Join our zoo community

Prague and Pilsen Visit

Discussion in 'Czech Republic' started by LaughingDove, 18 Oct 2015.

  1. LaughingDove

    LaughingDove Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    16 May 2014
    Posts:
    2,492
    Location:
    Oxford/Warsaw
    Good point about the visitor facilities, and something that didn't really occur to me actually because I don't eat in zoo restaurants and only had a brief glance in the shops.
     
  2. arafan

    arafan Well-Known Member 5+ year member

    Joined:
    11 Jan 2015
    Posts:
    213
    Location:
    Brazil
    I just wanted to say thank you very much for this review of this both zoos. They are now on the top of my to-do list. The collections in these both zoos are exellent and the most exhibits are looking rather good.
     
  3. FunkyGibbon

    FunkyGibbon Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    11 Jan 2015
    Posts:
    2,937
    Location:
    Birmingham, UK
    Agreed on both counts! I love your reviews LD, and I think I might have to persuade my employer here in China that flights to London can totally legitimately have a stop over in Prague!
     
  4. ralph

    ralph Well-Known Member 10+ year member

    Joined:
    11 Mar 2011
    Posts:
    428
    Location:
    Tilburg, Netherlands
    Great review! I visited Pilsen and Prague back in 2011 and loved both so much that I decided to revisit both next year. Few questions about Pilsen...

    Is the striped possom still on display? It was one of the highlights of my visit :)

    Do you happen to remember what birds are in the DinoPark? I skipped it in 2011, but if there's some nice species I haven't seen, I'll buy the ticket next year.

    Are you allowed to take photographs (for private use) during the behind the scenes tour?
    Did you see the Indian musk shrew, Greater Hedgehog Tenrec and Stripe-faced flying fox?

    Also, does anyone know if these kind of tours are possible in Prague as well?
     
  5. LaughingDove

    LaughingDove Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    16 May 2014
    Posts:
    2,492
    Location:
    Oxford/Warsaw
    To answer your questions:

    The Striped possum was not on public display...

    Here is a list of birds on display in the Dino Park (grouped by enclosure)

    Baer's Pochard,
    Common Redstart,
    Rosy Starling,
    Oriental Turtle Dove (subsp. orientalis),
    Spotless Starling,
    Rock Bunting (subsp. par),
    Red-headed Bunting,
    Turkmenian Pheasant (P. c. zarudnyi),
    Black Lark

    Persian Jird (subsp. rossicus)

    Barbary Partridge,
    Spotless Starling,
    Iberian Azure-winged Magpie (C. c. cooki),
    Common Pheasant (P. c. colchius).

    Turkmenian Mouse-like Hamster

    Garganey,
    Black Redstart,
    White-eared Bulbul,
    Chestnut-winged Laughingthrush,
    Zeravshan Pheasant (P. c. zerafshanicus),
    Spotted Nutcracker (subsp. macrorhynchos)

    Greenfinch (subsp. chloris),
    Long-tailed Rosefinch (subsp. sibiricus),
    Hawfinch,
    Dark-grey Tit,
    Eurasian Oystercatcher,
    Chiwa Pheasant (P. c. chrysomelas).

    Steppe Lemming

    Eurasian Siskin,
    Green-winged teal (subsp. crecca),
    Baikal Bullfinch,
    European Goldfinch,
    Eurasian Bullfinch (subsp. pyrrhula),
    Song Thrush (subsp. philomelos),
    Formosan Ring-necked Pheasant (P. c. formosanus),
    Azure Tit.

    Water Rail,
    Green-winged Teal (subsp. crecca),
    Northern Lapwing,
    White-shouldered Starling,
    Black-breasted Thrush,
    Spotted Nutcracker,
    Spotted Dove (subsp. chinensis),
    Mikado Pheasant.

    Taiwan Beauty Snake (subsp. friesi),

    Korean Ring-necked Pheasant (subsp. karpowi),
    White-crested Laughingthrush (subsp. diardi),
    Red-backed Shrike,
    Baikal Teal.

    Purple-backed Starling,
    Black-collared Starling,
    Azure-winged Magpie,
    Baer's Pochard,
    Pallas' Pheasant (P. c. pallasi),

    White-headed Black Bulbul (subsp. leucocephalus),
    Grey-backed Thrush,
    Spotted Dove (subsp. chinensis),
    Black Redstart,
    Moustached Laughingthrush (subsp. cinereiceps),
    Baer's Pochard,
    Chinese Ring-necked Pheasant (P. c. torquatus),

    (and also a waterfowl pond that is also viewable from the zoo without going into the DinoPark)

    I personally thought it was worth getting the ticket.


    Other Questions:
    I was allowed to take photographs in the behind the scenes area and I wasn't told that I couldn't share them on the internet. However I didn't think it would be appropriate to post pictures of an off show area all over the internet.

    I didn't see the shrew or the flying fox on or off display, however I did see the tenrecs.
     
    Last edited: 17 Dec 2015
  6. ralph

    ralph Well-Known Member 10+ year member

    Joined:
    11 Mar 2011
    Posts:
    428
    Location:
    Tilburg, Netherlands
    Thanks!
    Seems one would miss out on quite a few interesting bird species if not visiting the Dino Park. It will be worth the extra ticket.
     
  7. sooty mangabey

    sooty mangabey Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    29 Apr 2008
    Posts:
    1,939
    Location:
    Sussex by the Sea
    I'm pretty sure that Laughing Dove's behind-the-scenes tour was nothing in any way "official", but rather the result of his having contacted the zoo in advance to ask if he could see those areas not on public show. In my experience, the staff at Pilsen are exceptionally helpful and keen to show things to interested visitors...

    ..which raises a question: which zoos are the most welcoming and friendly to interested amateur visitors? At which places are you most likely to get ushered through a side door to see a newly-born bear cub, an off-show hornbill, or the intricate workings of the puma's sliding doors? My experience in Europe is that, the further east one goes, the friendlier places get (with a few honourable exceptions either way: praise for Fuengirola, in Spain; boos to Liberec in the Czech Republic). Of course, this is entirely dependent on who it is you get talking to: it could have been that my Mrs Grumpy at Liberec, this past summer, is the one bad apple in amongst an otherwise marvellous group of workers (or it could be that she was busy and appalled at my failure to grasp even the basics of the Czech language)...

    My top friendliest zoos would be:
    1. East Berlin
    2. Pilsen
    3. West Berlin
    4. Wroclaw
    5. Wuppertal
    6. Antwerp

    ...and the least friendly:
    1. London (by a mile)
    2. Paris
    3. Marwell