Planning trip to Vienna - practical info advices?

Hi', just returned from my travel! Very satisfactory and I enjoyed a lot. Overall, photographing infinite number of new species at the incredible Natural History Museum - and old-style dipslay of endless cabinets ordered taxonomically with countless rarities of the almost every animal group, from cestodes to priapulids and of course also infinite vertebrates and insects and fossils.
Haus des Meeres was very pleasing to visit, I never has been in an aquarium that consist of a tall, 11 floor building instead a wide and low one as usual. Sadly, the two most extremely superexciting animals in the whole of Austria, the bowfin and the bearded leatherjacket, passed away both in Haus des Meeres after I asked the staff about them. And as expected, the countless rarities of small toothcarps and livebearers are BTS. But what remains is very enjoyable and it includes what I would rate as the best zoo exhibit I visited ever, only rivalled by Burger's Mangrove maybe. A two-floow tropical jungle where marmosets, sakis, bats, all sort of birds (guans, turacos, hornbills and various passerines), turtles and every kind of freshwater tropical medium-sized fishes, roam freely around you, and with every animal being extremely tame as for let you approach by millimeters, but also not interacting with visitors as they know visitors are not a source of food. So just the perfect grade of tameness for seeing every bird and monkey and bat and fish at zero distance without afraid them and seeing also them interact with themselves.

Tiergarten Schönbrunn was nice, nothing extremely spectacular but definitely worth a visit. I would say it's comparable to Madrid zoo-aquarium or Wüppertal zoo. All the rare chameleons and small freshwater fishes that ZTL announces for here are BTS.
As Jakub said, the broadbill is signed but one must have many luck to find a green bird that don't move in the foliage of an endless treetop jungle. I didn't found it, but I saw most of the other bird species announced for this exhibit, despite floor level being closed to public.

Rats House was open, but I only saw the domestic fancy Brown Rats and the Northern Luzon rats, not the Gambian Pouched ones that was the interesting ones for me. They was signed, but no-show.

If red-billed starling is on show, then it must be in the False Gharial walkthrough "dry forest" enclosure with marmosets, turtles, big fishes and many birds. The problem is that many normal Red-winged starlings live here and I don't know how to distinguish both species.

The Blue-backed manniking that Jurek7 asked about are in the tropical aviaries in the right border of the zoo near the gibbons. First aviary is African-themed and the other American-themed, obviously the mannakins are in the latter. There are various individuals and they're very conspicuous and easy to spot both visually and acustically. They're very restless tough, so difficult to take a good photo as they are alwasy hoping from branch to branch or taking short flights.

Visited also Desert House and Palm House - near the zoo, but not part of it - I expected more animal species at Desert House, and more labelling in the succulent plants.

I also visited nearby Slovakia, passing a night in the High Tatras where I was lucky to find one of my most dreamed animals ever, the Blue Slug (Bielzia coerulans) endemic of the mountain chains of this zone.

Hi,
In September of this year I plan a trip with my mother to Vienna. But traveling with the current situation is difficult. I suppose, but I only can suppose, that by September I will be vaccinated of covid-19.

I want to visit the next places:

HAUS DES MEERES, a magnific place with extremely dreamed BOWFIN and BEARDED LEATHERJACKET!!!, only holder of magnific Giant Hawkfish, Oriental Flying Gurnard and Slender-billed Red-winged Starling, and many other interesting amphibians, fishes and small birds, from Lake Titicaca frogs to tope sharks and Borneo earless monitor.
The problem is: when I enter to their website first photo shows some signage regarding the obligated use of FPP2 mask and the obligation of being vaccinated or recently recovered from covid-19. I understood well? These are only image symbols so I'm not sure if there is an explicit obligation of doing this. I mean, in most zoos the mask is obligatory but not the vaccine certificate. Also, a third symbol appears with the other two and it says "Registration". It means that I must register in the Haus des Meeres for be able to visit it? I'm a bit confused by the supposed rules of this place...

TIERGARTEN SCHÖNBRUNN, with some incredible jewels, especially in reptiles, with some nice birds, small mammals and fishes too. One of my most wished is the Long-tailed broadbill, only holder in Europe, but ZTL says "behind the scenes?". Yes, with a question mark. So somebody know if this bird is or not behind the scenes?
This zoo apparently only ask for wear mask and keep social distance. No recent vaccination certificate needed for enter here. I'm right?
After reading the website I see that some animal houses are closed during pandemy, and it's probable that they're still closed during September. These include the bird house (aaargh), the jungle house (aaaaaargrrrrhhhh) and the rat house. What is the rat house? ZTL don't list an extensive series of rare rodents for Schönbrunn, only common rat and Gambian giant pouched rat. The later would be a lifer very interesting and wished for me. Are the Gambian rats in the Rat House?

A place that I'm in doubt to visit or not is GREIFVOGELZUCHSTATION HAGENBACHKLAMM . It's not in the same Vienna city and I don't know if public transport is easily available to this place and if it worth the price-time of travel. It's cheap, but it only open on weekend and for brief hours closing in the midday. Actually not much hours are needed for this little falconry show. The thing that attracts me from here is that they have WEDGE-TAILED EAGLE!! and AUGUR BUZZARD! as well as laggar falcon, Himalayan griffon vulture and Martial eagle, all of them are of my interest. I can't find many info in English and none about covid-19 restrictions. It worth the visit including public transport?

-The UNIVERSITY OF VIENNA BOTANICAL GARDENS, that are free. No apparent restrictions from covid-19.

-THE VIENNA MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY, that from all these places probably it's the most interesting one for me. Closed on Tuesays. It ask to wear mask, social distance and hand desinfection but apparently no vaccine certificate needed, except for guided tours and Museum Cafe.

-I know Turtle Island in Graz is in the same country, and it's very good for getting photos of many unique turtle species but turtles are not a group I'm specially fond about, and apparently this place is really far from Vienna, so I guess that the travel is not worthy...

So I want to know, this is all correct? Especially regarding covid-19-related visiting rules for each place? So, is Haus des Meeres the only one that ask vaccine certificate to enter? What means "registration"? It will be probably the same rules by September?

And also, there are any other places besides the mentioned ones that could be interesting for me species-wise? I know there is a butterfly house but seen photos from TripAdvisor and all the species are the commonly kept ones in every butterfly house, plus is a small place, crowded and expensive. But, maybe there are other aquariums, insectariums, natural history museums or botanical facilities in the place, or even temporary animal fairs that will take place in September, or extensive specialized pet shops that usually have rare species?
 
Hi', just returned from my travel! Very satisfactory and I enjoyed a lot. Overall, photographing infinite number of new species at the incredible Natural History Museum - and old-style dipslay of endless cabinets ordered taxonomically with countless rarities of the almost every animal group, from cestodes to priapulids and of course also infinite vertebrates and insects and fossils.
Haus des Meeres was very pleasing to visit, I never has been in an aquarium that consist of a tall, 11 floor building instead a wide and low one as usual. Sadly, the two most extremely superexciting animals in the whole of Austria, the bowfin and the bearded leatherjacket, passed away both in Haus des Meeres after I asked the staff about them. And as expected, the countless rarities of small toothcarps and livebearers are BTS. But what remains is very enjoyable and it includes what I would rate as the best zoo exhibit I visited ever, only rivalled by Burger's Mangrove maybe. A two-floow tropical jungle where marmosets, sakis, bats, all sort of birds (guans, turacos, hornbills and various passerines), turtles and every kind of freshwater tropical medium-sized fishes, roam freely around you, and with every animal being extremely tame as for let you approach by millimeters, but also not interacting with visitors as they know visitors are not a source of food. So just the perfect grade of tameness for seeing every bird and monkey and bat and fish at zero distance without afraid them and seeing also them interact with themselves.

Tiergarten Schönbrunn was nice, nothing extremely spectacular but definitely worth a visit. I would say it's comparable to Madrid zoo-aquarium or Wüppertal zoo. All the rare chameleons and small freshwater fishes that ZTL announces for here are BTS.
As Jakub said, the broadbill is signed but one must have many luck to find a green bird that don't move in the foliage of an endless treetop jungle. I didn't found it, but I saw most of the other bird species announced for this exhibit, despite floor level being closed to public.

Rats House was open, but I only saw the domestic fancy Brown Rats and the Northern Luzon rats, not the Gambian Pouched ones that was the interesting ones for me. They was signed, but no-show.

If red-billed starling is on show, then it must be in the False Gharial walkthrough "dry forest" enclosure with marmosets, turtles, big fishes and many birds. The problem is that many normal Red-winged starlings live here and I don't know how to distinguish both species.

The Blue-backed manniking that Jurek7 asked about are in the tropical aviaries in the right border of the zoo near the gibbons. First aviary is African-themed and the other American-themed, obviously the mannakins are in the latter. There are various individuals and they're very conspicuous and easy to spot both visually and acustically. They're very restless tough, so difficult to take a good photo as they are alwasy hoping from branch to branch or taking short flights.

Visited also Desert House and Palm House - near the zoo, but not part of it - I expected more animal species at Desert House, and more labelling in the succulent plants.

I also visited nearby Slovakia, passing a night in the High Tatras where I was lucky to find one of my most dreamed animals ever, the Blue Slug (Bielzia coerulans) endemic of the mountain chains of this zone.

Did you manage to see widowbirds in the african aviary?
I have visited the zoo twice before but I can’t remember a walk-through with false gharials and marmosets. Just checked the map and did not manage to find it. Where is it?
 
Did you manage to see widowbirds in the african aviary?
I have visited the zoo twice before but I can’t remember a walk-through with false gharials and marmosets. Just checked the map and did not manage to find it. Where is it?

The gharials and marmosets might be in the Haus des Meeres, there are not at Schönbrunn.
 
Did you manage to see widowbirds in the african aviary?
I have visited the zoo twice before but I can’t remember a walk-through with false gharials and marmosets. Just checked the map and did not manage to find it. Where is it?

Yes, I saw an splendid male widowbird pecking some greens at the feeder. And yes, the gharials are in Haus des Meeres, with cotton-top tamarins, red-winged starlings, emerald starlings, bearded barbets, red-crested turacos, giant gouramis, red-tailed catfishes, pacus and more (and a tube of leafcutter ants through the exhibit). I saw the false gharial almost catching a turtle that approached to him too much because a piece of lettuce ended just in the gharial's snout. It sounded like a shoot in the water, and a member of staff went here inmediately for see what is happening - and I explained her what I saw.
 
Overall, photographing infinite number of new species at the incredible Natural History Museum - and old-style dipslay of endless cabinets ordered taxonomically with countless rarities of the almost every animal group.....
Are the museum's quagga and blaubok specimens currently on display?
 
I didn't saw none of both. Argh, they had bluebuck?? I would love to have seen it!
Yes the Vienna Museum has one of the four remaining mounted blaubok skins (the other three being in Paris, Leiden and Stockholm).

Frustratingly neither Vienna's blaubok nor quagga have ever been on exhibit on any of my visits.
 
BTW - according to staff of Haus des Meers, there is no Slender-billed Red-winged Starling in the collection, only Red-winged Starlings O. morio.
 
Hi', just returned from my travel! Very satisfactory and I enjoyed a lot.

Very usefull report as I hope to visit these three facilities next week.

Do you have to buy tickets online for Tiergarten, Haus des Meeres and/or Museum or can you just buy these on location?

Frustratingly neither Vienna's blaubok nor quagga have ever been on exhibit on any of my visits.

More or less the same for Leiden. Their quagga (the last individual ever) was only on display in a temporary exhibit last year, but otherwise the blaubok, quagga, thylacine and so many other recently extinct mammals and other rarities like striped rabbit are held off-show.
 
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More or less the same for Leiden. Their quagga (the last individual ever) was only on display in a temporary exhibit last year, but otherwise the blaubok, quagga, thylacine and so many other recently extinct mammals and other rarities like striped rabbit are held off-show.
I've only visited the Leiden Museum once (when I attended a meeting of the Society for the History of Natural History that was held in the museum).

Both Leiden's quagga and blaubok were on exhibit then. It's a great shame that they no longer are.
 
Dear @AWP I bought the tickets directly on location for all three places without any problem. The only slightly more complicated place is Haus des Meeres that ask you for a vaccinate certification proof for entry, but once shown, they sell you the ticket directly.
 
@Kakapo Thanks for the info.

I've only visited the Leiden Museum once (when I attended a meeting of the Society for the History of Natural History that was held in the museum).

Both Leiden's quagga and blaubok were on exhibit then. It's a great shame that they no longer are.

Interesting, do you know which year you visited?
 
More or less the same for Leiden. Their quagga (the last individual ever) was only on display in a temporary exhibit last year, but otherwise the blaubok, quagga, thylacine and so many other recently extinct mammals and other rarities like striped rabbit are held off-show.
I've only visited the Leiden Museum once (when I attended a meeting of the Society for the History of Natural History that was held in the museum).

Both Leiden's quagga and blaubok were on exhibit then. It's a great shame that they no longer are.
Interesting, do you know which year you visited?
My only visit to the Leiden Museum was in 2007.

Incidentally, apologies for further digression from Vienna, but I was very interested by your comment that the Leiden Museum quagga was the "last individual ever".

According to quagga expert Reinhold Rau, the Leiden quagga was acquired between 1830 and 1833 (about fifty years before the last quagga died in Amsterdam Zoo).

The last quagga died in Amsterdam Zoo on 12th August 1883 and Reinhold Rau lists it as being in the Amsterdam Museum (also off-exhibit).

Was the Amsterdam quagga loaned to Leiden for the temporary exhibition you mention?
 
Incidentally, apologies for further digression from Vienna, but I was very interested by your comment that the Leiden Museum quagga was the "last individual ever".

According to quagga expert Reinhold Rau, the Leiden quagga was acquired between 1830 and 1833 (about fifty years before the last quagga died in Amsterdam Zoo).

The last quagga died in Amsterdam Zoo on 12th August 1883 and Reinhold Rau lists it as being in the Amsterdam Museum (also off-exhibit).

Was the Amsterdam quagga loaned to Leiden for the temporary exhibition you mention?

The zoological collection of the University of Amsterdam was merged with that Leiden and is now stored at Naturalis.
 
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