Rajang-GOAT
Well-Known Member
Is there any chance of them, or Whipsnade, getting them back in the nearish future I wonder?London never should have gone out of Orangs. They had a strong history with them, and a terrible history with Gorillas.
Is there any chance of them, or Whipsnade, getting them back in the nearish future I wonder?London never should have gone out of Orangs. They had a strong history with them, and a terrible history with Gorillas.
Is there any chance of them, or Whipsnade, getting them back in the nearish future I wonder?
For similar reasons, we should probably be thankful that Lubetkin's plans for an Elephant House at London Zoo never materialised either.As an aside, ZSL had given commission in the 1930s to Berthold Lubektin for a Gibbon House at Whipsnade. Designed in the shape of an amphitheatre (more like an enormous open clam shell!) the design was meant in such a way “as to amplify the gibbons calls” across the zoo.
Thankfully the plans never came to fruition, and the sketches have to be seen to be believed!
Yes, but from memory only the 2nd 'spare' male Saleh and maybe one female. Not juveniles I don't think. London's success with Orangs stems from that almost chance gift/deposit of around nine animals by the Bornean government in the mid sixties. Two(Napolean and Josephine) were later sent to I think Hong Kong or was it Vienna. Anyway it still left London with over half a dozen, too many to house properly, even after the Sobells were built with its single main exhibit for each species. Free breeders almost anywhere, ZSL were bound to produce many babies from this foundation stock, plus the occassional loan/transfer in and out to other zoos, until finally the decision came to discontinue them- one reason being as a non-group species their management was deemed 'labour intensive'.I think that some were definitely in the old Tecton Gorilla House
That’s really interesting, thanks Pertinax. If I recall correctly, I believe the orangutans were a gift from the Sultan of Brunei.
After checking through my back copies of the ZSL Annual Reports, I can confirm 1967 was the year that London Zoo received nine young orang-utans (four males and five females).London's success with Orangs stems from that almost chance gift/deposit of around nine animals by the Bornean government in the mid sixties. Two (Napoleon and Josephine) were later sent to I think Hong Kong or was it Vienna...