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Mission Statement
 
"To promote, conserve and manage nature in all its diversity balancing human needs with the environment on a sustainable basis for posterity - ensuring maximum community participation with due cognizance of the linkages between economics, environment and ethics through a process in which people are both the principal actors and beneficiaries."
 
 
     
  Central Zoo  
  Introduction  
 

The Central Zoo was established by late Rana Prime Minister Juddha Shumser in 1932 as a private Zoo. After the political changes in 1950, the ownership of the private Zoo came under the Government of Nepal. Over the years, the management of the Zoo remained under various Departments of the Government. On the auspicious occasion of the Golden Jubilee Birthday Celebration of the Late Majesty King Birendra Bir Bikram Shah in December 1995, the Government of Nepal formally entrusted overall management responsibility of the Central Zoo to the National Trust for Nature Conservation (NTNC) for 30 years. The Central Zoo at present aims at developing it as a centre for recreation, conservation education and wildlife research within the given ideology of modern zoo philosophy. However, the Zoo is also a site of historical and cultural significance for multi-ethnic communities where every year more than a million visitors visit it. In festival like Bhoto Jatra, tens of thousands of visitors visit Zoo in a day. Moreover, with added animals of various species every year has remained attraction to people living far and near. At present the Central Zoo has housed a total of 1,013 individual animals representing 116 different species of mammals, birds, reptiles and fish. Big mammals like tiger, rhino and hippo are the major attraction to the visitors.

 
     
  Objectives  
 

» To improve animal health and welfare by creating natural habitat and providing food according to their dietary requirement.
» To encourage research and provide conservation education through first hand experience of wild animals.
» To raise public awareness about the importance of nature conservation.

 
     
  Physical facilities at the Central Zoo  
 
  • Information counter
  • Restaurant
  • Souvenir shop
  • Paddleboat and rafting
  • Picnic shed
  • Couple chairs
  • Children ground (swings, funny temple, merry-go-round, Uranus etc.)
  • Elephant ride
  • Visitor centre (with audio visual facilities)
  • Library (books and audio visuals)
  • Aquarium (sub-tropical fish)
 
     
 

Admission fees at the Central Zoo

 
 
Adult

(Nepali) – NRs 35

Student (from 12+ years Nepali) – NRs 20
Children (from 4-12 years Nepali) – NRs 15
Adult (Foreigner) – NRs 150
Children (from 4-12 years Foreigner) – NRs 100
Video filming NRs 4,500
Feature filming NRs 8,000
Elephant ride

(Nepali) – NRs 50
(FOZ members) – NRs 30
(Foreigner) – NRs 200


Elephant hire

(Nepali) – NRs 2,500 per hour
(Foreigner) – NRs 4,500 per hour


Fishing

(Nepali and Foreigner) – NRs 600
(FOZ members) – NRs 480


FOZ membership fee

(Nepali student) – NRs 200
(Nepali individual) – NRs 300
(Nepali family of four members) – NRs 600
(Foreign student) – NRs 350
(Foreign individual) – NRs 600
(Foreign family of four members) – NRs 1,000


 
  Note
  • The Central Zoo opens 1000 – 1700 hours from Sunday to Saturday.
  • Fishing is open from 1st of Chaitra till 30th of Kartik
  • Use of Plastic bags is prohibited.
 
     
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