The new attraction at the park this year is an African Plains and Masai Village. You enter the African Plains via passport control where you can stamp a passport which you are given at the entrance. You then walk along a path past a camp-site and land-rover. There is also a walk-through area with Pygmy Goats which you pass through before entering the Masai Village. The village has an enclosure with Porcupine. The huts in the village have lots of information on Africa and conservation. The Plains are home to Zebra, ostrich and Eland (which came from Longlet) on an open field with a waterhole.
The rest of the park has numerous aviaries with several species of birds.
Mammals which are housed in basic enclosures include Meercats, yellow Mongooses, Racoons, Coati, Caracal, capybara, Kinkajou, Deer, Wallabies and several primate species.
I had visited the park a few years earlier and was not happy with the state of the park, although on this visit things had improved, so much more could be done to improve it, but needs a lot of money to do this.
The highlight of the park for me was the Eland as I had never seen them before.
The rest of the park has numerous aviaries with several species of birds.
Mammals which are housed in basic enclosures include Meercats, yellow Mongooses, Racoons, Coati, Caracal, capybara, Kinkajou, Deer, Wallabies and several primate species.
I had visited the park a few years earlier and was not happy with the state of the park, although on this visit things had improved, so much more could be done to improve it, but needs a lot of money to do this.
The highlight of the park for me was the Eland as I had never seen them before.