Showing posts with label #bristol. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #bristol. Show all posts

Saturday, September 3, 2022

Bristol Zoo, the fifth oldest zoo in the world, to close after 186 years

The zoo appears to be losing its charm. Children used to be eagerly waiting to go to the zoo and see the wild animals. However, in the age of smartphones and TV, they now have many more options and visiting the zoo is no longer attractive. This is borne out by the closure of the186 year old Bristol Zoo in Clifton. It seems this is the fifth oldest zoo in the world. There are many original Victorian buildings in its premises. These are the gatehouse, the old giraffe house and its monkey temple. One of the reasons cited by the Bristol Zoological Society for the closure is the financial pressures caused by the coronavirus pandemic. The society plans to focus its resources on its site in south Gloucestershire. This site was not open to the visitor but its use was restricted to breeding and quarantine purposes. In fact, it was a sort of nursery for Bristol Zoo’s botanical gardens, apart from growing fodder for its animals. In 2008, the society put up plans to the council for constructing a walking safari park. That led to the Wild Place Project five years later. Staff at the zoo are sad to be leaving the famous Bristol city site. It retains its Victorian walls. Bristol Zoo closing for good after 186 years as it's hammered by pandemic. The Bristol Zoo was originally a sort of menagerie. Those associated with the zoo are looking forward to the conservation opportunities that would be available in the more spacious facilities in Gloucestershire.



Dr Grainne McCabe is head of field conservation and science. When asked what she is most excited about with the big move, she replied - “One of the best things I think about Wild Place is it will be much more like what I feel like when I go in the forest in the wild to see the animals. She might walk into …. you may see the animal, you may not. She admits some of the animals might struggle with the change. However, it will be a much, much more enjoyable experience for them. This is because they would be in a more natural enclosure. The overall objective is to get the animals linked to the conservation work.



Some popular stories of this blogger –

Tala Bridge, the lifeline of North Kolkata, to reopen before the Pujas

China and Russia launch war games to confront tensions with the United States

Taiwan shoots down civilian drone near China

Mamata Banerjee expresses gratitude to UNESCO for awarding Cultural Heritage tag to Kolkata’s Durga Puja

Jilebi and Vada-pau make it to a list of 50 of the best street foods in Asia

Maddox Square puja returns in all its glory after two years due to Covid-19

The Midwest and the South of the U.S. faced severe storms, damaging winds, heavy rains and flash floods

Greenland is losing ice at a fast rate with global sea level rise

Meghan Markle says she and her husband were "happy" to leave the UK

Sunday, March 15, 2015

‘Poo Bus’ powered by human waste to hit the road in Bristol


#poobus #bristol #biomethanegas #FirstWest It has been named as the ‘poo Bus’ and the 40-seater bus will be powered by gas generated from human waste and will be operated by bus company First West of England as reported in news.sky.com dated 15 March 2015.
This is Britain's first bus and had been unveiled in the Bristol area last autumn. It would be run entirely on gas generated by human and food waste and two of these buses would take to the roads on regular service later this month. These would be powered by biomethane gas and will use waste from more than 32,000 households along its 15-mile route. As per information, the bus will fill up at a site in Avonmouth, Bristol, where sewage and inedible food waste is converted into biomethane gas.
The bus would operate four days a week on Service 2 that stretches from Cribbs Causeway to Stockwood, from the 25th of March.
This is a practical application of alternate energy and would reduce dependence on conventional fuels. It had previously made an appearance running between Bath and Bristol Airport at the end of last year.

A few more must reads -

Nashik Kumbhmela 2015 – a once in 12-years pilgrimage

Trip to Nashik should take in Shirdi and the Ajanta and Ellora caves

First Russian woman cosmonaut returns to Earth after six-month stay in ISS

European court terms obesity as a disability

Save environment ban thermocol

Two years after Nirbhaya rape case in New Delhi, rapists still free

Sunshine means Vitamin D – good for health in measured dose

Maharashtra could soon have unpaid sweepers cleaning government offices