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Blair Drummond Safari Park

Blair Drummond Safari Park
Blair drummond logo.jpg
Date opened 1970
Location Blair Drummond, Stirling, Scotland
Coordinates 56°09′54″N 4°02′17″W / 56.165°N 4.038°W / 56.165; -4.038Coordinates: 56°09′54″N 4°02′17″W / 56.165°N 4.038°W / 56.165; -4.038
Land area 120 acres (49 ha)
No. of animals 300
Memberships BIAZA,EAZA
Owner Jamie Muir
Website www.blairdrummond.com

Blair Drummond Safari Park is a safari park located near Stirling in Scotland. Opened to the public in 1970, it is spread over 120 acres (49 ha). The safari park features drive-through reserves, a boat safari, amusements, children's play areas and a petting zoo.

The original Blair Drummond House was built in 1715. Sir John Kay, a tea merchant from Glasgow, purchased the house and its surrounding land in 1916. Because he had no sons, Kay passed the property to his nephew Sir John Muir, the father of the park's present owner Jamie Muir. The house was a family home until it was sold to the Camphill Movement, a charity that cares for people with special needs, in 1977. The current Blair Drummond House was built in a new location in 1872 by James Campbell Walker, and again in 1923 by James Bow Dunn after a fire destroyed the previous house.

Blair Drummond Safari Park was opened in 1970, with the help of Jimmy Chipperfield, one of Britain's first safari parks (Longleat Safari Park being the first, in 1966) and one of the first to open outside Africa.

Like many safari parks, Blair Drummond features reserve areas that visitors drive through in their own cars or as passengers on the park's "Safari Bus" to view free-roaming animals.

The first reserve features non-carnivorous native African species, such as Grant's zebra, Ankole-Watusi cattle, Guineafowl, Lechwe, Kudu and the Southern white rhinoceros. The rhinos are part of a Europe-wide breeding programme which began in 2004 with the arrival of three young rhinos from Kruger National Park: Dorothy (Dot), Graham and Jane. Dorothy and Graham have gone on to have five calves: in 2007, 2009, 2012 and 2014. Dot and Graham can still be seen at the park today.

The second reserve is home solely to African lions. They are also part of a Europe-wide breeding programme, with two of the current females having been born in the park. There is currently one male, Zulu, introduced in February 2016 through an exchange with Wildlands Adventure Zoo Emmen to ensure genetic diversity is maintained.


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