Snow lends magic to the zoo
“The African animals tend to grow a thicker coat living here. They all have access to warmth inside, but most of them have been out and about,” she says.
The chimps are particularly curious, and Keza the chimp showed more smarts than most of the girls who frequent Courtenay Place on the weekend – wrapping up in a blanket before heading outside.
“They’ve been wandering round tasting it, and opening their mouths up to catch snowflakes.”
Native to the Himalayas - the red pandas love the cold.
“They actually have fur on the bottom of their paws to cope with snow. They’re fantastic… the most active I’ve ever seen them.”
Happy Feet the emperor penguin is happy and on the road to recovery. It’s cold enough to open the door to the saltwater pool, and while they can’t guarantee he’ll have a swim, visitors are likely to glimpse him sitting in the doorway.
The meerkats aren’t having a bar of it.
“They’re all piled up on top of each other inside, but you can see them and they’re really cute.”
Baker says visitors who’ve braved the cold have enjoyed having the zoo largely to themselves, saying the experience is, “magical”.










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