Borth Wild Animal Kingdom

Animalarium, Borth Zoo
Date opened 2000
Location Borth, Wales
Coordinates 52°29′08″N 4°02′38″W / 52.4856°N 4.0440°W / 52.4856; -4.0440Coordinates: 52°29′08″N 4°02′38″W / 52.4856°N 4.0440°W / 52.4856; -4.0440
Land area 12
No. of animals 400
No. of species 120
Owner Tweedy Family
Website https://www.borthzoo.co.uk

Borth Wild Animal Kingdom, formerly known as Borth Animalarium, is a zoo, located in the seaside Welsh town of Borth, 7 miles north of Aberystwyth in the county of Ceredigion, Mid Wales. It occupies 12 acres and in 2015 had some 27,000 visitors.[1]

History

Borth Animalarium was opened in the late 1980s at Ynys Fergi, half a mile from Borth town centre, by Ron and Ann Crowther.[2] Starting as a hobby, the zoo expanded gradually into a business, concentrating on breeding of animals for conservation, working closely with Chester Zoo and the Northern Zoological Society on breeding programmes for harvest mice and capybara.[3] The zoo was sold in 2000 to Jean and Alan Mumbray who ran it for 15 years before announcing that they were putting it up for sale in June 2015.[4]

The zoo was bought in early 2017 by Dean and Tracy Tweedy, an artist and psychotherapist couple from Milton Regis in Kent, who planned to use the facility for animal therapy, making it a sanctuary for both animals and people.[5][6][7][8] Their purchase of the zoo was covered in a three part report on BBC's The One Show in September 2017. On transfer of ownership, the zoo is stated to have been in need of significant improvement to bring it up to modern zoo standards, with the lynx enclosure particularly being not fit for purpose.[9][10]

Animal exhibits

Animals kept at Borth Animalarium include big cats, monkeys, wallabies, snakes, iguanas, caimans, fruit bats, spiders, emu, pigs, frogs, ocelots, and cockroaches.[11]

In 2005, the zoo took on an African leopard named Rajah. The cat, bred at Basildon Zoo in Essex in 1995, had been sold to a private owner but was given up after it tried to kill its owner.[12]

In 2013, the zoo took in a three month old female Lynx named Nilly, who was partially hand-reared.[13] A female companion was brought in for her in May 2016. The new animal turned out to be pregnant and gave birth to three kittens two days later, two of which survived and were named Tirion and Lilleth.[14]

In August 2015 the Animalarium took delivery of two African Lion, named Zulu and Wilma, from Noah's Ark Zoo Farm in Somerset[15][16]

Controversies

Early in the zoo's history, it made the news when a capybara escaped and was found in the River Leri.[3]

In September 2010, the Mumbrays were fined £1,237.50 plus costs at Aberystwyth Magistrates' Court for displaying animals without proper paperwork. In addition to the fine, nine of the zoo's animals were ordered to be confiscated including the zoo's leopard, two lynx and two ring tailed lemurs.[17][18] The couple vowed to fight against the confiscation order,[19] and several attempts to take the animals were unsuccessful due in part to paperwork irregularities and a lack of co-operation from the leopard.[20][21][22][23][24]

In July 2012, a beaver escaped from the zoo.[25] In August 2013, the zoo again made the news when a leopard nearly escaped from its enclosure when its cage door was accidentally left open.[12][26][27]

In late October 2017 it was reported that an 18 month old, adult lynx had escaped from her enclosure at some point in the previous week.[28][29] It was reported that seven sheep had been killed in the days following her escape, approximately 500 metres from the zoo, although the zoo owners insisted the lynx was not responsible.[30][31] After more than a week evading capture, the lynx was shot dead by a marksman under the instruction of Ceredigion County Council when it wandered into a populated area.[32][33][34] The killing of the lynx was criticised both by the local community and by celebrities including wildlife broadcaster Chris Packham, who sent a bottle of Lynx deodorant to the council, saying that their decision "stinks".[35][36] The council later stated that there had been no possibility to use a tranquiliser dart and that euthanizing the lynx was the only realistic option.[37][38]

The zoo owners protested the killing of the lynx, saying they were "outraged" about the incident.[39][40] It later emerged that another lynx had been accidentally killed several days earlier when it asphyxiated as it was being controlled with a catchpole while being moved to another enclosure.[41][42]

The second death drew wide criticism, with calls for the zoo to be shut down.[43][9][36][13] In the wake of the incident, people from the local community rallied around the owners, with nearly 150 turning up to help refurbish the zoo.[44] Following the lynx escape, the zoo was banned from keeping "category one" dangerous animals, including large cats.[45]

References

  1. "Buy a zoo for the price of a London flat". Mail online. 25 January 2016. Retrieved 26 January 2016.
  2. "Baby monkeys may cut red tape", Cambrian News, 5 Apr 1991, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  3. 1 2 "Call of the jungle in deepest Dyfed", Western Mail, 11 Jul 1995, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  4. "Borth Animalarium zoo in Ceredigion for sale", BBC News, 28 Jun 2015, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  5. Jeffery, Poppy (23 Apr 2017), "Dean Tweedy of Marvellous Murals has moved to Borth in Wales to run a zoo", Kent Online, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  6. "Family moves in with lions and snakes at Borth Animalarium", BBC News, 3 May 2017, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  7. "Family moves in with lions and monkeys after buying zoo in Wales", Sky News, 5 Aug 2017, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  8. "We Bought a Zoo... Welsh style! Family move in with 300 animals including lions, snakes and crocodiles after snapping up £625,000 zoo in tale reminiscent of Matt Damon's Hollywood movie", Daily Mail, 3 Aug 2017, retrieved 15 Nov 2017
  9. 1 2 Lusher, Adam (13 Nov 2017), "'Hobby zoos' face calls for crackdown after second lynx dies at animal park home of Lillith", Independent, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  10. Hopkins, Steven (13 Nov 2017), "Second Lynx Killed At Borth Wild Animal Kingdom After 'Terrible Handling Error'", Huffington Post, retrieved 16 Nov 2017
  11. Animalarium animals Archived February 23, 2009, at the Wayback Machine.
  12. 1 2 "Investigation after leopard's cage left open at zoo", ITV News, 7 Aug 2013, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  13. 1 2 "Lynx deaths prompts zoo closure call from Iolo Williams", BBC News, 14 Nov 2017, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  14. Gedge, Antony (6 Jun 2016), "Animalarium gets surprise as three new lynx cubs arrive", Cambrian News, retrieved 15 Nov 2017
  15. Betteley, Chris (1 Dec 2015), "Borth's lions weather their first storms", Cambrian News, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  16. "Love is in the air for lions at Bristol animal park", DestinationBristol, 28 Apr 2016, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  17. "Animals taken from Borth Animalarium and owners fined", BBC News, 24 Sep 2010, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  18. "Animalarium owners fined", Cambrian News, 23 Sep 2010, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  19. "Couple in fight to keep rare animals", Cambrian News, 30 Sep 2010, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  20. "Leopard Rajah's fight to stay at Borth Animalarium", BBC News, 25 Apr 2011, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  21. "Big cats seizure "farce"", Cambrian News, 13 Apr 2011, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  22. "Leopard Rajah refuses confiscation at Borth Animalarium", BBC News, 14 Apr 2011, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  23. "Borth Animalarium leopard Rajah stays as removal fails", BBC News, 15 Jun 2011, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  24. "Second bid to catch leopard ends in fiasco", Cambrian News, 23 Jun 2011, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  25. Nicholas, James (13 Dec 2012), "Bob the beaver on the loose", Cambrian News, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  26. Rowland, Paul (7 Aug 2013), "Zookeeper bans himself from working with dangerous animals after leopard enclosure left open", Wales Online, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  27. Gedge, Anthony (8 Aug 2013), "Investigation after leopard nearly escapes enclosure", Cambrian News, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  28. "Warning as lynx escapes from zoo at Borth", Cambrian News, 29 Oct 2017, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  29. Wardle, Sally (30 Oct 2017), "Wild Lynx on the loose in Wales after escaping from zoo", Independent, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  30. "Missing lynx believed to have killed seven sheep", Cambrian News, 8 Nov 2017, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  31. Morris, Steven (7 Nov 2017), "Lillith the lynx blamed for seven sheep deaths in north Wales", The Guardian, retrieved 15 Nov 2017
  32. "Escaped lynx is dead", Cambrian News, 10 Nov 2017, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  33. "Escaped lynx: Borth zoo's big cat 'humanely destroyed'", BBC News, 10 Nov 2017, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  34. "Borth zoo lynx killing defended by Ceredigion council", BBC News, 12 Nov 2017, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  35. Gedge, Antony (15 Nov 2017), "Killing of escaped lynx has sparked outrage", Cambrian News, retrieved 15 Nov 2017
  36. 1 2 Morris, Steven (13 Nov 2017), "Campaigners demand Welsh zoo be shut after death of second lynx", The Guardian, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  37. Gedge, Antony (14 Nov 2017), "Borth zoo was responsible for catching lynx, says council", Cambrian News, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  38. "'No option' but to kill lynx", Cambrian News, 15 Nov 2017
  39. "Borth Wild Animal Kingdom 'outraged' over lynx killing", BBC News, 11 Nov 2017, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  40. Lawrence, Hannah (11 Nov 2017), "Wales lynx escape: Zoo 'outraged' over killing of escaped big cat", Independent, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  41. Davies, Dylan (13 Nov 2017), "Second lynx dies at Borth Zoo", Cambrian News, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  42. "Second lynx at Borth Wild Animal Kingdom dies", BBC News, 13 Nov 2017, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  43. de Bruxelles, Simon (14 Nov 2017), "Welsh zoo branded 'inept' over death of second lynx", The Times, retrieved 14 Nov 2017
  44. Walford, Jessica (20 Nov 2017), "Dozens of volunteers have helped 'rebuild' a Welsh zoo where two lynx died", WalesOnline, retrieved 21 Nov 2017
  45. "Lynx death: Wild cat ban at Borth Wild Animal Kingdom", BBC News, 28 Nov 2017, retrieved 29 Nov 2017
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