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Zoo visitor numbers go wild, bucking Scottish tourism downturn

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Published Date: 04 March 2009
ZOOS in Scotland have been bucking a trend that has seen visitor numbers at tourist attractions fall sharply over the previous year.
Unlike museums, art galleries and castles that have generally experienced a drop in visitors, Edinburgh Zoo and Highland Wildlife Park both saw a rise in numbers.

Visitors to Edinburgh Zoo rose by 10 per cent, to 650,000. Highland Wildlife Park in
Inverness-shire attracted 23 per cent more people, with 80,000 visitors during 2008.

Bosses at the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland (RZSS) think new star attractions such as the £5.5 million Budongo Trail at Edinburgh Zoo, which is believed to be the biggest chimp enclosure in the world, and the arrival of exotic animals such as tigers to the Highland Wildlife Park could be behind the rise in numbers.

They also think during the recession more people could be opting to spend time at home rather than travelling overseas.

David Windmill, chief executive of RZSS, said: "People still want to get out and have a day out with the family even though they don't have quite as much money, and I think the zoo provides that."

He hopes the arrival of Mercedes, the only polar bear in the UK, at Highland Wildlife Park, will help encourage even more people to visit over the coming year. She is being transferred from Edinburgh Zoo to the park, where she will have a larger enclosure.

Five Sisters Zoo Park in West Lothian has also seen a rise in visitors over the past few months, according to its owners.





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1

Incandescent,

04/03/2009 00:19:21
Animals are great - Rufus - as long as they haven't got gnats. Right?
2

StuartAD,

West Lothian 04/03/2009 08:17:01
Only pop stars can afford the Africa visit, usually for some charity or other.
3

RogueTrooper,

Nu-Earth 04/03/2009 08:21:39
So no chance of finding a topic that's free from inane nat-fanboy comments today then?



4

Starkravingsane,

Edinburgh 04/03/2009 08:45:49
The zoo is an awfully expensive day out - though at least it has the virtue of being a full DAY out, where you can take your own food and drink and eat it, without being chased into the restaurants.
And if it's sunny, it's a brilliant day too.
5

john z,

edinburgh 04/03/2009 08:50:21
Poor Mercedes.

Kept in a truly unsatisfactory enclosure for decades, is now being moved to the Highland Wildlife Park. Methinks this is just part of a strategy to move her away from mainstream view, and then to finally remove her off somewhere else abroad.

For those who don't know, Mercedes has a really interesting, but sad history.

Let's hope the Zoo in Edinburgh has learnt its lesson regarding Polar Bears AND ELEPHANTS, and doesn't decide to repeat the mistakes of the past. The new management is VERY commercial - think like Disney, and you get the idea.

The rest of the article above, is just pure PR fluff.

 

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