Philippine eagle spotted above the Alpes

Alpenzoo remains an amazing place and with an ever changing array of native bird rescues every visit is sure to get you something new. I just hope they will enlarge many of the small aviaries in the coming years.

At the highest point, European bison, Alpine ibex and new enclosures for foxes and badgers can be seen.

As well as Bavarian pine vole near the foxes and badgers and Etruscan shrews in the small house opposite the bison (so you have Europe's largest and smallest land mammal next to each other).
 
The zoo's proficiency in landscaping culminates in an open-air terrarium with 5 amazingly decorated landscape terrariums for native reptiles.

I think you must have missed one out, then :P there's six!

I am incredibly fond of this collection too, having visited a total of three times (2015, 2022, 2023) and with the certainty that another visit will come as a matter of course whenever I next visit Bavaria or Austria.

At some point when I have the time and mental energy I intend to re-name all of the 2015 photographs which I uploaded to a personal album (which, as they were uploaded as attachments to my lengthy walkthrough account of the collection, currently only display file-names) and move the contents of the album into the Alpenzoo gallery. Once I have done this, my comprehensive photographic walkthrough from almost nine years ago will serve as a useful point of comparison to the present-day comprehensive photographic walkthrough you have now uploaded to the gallery.
 
I think you must have missed one out, then :p there's six!

I am incredibly fond of this collection too, having visited a total of three times (2015, 2022, 2023) and with the certainty that another visit will come as a matter of course whenever I next visit Bavaria or Austria.

At some point when I have the time and mental energy I intend to re-name all of the 2015 photographs which I uploaded to a personal album (which, as they were uploaded as attachments to my lengthy walkthrough account of the collection, currently only display file-names) and move the contents of the album into the Alpenzoo gallery. Once I have done this, my comprehensive photographic walkthrough from almost nine years ago will serve as a useful point of comparison to the present-day comprehensive photographic walkthrough you have now uploaded to the gallery.

It is bizarre how quickly the human mind forgets and is led astray. I could have sworn there were only 5, I wrote 2 reports on this, but when I check my photos based on your comment, I indeed count 6. :)
 
Day 8 #18 Walter Zoo - Gossau

Next morning, rain was pouring down. I had planned a free morning and, despite the weather conditions, decided to take the scenic Silvrettahochstrasse before travelling to my next destination. This is a scenic toll road over the Bielerhöhe, a +2000m high mountain pass on the border between Tyrol and Voralberg. The road runs along the Silvretta Mountains, a mountain range on the border between these two Austrian states and the Swiss canton of Graubünden. The whole area forms a breathtaking high-mountain landscape with deep valleys, mountain forests, alpine lakes and glaciers. I really enjoyed it and after a short traffic jam on the border, it was time for my first Swiss stop.

A few km from Sankt Gallen's Kybunpark football stadium, just outside the small town of Gossau, lies the Walter Zoo. Located in the hilly countryside of eastern Switzerland, it is a pleasant walk along sun-drenched slopes, although the silence can sometimes be disturbed by the nearby Swiss army training grounds. The Walter zoo is a small (just 5.5 ha) but modern zoo founded in 1961 by circus artists Walter and Edith Pischl and it is clear, given the zoo's name, who was in charge.

It is a very pleasant garden with several visitable buildings. The species list is quite general but there is a nice focus on smaller animals. The whole zoo exudes a kind of pride that is best expressed in a small expo building at the tiger enclosure where the history of the zoo over 3 generations is shown on large info panels. Special attention has also been paid to beautiful info signs and there are a lot of feeding presentations and other activities aimed at children.

The first building is the Dschungel- und Reptilienhaus, which is the zoo's oldest building and consists of several floors. The upper part used to house the chimpanzees and is now a small South-American walk-through area with two-toed sloth, green iguana, white-bearded saki, st. Vincent agouti and southern three-banded armadillo. They have retained some of the old furnishings, so the former ape enclosures are still clearly recognisable.

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Upper floor South American walk through

The lower floor has spacious terrariums for quince monitor, western dwarf crocodile, Malagasy tree boa, Chinese crocodile lizard, giant plated lizard, and others.

From this building, it is only a short step to the Tropenhaus. This consists primarily of a small rainforest with ponds for American alligators and alligator turtles. Among the trees roam goeldi monkeys and emperor tamarin. The alligators also have an outside pond.The second part has very spacious additional enclosures for grey-handed night monkeys, pygmy marmosets, tarantulas, poison dart frogs and common anaconda.

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Main enclosure for American alligator, snapping turtles and callithrids

I am a big fan of these types of conservatories: no matter how small and old, it is always a great joy to search among the mature vegetation, which was certainly the case here, for the animals that should be found there.

The Tiger Höhle is an octagonal building with seminar rooms at the top and a visitor area below where the tiger boxes can be viewed. It shows 3 pens and as many outdoor areas for Siberian tigers. Surrounding this building is a large wooded outdoor area in which the former Amur leopard enclosures are integrated. At the top of the enclosure is another octagonal construction serving as the tiger feeding presentation.

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Tiger Höhle for Siberian tiger

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Siberian tiger enclosure (feeding presentation on the right)

The chimpanzee holding is what has made this zoo name and fame in Switzerland. The 13 animals signify the largest group in the country, and they live in the largest outdoor enclosure in the country (not so difficult, as only Basel has bonobos in a more or less same way). The visitor path runs between the Schimpansenhaus and the 2 outdoor enclosure (which are separated by a rock). These are not that large but the animals still have some opportunities for seclusion. Underground tunnels allow the animals to get to the Chimpanzee House, which again consists of 2 separate high halls which are filled with climbing trees. The building is clearly of older date (1993), but I did not find that these enclosures stood out against modern principles, although it may lack seperation rooms.

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One of two outdoors enclosures

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One of two indoors enclosures

Next are 3 excellent parrot aviaries, all spacious, tall and well provided with trees and other enrichment elements. On display are keas, horned parakeets and hyacinthara, among others.

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Kea aviary

A highly attractive enclosure for Asian small-clawed otters and Nepalese red panda that came into being in 2022 marked the first realisation of the 2040 master plan (which will also see the zoo expand). The 650m² enclosure is a particularly attractive mix of shrubs and grass, trees and water.

The African-themed Savannenhaus displays a host of small animals, from mammals over birds and reptiles to invertebrates. The best display is a meerkat enclosure (yes I'm really writing this) with Fishers agapornis and spurred tortoises as co-inhabitants, but in this building we equally find naked mole rats, striped grass mice, gundis, African egg-eating snakes, African bullfrogs, Angolan pythons and lizards. Perhaps the main attraction here are the fennec foxes, which have a very small enclosure indoors, but fortunately have access to a wider run outside. The building also has a community terrarium for Gorongosa girdled lizard, East African girdled lizard and pancake turtle. A panther chameleon inhabits a free-standing tree. This is an excellent building, full of light, in calm earthy colours and a very attractively laid out.

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Interior of the Savannenhaus

Across the building lives a small group of Grant zebras, and next to the savannah building lies the hilly lion enclosure, which is truly stunning with its height differences, long grass, bushes and rocky outcrops. It opened in 2018 and the vegetation has only made the 1,600m² area more beautiful since then. The photo below unfortunately hides the actual height differences in the enclosure.

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Barbary lion enclosure

On top of the indoor enclosure is the Zooschüle and a nice terrace with a catering point.

Both Savannenhaus and lion enclosure are the stars of this small but extremely well-maintained zoo. They are the prelude to the Zoos 2040 master plan. It primarily means a significant expansion of the zoo to 9.5 ha. Among other things, the zoo will have a new entrance with a car park, ticket office building, shop and meeting rooms. A large savannah will feature some new species in addition to Grant zebras and ostriches.

As is often the case with gardens located in smaller locations, the options are not unlimited in terms of enclosures and species, and visitors have to be kept busy in other ways. A circus tent made me suspect the worst, but in the end, activities are limited to pony and camel rides, and lots of feeding presentations. The circus tent hosts artistic theatre performances that are mainly aiming at children and their subject is always about nature conservation. Animals, except perhaps the domestic cat, are not used in these.

I really enjoyed my visit to this zoo.
 

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This looks like a very nice institute, I’m just slightly disappointed on the lack of vegetation in the Chimpanzee enclosure.
 
This looks like a very nice institute, I’m just slightly disappointed on the lack of vegetation in the Chimpanzee enclosure.

Agreed. The outdoor enclosures lack vegetation/shade and they are also on the small side.

But, think this is not a major zoo.

There are two outside enclosures, which is a plus and allows the animals to isolate themselves.

The chimpanzee building also has two indoor enclosures. These too are not too big but I did like the height, the climbing trees and high nesting platforms. There're also a lot of enrichment elements present: termite mounds, food dispensers, etc.
 
This looks like a very nice institute, I’m just slightly disappointed on the lack of vegetation in the Chimpanzee enclosure.
It's hard to keep vegetation in great ape enclosures you need to keep areas of the enclosures secluded and protected. Great apes will wreck vegetation at staggering rate. Honestly from pictures alone it seems like a great enclosure.
 
Day 8 #19 Plätli Zoo – Frauenfeld

Just 40 km from Gossau lies another zoo in north-eastern Switzerland. Here too they have lions and chimpanzees, so little can go wrong, right? I arrived a bit later than planned but that turned out to be no problem afterwards. Full parking lot here in the late afternoon, usually a good sign.

The Plättli zoo was founded in 1958 and is the only zoo on this trip across Switzerland that is not a member of ZooSchweiz, the Swiss zoo association. The zoo made some furore, especially in the 1980s, because of its show acts with lions but this already came to an end in the 1990s for commercial reasons.

This was a disappointment, especially considering the visit earlier that day in Gossau. I had few expectations about this location and it was the only real disappointment of this trip. Of course, ZTL spoils the fun of discovering what a place is all about but I still had secretly hoped for some surprises. In reality it’s a roadside zoo with few species and almost no good enclosures. Yes the owl aviaries are ok and will do in any place and the barbary macaque enclosure isn’t bad at all. But chimps and mountain lion are horribly housed while lions hardly any better. It took me no more than half an hour to see the entire place.

The small walking loop right after the entrance looks particularly cramped because of the narrow visitor paths and small cages built together. This is the oldest part of the zoo and here we find 3 linked enclosures for 4 pumas and a lion enclosure. It takes quite a lot of good intention to write something positive about this, because the enclosures are small, long and narrow, and visitors stand too close. At the centre is a small building with a cage for white tufted-ear marmoset.

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Cage for mountain lion

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Walking loop : African lions - white tufted ear marmost and mountain lion

After that it got slightly better, but not much. A couple of decent owl aviaries and a pasture for donkeys or Bactrian camel are just about doable, but that's about it.

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Aviaries for snowy owl and European eagle-owl

The enclosure for Barbary macaques is spacious but uninspired, and then there’s a small cage for 2 chimpanzees and 4 tiny aviaries for parrots, maybe just ok for smaller species but definitely not for macaws.

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The Plätli zoo was one of the few disappointments of this trip. Honestly, there was nothing terrible here, it is certainly no Donnersberg or any other crappy place, everything is neat and clean, but almost all wild species are clearly housed too small.
 

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The small walking loop right after the entrance looks particularly cramped because of the narrow visitor paths and small cages built together. This is the oldest part of the zoo and here we find 3 linked enclosures for 4 pumas and a lion enclosure. It takes quite a lot of good intention to write something positive about this, because the enclosures are small, long and narrow, and visitors stand too close. At the centre is a small building with a cage for white tufted-ear marmoset.
The enclosure for Barbary macaques is spacious but uninspired, and then there’s a small cage for 2 chimpanzees and 4 tiny aviaries for parrots, maybe just ok for smaller species but definitely not for macaws.

This is very disappointing, these enclosures look unnatural and cage-like. It is very sad this in European Zoos.
 
This is very disappointing, these enclosures look unnatural and cage-like. It is very sad this in European Zoos.

There is nothing wrong animal wise with a good cage, this is not a good cage though...

I found the contrast between some private zoos and the main zoos in Switzerland very large and I am surprised a place like this still gets enough visitors when you have far superior options nearby..

It's hard to keep vegetation in great ape enclosures you need to keep areas of the enclosures secluded and protected. Great apes will wreck vegetation at staggering rate. Honestly from pictures alone it seems like a great enclosure.

The Gossau chimpanzee outdoor enclosures aren't that great, they are quite narrow and small and they lack privacy options. They are an upgrade from the original concrete grottos, but when looking at the latest investments in the zoo, they would do it completely different if they could rebuild it.
 
I miss read the previous statement and forgot to remove my comment. I thought that if the chimp enclosure was repurposed and fitted. My comment was stating that this enclosure structure could also be more appealing for visitors if given its own style/design.
 
I miss read the previous statement and forgot to remove my comment.

Removing comments when proven wrong or when a question has been answered really is bad etiquette and doesn't give you any points, to the contrary...

I completely understand that you are enthusiastic that you have found a place with others to share your zoo passion. But you have been posting at an extraordinary high rate the past days, I have been that enthusiastic kid too, so I know how it feels. But for your own benefit it would be better to take a short break with posting so much and get to know the forum better and try to learn from other members to learn to find your place. You aren't the first overenthusiastic new forum member and you won't be the last, but this is not a playground. It is a place for zoo enthusiasts, regardless of their age, to discuss zoos and related things. That does mean other expect you to add value with posts and that you don't pretend to know more than you actually do. I might sound a bit harsh, but it is not an attack, just a mirror.
 
With the first section of your message, I meant removing the comment after I had posted it (in the 5 minute gap) not that it had been pointed out. This is my mistake if it does not sound this way.
 
I completely understand that you are enthusiastic that you have found a place with others to share your zoo passion. But you have been posting at an extraordinary high rate the past days, I have been that enthusiastic kid too, so I know how it feels. But for your own benefit it would be better to take a short break with posting so much and get to know the forum better and try to learn from other members to learn to find your place. You aren't the first overenthusiastic new forum member and you won't be the last, but this is not a playground. It is a place for zoo enthusiasts, regardless of their age, to discuss zoos and related things. That does mean other expect you to add value with posts and that you don't pretend to know more than you actually do. I might sound a bit harsh, but it is not an attack, just a mirror.
The Only reason that I am posting currently is that I have been meaning to log into ZooChat for a long time now and things just get in the way.
 
*leading on from post above*

The Only reason that I am posting currently is that I have been meaning to log into ZooChat for a long time now but things just get in the way. Another factor is the start up of new 2024 forums which I have not seen. I’m sorry if you find me overenthusiastic but that is my general nature.

The complications with my view on the Chimp and Puma/Lion Enclosures were my fault and human-error.
 
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