosure is a good size and, even better, it's equipped with a (scarily-laddered!) photography platform that lifts you over the height of the fence to enable better pics without the wire in the way.
About halfway round the red route is a walkthrough Australian aviary with a few rosellas, some cockatiels and a large flock of budgies who are all over you as soon as they catch sight of the millet bag. Great if you like birds (which we do
Onto the GREEN ROUTE... Geoffroy's marmosets and cats, Japanese and Korean squirrels, various pheasants (Lady Amherst's, Golden) and yellow mongoose, then onto the BLUE ROUTE
Canadian enclosure (racoons/skunks), cranes, peccaries and coatimundis, bush dogs, ring-tailed lemurs, white-handed gibbons and African grey parrots lead to a mini farm (pass through quickly, bribing the goats with food pellets to leave you alone) and onto an enormous and very impressive walk-through African aviary with egrets, Marabou storks, pelicans, cormorants etc (and side aviaries off this with various other African birds).
This brings you back via red-ruffed lemurs in a nice large enclosure to the second half of the green route. There is another walkthrough enclosure with an odd mix of tamarins and various small parrots and agoutis, then it's onto jaguarundis, macaws and chipmunks and into another walkthrough with weaver birds and touracos and into the "Exotarium" - armadillos, reptiles, cappucins, ring-tailed lemurs and a nice nocturnal section with three-banded armadillos, nocturnal wallabies, douroucoulis, spring hares and bats. Quite a few species I hadn't seen before.
About the last thing you come to is a building housing amethyst starlings, finches, tortoises and armadillos.
Overall this is a small zoo that punches above its weight. The species mix is interesting and unusual. I loved the various photography outposts, even if the ladders are steep and tricky to climb with a lot of equipment! The signage is excellent with a lot of stimulating and educational information and quite a few flip-up question-and-answer type signs. Additionally, this zoo markets itself as being "for children". There is a stage in the main building where there are educational shows put on. Throughout the zoo there are the games that I referred to earlier. These include, for example, a set of stilts which you can use to compare yourself to a crane, and a long-jump pit to compare yourself to various jumping creatures. Several of these games would never pass a UK health and safety inspection, but I think it's great that they're there!
Overall I would definitely recommend the zoo for a visit. I will be uploading photos at some point.
Next... Zoo Palmyre










































































