Unrelated note, my facebook messenger is playing up so any chance you can resend your last message Dave? I'm not ignoring you, honestly!![]()
Have done so![]()
The richness of colour in the coat of a Sumatran Tiger in particular is rather emphasised by seeing one standing next to the relatively-pale Amur Tiger!
I don't know about you guys, but for me, sometimes it really does surprise me just how big white rhinoceroses are. I've always understood they were large animals, but anytime I see them at close proximity (their indoor exhibit at the Bronx Zoo allows you to come fairly close), I am in awe at how massive they are (and also, the space is a bit small, so that may make them seem bigger). They're also very long animals!
Totally agree, I always knew they are big, tall animals but when I stood next to Thorn in the house at Chester I got a whole new perspective on what enormous animals they are, even without the neck length, their shoulder height is mind boggling.
And their heads are huge too!
Also I am probably one of a small number of people who find the smell of a male giraffe quite nice in a weird way....![]()
As I have noted in the past, the train between Chester and Liverpool - which I always use to reach Bache, from where I walk to the zoo - always tends to smell of the Chester Zoo giraffe house.
What this says about the inhabitants of the Wirral, Merseyside and northern Cheshire, I will leave to you![]()
Musk Ox are a bit smaller than I thought.