I remember one time Edinburgh Zoo said their cotton-top tamarins had 'left' but I saw this species in Magic Forset
The weirdest thing I saw in zoos was definitely the New Guinea Short-beaked Echidna & New Guinea Ground Cuscus' exhibit at Plzen Zoo. It was not the enrichment of the exhibit I find weird, it's the exhibit's place in the zoo: you can only find it, if you need to go to the toilet.... I think that says it all.
It really is too weird!Fortunately, the exhibit is not situated IN the toilet directly but in the dark-lighted corrdior in front of the toilet. You won't pass it on the way around the zoo, not very subtle, especially because of the rarity of those species.
The weirdest thing I saw in zoos was definitely the New Guinea Short-beaked Echidna & New Guinea Ground Cuscus' exhibit at Plzen Zoo. It was not the enrichment of the exhibit I find weird, it's the exhibit's place in the zoo: you can only find it, if you need to go to the toilet.... I think that says it all.
It really is too weird!Fortunately, the exhibit is not situated IN the toilet directly but in the dark-lighted corrdior in front of the toilet. You won't pass it on the way around the zoo, not very subtle, especially because of the rarity of those species.
I can't decide if this is stupid or brilliant.
I can't decide if this is stupid or brilliant.
in the entrance building at Twycross, where you can watch leaf-cutting ants carry leaf fragments past your nose as you point Percy at the porcelain (this phrase (c) Barry Humphries 1966).
Even stranger was the afternoon feeding for the gorillas at Frankfurt. First Matze, then quite a young silverback, was shut away. Then the rest of the group were mustered in the indoor enclosure and then the keepers went in with them.... It was a rather disturbing sight, as it was obvious that the keepers were in charge, keeping control by force of personality, although the gorillas were quite clearly much stronger:
Frankfurt Gorillas. I saw exactly the same thing on one of my visits there. Very regimented performanceThey had to have their arms folded too. Interesting what you said about 'force of personality'. While I was there, at the end of it the keeper(only one in this case, from memory) exited the enclosure via the big metal door at one side. The Gorillas had to remain sitting in line, arms folded etc while he left. But as soon as he'd gone the blackback male 'Max' immediately walked over and climbed up onto the door, hanging above it it with his hands. Then he slammed it hard with his feet. 'Crash!' No mistaking the message- 'I'm getting too big for this'!
Ithink we have discussed this before, but I couldn't find the thread when I searched for it.
Actually the two weirdest things I ever saw were in Germany in 1973.
One was the feeding show for the Californian sea lions and the big bull southern elephant seal that shared a pool at Wilhelma, Stuttgart: the climax was a set piece in which two sea lions leant against the elephant seal like bookends while he reared up into the air; the tip of his nose must have been almost 4 metres above the ground......
Much weirder than this was surely the fact that, at one time, Stuttgart Zoo's elephant seal feeding show used to feature a chimpanzee throwing fish for the elephant seal.....
there's a photo of that in one of my older zoo books! I can't remember the title, but it was an English edition of a German book.Much weirder than this was surely the fact that, at one time, Stuttgart Zoo's elephant seal feeding show used to feature a chimpanzee throwing fish for the elephant seal.....
Too true . . . but I didn't see it
Alan
Much weirder than this was surely the fact that, at one time, Stuttgart Zoo's elephant seal feeding show used to feature a chimpanzee throwing fish for the elephant seal.....
there's a photo of that in one of my older zoo books! I can't remember the title, but it was an English edition of a German book.
I've seen a photo of this somewhere- is it in one of the old 'Zoos of the World' books?