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Chester Zoo scoops prestigious volunteer award
Chester Zoo's volunteers highlight different species and the conservation actions underway to protect them.
Zoo is the first in UK to achieve 'Investors in Volunteers’ status

Chester Zoo has become the first zoo in the UK to win a prestigious award for its work with volunteers.

The Zoo scooped the nationally important ‘Investors in Volunteers’ award following a 15-month consultation confirming the zoo’s value and commitment to its volunteers. 

The award aims to improve the quality of the volunteering experience offered by organisations across the UK and underscores the value of volunteers to the charity’s mission to prevent extinction.

“As a major UK wildlife charity, the support we receive from our volunteers is invaluable,” commented Lindsay Marston, volunteer manager at Chester Zoo. “This award shows our current and future volunteers that we’re committed to ensuring they have the very best experience when they volunteer with us. We’re very proud to be the very first zoo in the UK to achieve this accolade."

Chester Zoo's volunteers play a significant role in animal conservation by highlighting different species and the conservation actions underway to protect them. In a typical year, the zoo welcomes more than 250 volunteers in various positions, but COVID-19 spurred a change in how it engaged with and supported its volunteers.

“In the wake of the global pandemic we had to adapt the way we worked with volunteers and lots of our consultation work moved online," Lindsay explained. "We introduced ‘micro-volunteering, as it became apparent that a lot of our volunteers felt isolated and alone during lockdown."

Despite the zoo's closure, the volunteers were able to continue their work from home, by fact-checking educational signage or creating wildlife spaces in their gardens. 

“Some of our volunteers are in their later years and, for them, volunteering is a huge part of their lives," said Lindsay. "We really recognise the mutual benefits that volunteering gives, so by keeping them engaged with other activities while the zoo had to close helped to make them feel motivated and valued."

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Strangles survey seeks views of horse owners

News Story 1
 With Strangles Awareness Week just around the corner (5-11 May), vets are being encouraged to share a survey about the disease with their horse-owning clients.

The survey, which has been designed by Dechra, aims to raise awareness of Strangles and promote best practices to prevent its transmission. It includes questions about horse owners' experiences of strangles, together with preventative measures and vaccination.

Respondents to the survey will be entered into a prize draw to win two VIP tickets to Your Horse Live 2025. To access the survey, click here 

Click here for more...
News Shorts
DAERA to reduce BVD 'grace period'

DAERA has reminded herd keepers of an upcoming reduction to the 'grace period' to avoid BVD herd restrictions.

From 1 May 2025, herd keepers will have seven days to cull any BVD positive or inconclusive animals to avoid restrictions being applied to their herd.

It follows legislation introduced on 1 February, as DAERA introduces herd movement restrictions through a phased approach. Herd keepers originally had 28 days to cull BVD positive or inconclusive animals.

DAERA says that, providing herd keepers use the seven-day grace period, no herds should be restricted within the first year of these measures.

Additional measures, which will target herds with animals over 30 days old that haven't been tested for BVD, will be introduced from 1 June 2025.

More information is available on the DAERA website.