The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Turn your home into a window on a wild world

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FROM travelogue­s to films and even webcams, NEIL SIMPSON reveals how you can still explore the world from your own home during the lockdown.

SPOTTING the ‘Big Five’ on a longed-for African safari is off-limits at the moment and zoos have shut their gates, so you will need to be creative if you want to get a glimpse of some exotic animals.

Fortunatel­y, some extraordin­ary creatures can be found closer to home, including at

Thrigby Hall Wildlife Gardens in Great Yarmouth, home to a pair of endangered Sumatran tigers as well as red pandas, snow leopards, gibbons and meerkats.

During lockdown, keepers at the 18th Century country estate in Norfolk have set up Facebook Live links so you can watch the animals play and feed. Daily events focus on different animals and you can even adopt one for £25 (thrigbyhal­l.com).

Sun-seekers yearning for the French Riviera should stream the sparkling 2014 romcom Magic In

The Moonlight, as Hollywood stars Colin Firth and Emma Stone leap into open-top sports cars, cruise along clifftop roads and flit between a series of stunning Cote d’Azur houses. Scenes on sunny terraces and in candlelit gardens remind us why the South of France remains such a glamorous destinatio­n.

If you fancy a stay in St Tropez once the tourism industry reopens, find inspiratio­n at i-escape.com, which has lavish photograph­s and detailed descriptio­ns of Riviera hotels and hip hideaways, including boltholes, stylish villas, boutique B&Bs and even a royal retreat once owned by a Swedish prince.

Those who can’t wait to experience that ‘just checked-in’ feeling can pick a podcast to help bring the hotel look to their home.

Hotel Design At Home is a panel discussion from The Arts Club in London’s Mayfair, where contributo­rs talk about their work in five-star properties from Barbados to Tokyo.

Dozens of Arts Club talks are now available for free, and another travel special is Cultural Heritage:

Beyond Monuments, which reveals how tourism could change if it focuses on local people rather than on ‘must-take’ photograph­s.

Holiday menus will certainly change for readers of Recipes For

Edible Alien Species, a ‘cookbook with a message’ from the charity the Cyclades Preservati­on Fund.

It explains how ‘alien’ fish from the Indian Ocean swam through the Suez Canal and now fight for supremacy among native species around the Greek islands of Santorini and Zakynthos.

By showing how to cook the new fish, conservati­onists hope they will be gradually removed, relieving pressure on native species such as tuna, sea bream and swordfish.

And if you’re missing artists and art galleries during lockdown, then try chattyfeet.com. The website’s blog has a new ‘lockdown activities’ section which has links to cultural events and production­s streamed from galleries and theatres around the world.

 ??  ?? GETTING CLOSER: One of the Sumatran tigers at Thrigby Hall Wildlife Gardens in Great Yarmouth
GETTING CLOSER: One of the Sumatran tigers at Thrigby Hall Wildlife Gardens in Great Yarmouth

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