Kakapo
Well-Known Member
Dear Zoochat pals,
This summer (by the begin of August) I plan to do a zootrip to Paris for two weeks. I tought in the next collections to visit:
1. CINÉ AQUA TROCADÉRO
This seems to be a small aquarium, with few species of interest. Being worse than Aquarium de la Porte Dorée (species-wise), its more expensive: 20,50€. It reopens to the public on 22th June so I suppose that by the begin of August it would be no problem of getting tickets on board. It have 15 species of fishes that are not found in any other collection in ZTL and that I lack. Of these 15, only 2 are really exciting for me: Chaetodon striatus and Chaetodon unimaculatus, but that's only because I'm crazy about butterflyfishes, haha. 20 more species are rare (found in 1 to 5 collections in ZTL) and I lack. Of these 20, Chaetodon citrinellus, Lepadogaster lepadogaster and Tripterygion melanurum are the most interesting for me. I wonder if Lepadogaster will be too difficult to spot, probably hidden under rocks? and if Tripterygion would be easily visible. The place have three different species of Tripterygion and I would like to know if they're signaged and if in the same or different tanks for avoid confusion of species. Among the more common species, the most interesting for me are Cilata mustela, Scomber scombrus, Tripterygion delaisi and Zeugopterus punctatus. I would like to know if it worth the visit to this place. Zeugopterus is also present in Oceanographic Valencia that I will visit before Paris. It would worth the visit the place that cost 20'5€, when Porte Dorée costs only 7€ and have many more species? Yes, two unique butterflyfishes but... I'm in doubt to visit it or not. Any advice?
2. AQUARIUM DE LA PORTE DORÉE
Being very close to the Zoo Vincennes, it would be easy to visit both the same day for a non zoo-geek, but I wonder if I would be able to photograph all both places in same day. Aquarium reopens on 16th June, so again I think it will not be problem for buy tickets on board. Ticket costs only 7€ for single adult. One of the things that catch more my attention is that the species list in ZTL is substantially different from the species list of the Aquarium website. The website shows some interesting species missing in ZTL, and I remember especially one very very exciting to me: Pegasus volitans. I think I also remember black arowana (Osteoglossum ferreirai), also missing from ZTL list. I wonder which of the two lists are more updated, could anybody help?
This place have 30 species exclusively found here according to ZTL and that I lack. Of these, the most interesting for me is Apolemichthys griffisi. Unfortunately, many of the rare and unique species of this place are cichlids, that are the less exciting animal family on Earth for me
59 species are rare (found in 1-5 zoos according to ZTL) and I lack them. The most exciting for me are Atractosteus tropicus (missed them at Burgers), Chaetodon interruptus, Chaetodon quadrimaculatus and Scleropages leichardti (with this one I would complete the genus). I also miss a lot of "more common" species including exciting ones: Chitala ornata (really they're Chitala ornata, or just Chitala chitala? ZTL lists ornata, while the aquarium website lists Ch. chitala...), Ctenopoma acutirostre, Malapterurus electricus, Potamotrygon castexi and Potamotrygon jabuti. Any toughts and advices? It's easy to see all the most wished or unique species? Some especially difficult to spot?
3. MENAGERIE DU JARDIN DES PLANTES
This wonderful special place have the less number of interesting/new species for me but that's because I already visited it in 2009. However, things changed from then to now. Menagerie reopens to public on 8th June so I think will be no problem in getting tickest on board. It costs 13 €, a little more expensive than when I visited in 2009, but still very cheap. The big shame is that spotted quolls are missing from the collection. I only have a pic of two fur balls rolled sleeping in Faunia, and I need a decent photo of an alive quoll :-( Only 6 species would be new for me, and from these, only 2 are rare (1-5 zoos): McQueen's bustard (Chlamydotis macqueenii) and Egernia striolata. The bustards are extremely exciting for me and I think that themselves alone worth the visit. More common species that I still lack are Elaphe schrenkii, Phalacrocorax melanoleucos, Vulpes corsac and the most interesting: Sus cebifrons. I look into the Zoochat gallery and the only pic of the Visayan warty pigs was of them sleeping. Any trick to catch them awake? When I visited in 2009, corsac fox enclosure looked like designed specifically for avoid photography. They are still so difficult to take photos due to the double fence, mesh and vines climbing on them? I'm also interested in take better pics of species I already have, especially Little bustard (substituting photo of taxidermy specimen by alive one), gaurs and manul. Manul probably is not much a problem if I visit Nesles in same trip. I remember also gaurs were very difficult to get decent photos without barriers. Toughts and advices about this place?
4. GRANDE GALERIE DE L'EVOLUTION
Jardin des Plantes is the best place in the world for a man like me: it have a good zoo, good botanical gardens and good natural history museum together combinated in the very same point. The Grande Galerie is not very exciting species-wise for me, but always I can find something interesting. The facilities of Jardin des Plantes in closed buildings reopens to public much latter than the Menagerie: all reopens on 24th June. But with all the month of July in between, getting tickets on board should be not difficult? One must take in account that all these closed buildings in Jardin des Plantes close on Tuesdays. Grande Galerie costs 10€, I think is a bit expensive for a museum taking in account that the Menagerie only costs 3 € more. But I think it will worth. Toughts and advices?
5. GALERIE DE PALÉONTOLOGIE ET D'ANATOMIE COMPARÉE
Same than the Grande Gallerie, but it costs 9€. It have an extremely interesting collection of fossil skeletons. But I would like to know if most of them are authentic or just casts. I'm not interested in casts and I don't take photos of them.
6. GRANDES SERRES DU JARDIN DES PLANTES
For 7€ you can enter both the greenhouses and the Galerie de Botanique. Probably I will be not very interested in the latter but I will visit if I have enough free time. All these covered buildings (Grande Galerie, Galerie de Paléontologie and Grandes Serres) open at 10:00 and closes at 18:00 so time is certainly very limited to see all in a single day. I think that two days would be enough, maybe one for the Menagerie and Grandes Serres and other for Grande Galerie and Galerie de Paléontologie, what do you think?
An additional place in the Jardin des Plantes that I would like a lot to visit is the Jardin Alpine, but according to website looks like that it's closed and there are nothing about reaperture dates. Somebody knows if it will be open for August? It's strange that being an open-topped place it remains closed while museums and greenhouses are open...
7. ZOO PARIS-VINCENNES
This place reopens to public on 8th June and costs 20€. The unique species that I miss are all small tropical birds: Cyanocompsa parellina, Sporophila torqueola and Tangara ruficervix. Looks like they will be in a free-flight walkthrough aviary and by experience I can tell that I will fail in locate and photograph them, as happens with almost all rarities in walkthrough aviaries. It is not the case, please let me know, and tricks for locate and photograph them are very welcome. Four additional species are rare (found in 1 to 5 zoos in ZTL) but these are not birds, but herps, so I hope they're easy to locate in their terrariums. Of these 4, the most interesting for me is Mantella baroni, and looking at the photos of the Gallery it seems an easy objective. I lack 16 more species that are "common", none of which are very exciting for me. As for the species that I need to take better photos than the ones I already have, it's noteworthy Eubucco bourcierii (taxidermy vs. alive), that I fear it will be also in a walkthrough aviary and nearly impossible to locate and photograph). Also noteworthy is Hapalemur griseus (taxidermy vs. alive), but the zoo also have Hapalemur simus, and I wonder if they're signaged and separated for allow good differentiation, or if they are mixed.
8. NESLES-PARCS DES FELINS
This is the most special place. It's off of Paris, and I wonder if it's easy to reach directly by public transport. Also I need to know if one can visit and see all by walking, as I know is a huge place with huge enclosures. There are four species that I miss and none of them are rare: crowned lemur, jungle cat, leopard cat and the most wished: rusty-spotted cat. I also need to avoid to see the cats as just a carpet of fur sleeping inside a hollow log. So if you tell me that I can see these four species by just walking and awake and enough close for good photograph, and the place itself is easy to reach by public transport, then I will visit it. If not, it will not worth for me, I think. It's open earlier than the other places mentioned: since 30th May it already opened to public. It costs 21 €, that is expensive for just a couple of rare cats, but maybe it worth. With 27 € you can visit both Parc des Felins and Terre des Singes. Is Terre des Singes worthy? (for somebody that already has been in Apenheul). Are both enough close for do both places by walking in the same day? It have some interesting species? (I didn't checked ZTL for Terre des Singes as I think nothing will excite me, but maybe...)
Besides the four species I miss, I also would like to take better photos from species I already have: mainly caracal (also present at Menagerie), Asian golden cat (in Wuppertal the enclosure is not photo-friendly, you only can photograph with bars), Gordon's wild cat, jaguarundi and manul (the latter also present at Menagerie).
I wish the place holds black-footed and flat-headed cats, then I would have not doubts about if it's worthy or not
So that's all. Advices and toughts on all this? Any other collection in Paris or very close that worths the visit species-wise? I think that I could delete CineAqua from my planning, and maybe Nesles, the others I think they're obligated. What do you think of all this?
Also, if some zoofreak wants to meet me and do the zootrip together, I'm open for suggestions
This summer (by the begin of August) I plan to do a zootrip to Paris for two weeks. I tought in the next collections to visit:
1. CINÉ AQUA TROCADÉRO
This seems to be a small aquarium, with few species of interest. Being worse than Aquarium de la Porte Dorée (species-wise), its more expensive: 20,50€. It reopens to the public on 22th June so I suppose that by the begin of August it would be no problem of getting tickets on board. It have 15 species of fishes that are not found in any other collection in ZTL and that I lack. Of these 15, only 2 are really exciting for me: Chaetodon striatus and Chaetodon unimaculatus, but that's only because I'm crazy about butterflyfishes, haha. 20 more species are rare (found in 1 to 5 collections in ZTL) and I lack. Of these 20, Chaetodon citrinellus, Lepadogaster lepadogaster and Tripterygion melanurum are the most interesting for me. I wonder if Lepadogaster will be too difficult to spot, probably hidden under rocks? and if Tripterygion would be easily visible. The place have three different species of Tripterygion and I would like to know if they're signaged and if in the same or different tanks for avoid confusion of species. Among the more common species, the most interesting for me are Cilata mustela, Scomber scombrus, Tripterygion delaisi and Zeugopterus punctatus. I would like to know if it worth the visit to this place. Zeugopterus is also present in Oceanographic Valencia that I will visit before Paris. It would worth the visit the place that cost 20'5€, when Porte Dorée costs only 7€ and have many more species? Yes, two unique butterflyfishes but... I'm in doubt to visit it or not. Any advice?
2. AQUARIUM DE LA PORTE DORÉE
Being very close to the Zoo Vincennes, it would be easy to visit both the same day for a non zoo-geek, but I wonder if I would be able to photograph all both places in same day. Aquarium reopens on 16th June, so again I think it will not be problem for buy tickets on board. Ticket costs only 7€ for single adult. One of the things that catch more my attention is that the species list in ZTL is substantially different from the species list of the Aquarium website. The website shows some interesting species missing in ZTL, and I remember especially one very very exciting to me: Pegasus volitans. I think I also remember black arowana (Osteoglossum ferreirai), also missing from ZTL list. I wonder which of the two lists are more updated, could anybody help?
This place have 30 species exclusively found here according to ZTL and that I lack. Of these, the most interesting for me is Apolemichthys griffisi. Unfortunately, many of the rare and unique species of this place are cichlids, that are the less exciting animal family on Earth for me
3. MENAGERIE DU JARDIN DES PLANTES
This wonderful special place have the less number of interesting/new species for me but that's because I already visited it in 2009. However, things changed from then to now. Menagerie reopens to public on 8th June so I think will be no problem in getting tickest on board. It costs 13 €, a little more expensive than when I visited in 2009, but still very cheap. The big shame is that spotted quolls are missing from the collection. I only have a pic of two fur balls rolled sleeping in Faunia, and I need a decent photo of an alive quoll :-( Only 6 species would be new for me, and from these, only 2 are rare (1-5 zoos): McQueen's bustard (Chlamydotis macqueenii) and Egernia striolata. The bustards are extremely exciting for me and I think that themselves alone worth the visit. More common species that I still lack are Elaphe schrenkii, Phalacrocorax melanoleucos, Vulpes corsac and the most interesting: Sus cebifrons. I look into the Zoochat gallery and the only pic of the Visayan warty pigs was of them sleeping. Any trick to catch them awake? When I visited in 2009, corsac fox enclosure looked like designed specifically for avoid photography. They are still so difficult to take photos due to the double fence, mesh and vines climbing on them? I'm also interested in take better pics of species I already have, especially Little bustard (substituting photo of taxidermy specimen by alive one), gaurs and manul. Manul probably is not much a problem if I visit Nesles in same trip. I remember also gaurs were very difficult to get decent photos without barriers. Toughts and advices about this place?
4. GRANDE GALERIE DE L'EVOLUTION
Jardin des Plantes is the best place in the world for a man like me: it have a good zoo, good botanical gardens and good natural history museum together combinated in the very same point. The Grande Galerie is not very exciting species-wise for me, but always I can find something interesting. The facilities of Jardin des Plantes in closed buildings reopens to public much latter than the Menagerie: all reopens on 24th June. But with all the month of July in between, getting tickets on board should be not difficult? One must take in account that all these closed buildings in Jardin des Plantes close on Tuesdays. Grande Galerie costs 10€, I think is a bit expensive for a museum taking in account that the Menagerie only costs 3 € more. But I think it will worth. Toughts and advices?
5. GALERIE DE PALÉONTOLOGIE ET D'ANATOMIE COMPARÉE
Same than the Grande Gallerie, but it costs 9€. It have an extremely interesting collection of fossil skeletons. But I would like to know if most of them are authentic or just casts. I'm not interested in casts and I don't take photos of them.
6. GRANDES SERRES DU JARDIN DES PLANTES
For 7€ you can enter both the greenhouses and the Galerie de Botanique. Probably I will be not very interested in the latter but I will visit if I have enough free time. All these covered buildings (Grande Galerie, Galerie de Paléontologie and Grandes Serres) open at 10:00 and closes at 18:00 so time is certainly very limited to see all in a single day. I think that two days would be enough, maybe one for the Menagerie and Grandes Serres and other for Grande Galerie and Galerie de Paléontologie, what do you think?
An additional place in the Jardin des Plantes that I would like a lot to visit is the Jardin Alpine, but according to website looks like that it's closed and there are nothing about reaperture dates. Somebody knows if it will be open for August? It's strange that being an open-topped place it remains closed while museums and greenhouses are open...
7. ZOO PARIS-VINCENNES
This place reopens to public on 8th June and costs 20€. The unique species that I miss are all small tropical birds: Cyanocompsa parellina, Sporophila torqueola and Tangara ruficervix. Looks like they will be in a free-flight walkthrough aviary and by experience I can tell that I will fail in locate and photograph them, as happens with almost all rarities in walkthrough aviaries. It is not the case, please let me know, and tricks for locate and photograph them are very welcome. Four additional species are rare (found in 1 to 5 zoos in ZTL) but these are not birds, but herps, so I hope they're easy to locate in their terrariums. Of these 4, the most interesting for me is Mantella baroni, and looking at the photos of the Gallery it seems an easy objective. I lack 16 more species that are "common", none of which are very exciting for me. As for the species that I need to take better photos than the ones I already have, it's noteworthy Eubucco bourcierii (taxidermy vs. alive), that I fear it will be also in a walkthrough aviary and nearly impossible to locate and photograph). Also noteworthy is Hapalemur griseus (taxidermy vs. alive), but the zoo also have Hapalemur simus, and I wonder if they're signaged and separated for allow good differentiation, or if they are mixed.
8. NESLES-PARCS DES FELINS
This is the most special place. It's off of Paris, and I wonder if it's easy to reach directly by public transport. Also I need to know if one can visit and see all by walking, as I know is a huge place with huge enclosures. There are four species that I miss and none of them are rare: crowned lemur, jungle cat, leopard cat and the most wished: rusty-spotted cat. I also need to avoid to see the cats as just a carpet of fur sleeping inside a hollow log. So if you tell me that I can see these four species by just walking and awake and enough close for good photograph, and the place itself is easy to reach by public transport, then I will visit it. If not, it will not worth for me, I think. It's open earlier than the other places mentioned: since 30th May it already opened to public. It costs 21 €, that is expensive for just a couple of rare cats, but maybe it worth. With 27 € you can visit both Parc des Felins and Terre des Singes. Is Terre des Singes worthy? (for somebody that already has been in Apenheul). Are both enough close for do both places by walking in the same day? It have some interesting species? (I didn't checked ZTL for Terre des Singes as I think nothing will excite me, but maybe...)
Besides the four species I miss, I also would like to take better photos from species I already have: mainly caracal (also present at Menagerie), Asian golden cat (in Wuppertal the enclosure is not photo-friendly, you only can photograph with bars), Gordon's wild cat, jaguarundi and manul (the latter also present at Menagerie).
I wish the place holds black-footed and flat-headed cats, then I would have not doubts about if it's worthy or not
So that's all. Advices and toughts on all this? Any other collection in Paris or very close that worths the visit species-wise? I think that I could delete CineAqua from my planning, and maybe Nesles, the others I think they're obligated. What do you think of all this?
Also, if some zoofreak wants to meet me and do the zootrip together, I'm open for suggestions