werribee zoo visit 28/05/06

28-05-2006
well today i visited werribee open range zoo for the first time in a few years.
we only had about half an hour before our bus tour departed so rather than rush the african walking trail, we looked for something else to do. unfortunately there wasn't anything. the australian themed volcanic plains walk was closed for "animal management" and the savannah discovery center closed for renovations. we had already looked at the meerkats for over ten minutes and still had 20 to kill. in the end we just settled on the zoo shop!!!
not that it would have made much difference. from memory the savannah discovery center was pretty much this large new building housing nothing but a few signs and small aquarium for african cichlids. the volcanic plains walk has a magnificent dramatic entrance with giant aboriginal spears and sculpture - all to entice you into a wonderful adventure where you will discover....... a fenced off moth habitat and a few kangaroos and emus!
we saw them as the bus drove past the walking trail anyway.
so then we did the safari. we saw all the usual african guys and even got a good look at all three of the hippos who were out of the lake for a change.
after that was over we headed off down the african trail, now called "pula reserve". we saw the new lions home. we saw that the new hippo exhibit was close to completion.
we left. all up - two hours, tops.
and this is one of the biggest problems with werribee. there just isn't much there to see or do. i suppose had it been a nice day we could have had a picnic in the sun, lounged around on the grass and watched the zebras grazing on the other side of the stream. but it wasn't a very nice day so our only entertainment was viewing the animals and there just isn't that many to see at your own pace. the safari bus takes 50 minutes - the lions, meerkats, serval, cheetah, vervets and zebras are done in maybe half an hour or 40 minutes. add half an hour messing around and your ready to go home. you spend almost just as much time in the car getting to/from werribee as you do at the zoo!
as for the exhibits, for all the ohhhing and ahhing - "lions on the edge" is pretty standard. there was a much better attempt at african immersion than the older trail exhibits and i'll go into this later, but generally it lacked something. i think what it was is this;
when the exhibit was being planned it was touted as featuring two lion prides in an african kopje where the lions could sit high above the savanah and lick their lips at the passing herds. a kopje are those big piles of rounded boulders that lions like to lounge apon in the wild and are such a distinct feature of the african savannh landscape. it sounded great.
however the actual lion enclosure of lions on the edge isn't that grand an experience. for starters there is only one place to view the lions from and the exhibit for the second pride exhibit can only be viewed from a far distance, beyond the first. since the zoo has no second pride, it currently houses the males and females seperately in each exhibit. thus, you don't get very close to the male lions at all. secondly, there is no kopje. think of how cool the lions would have looked lounging on carefully re-created, heated boulders with the odd thorny acacia. it would look distincly african and reminicent of the lion king or one of many documentaries we have all seen. instead they have a grassy lanscaped hill with a few dead eucalypus trees scattered around. the enclosure didn't make the most of the site in my opinion. nor did it really offer distant views of herds of zebra or antelope. more so, just some gum trees as the nearest ungulate paddock was more to the side of us, not directly behind.
the african herders hut and kraal (for livestock) wasn't exactly burting with life. there where a few chickens but the zoos spectacular watusi cattle where strangely not in their home. instead they where wandering around in the asian grassland paddock. maybe this was due to development of the hippo exhibit - i'm not sure. but nubian goats and free-ranging flocks of guinea fowl would have been a very welcome addition.
the rest of pula reseve at least makes attempts to landcape the zoo like africa - something they have until recently, largely ignored at werribee. there are faux termite mounds and cattle carcasses. clumps of elephant grass, and other african plants scattered amongst the australian accacias and gum trees.
one very clever section encourages you to wander though a tall elephant grass "maze" whilst you walk though, hidden speakers burst to life with the snarls and roars of lions. they even half frightened me! very clever.
easily the best section is a supprisingly large australian boab tree, a simulator species for the african boab, that they have transplanted on a large hill near the lions and meerkats. there are lots of other smaller boabs around the place but this big one just looks magnificent!! it really looks like africa. and shows how effective certain species can be in capturing the image a landscape. sure, much of australias vegetation is similar to that of africa, but like a eucalyptus trees epitomises australia, a boab (even though in this case it was an australian species) screams africa.
many of the other plants used extensively in the "africanisation" of the zoos walking trails are either australian or american simulator species. unfortunately for me i found it somewhat difficult to get an african "feel" from the landscaping when i recognised so many species as natives or other non-africans. in some cases such as the extensive use of washington palms (from mexico and arizona) i wondered why senegal or another african palm available in australia wasn't used instead. gum trees as i said earlier are so distinct to us australians you wonder why they where amongst the new plantings.
the new hippo exhibit was not quite what i had expected. it consists of a series of boardwalks and paths trailing through swamps. the hippo pools are going to be fed with water passed through a series of papyrus filtration ponds that aim to keep the water clear. there where many large "african" huts and buildings but i'm not sure if it will feature underwater viweing. it didn't look as though it would. unfortunately 3 rediculous lifesize cartoon hippos sculptures have been bult in the middle of the exhibit destroying any hope of the exhibit looking natural and wild. yuk!
other changes included a new african-style giraffe feeding hut built on the lower savannah. the zoo plans on offering giraffe feeding safaris this coming summer (i say let anyone do it - i'm not paying extra when there is so little on offer already!).
werribee is finally starting to make attemps at landscaping the zoo like africa - and although i haven't been to dubbo or monarto, judging from photographs, i would say it has quite a head start on them in this respect. that said - they really need to do more. so far, though i wasn't always that impressed by their "simulator" african landscape on the walking trails - at least it has been attempted and the lower savannah could do with a similar horticultural makeover. it has much potential as the ochre coloured soil and eroded cliffs that surround the floodplain instantly lend themselves to the african theme, but plantings of elephant grass, palms and the removal of a few of the young gum tress would make it so much better. the odd faux termite mound wuldn't go astray either.
in conclusion - the hortcultural development of the zoo is really starting to improve the feel of werribee zoo, and although the very new facilities (main entrance, restaurant, safari buses and exhibits) are probably the best of any open range zoo in australia, it still has a long way to go if it wants to be world-class. lets hope they keep it up. the masterplan features walking/bike paths down to the lower savannah, something i think the zoo desperately needs. however the masterplan features no asian or south american walking trails or exhibits and no additional species to the "pula reserve". without development of these areas the zoo will always be a little bit of a disapointment, since the it really does need to provide visitors with more animals to be worth the $20 entrance fee.
Last edited by patrick; 29-05-2006 at 01:39 PM.
|