Paultons Park Peppa Pig WorldHampshire • SO51 6AL • Attraction
Paultons Park in Hampshire is one of the most successful family theme parks in Britain, a well-maintained park near Romsey that combines a wide variety of rides, attractions and themed areas with the high production values and attention to detail that have made it consistently popular with families with young children. The park's most celebrated section, Peppa Pig World, is the world's first theme park dedicated to the internationally beloved animated television character and has become one of the most visited attractions for pre-school and early primary-age children in the country. Peppa Pig World opened in 2011 and has been extended and refined since, its themed environment of oversized buildings, ride vehicles and settings from the television series creating an immersive experience for children who know and love the programme. The rides, including Daddy Pig's Car Ride, Peppa's Balloon Ride and the Rebecca Rabbit Ride, are designed and scaled for very young children, their gentle motion and familiar theming providing an accessible first theme park experience for children who might find larger rides overwhelming. The wider park beyond Peppa Pig World contains rides and attractions for a broader age range, from toddler-appropriate spinning rides to the more substantial rollercoasters and water rides that provide challenge for older children and teenagers. The park is consistently praised for its cleanliness, its well-maintained infrastructure and the quality of its guest services, and the compact layout reduces the walking distances that tire young children at larger parks. The location in the New Forest fringe area of Hampshire provides an accessible destination for families from across the south of England, and the combination of Paultons with the New Forest itself makes for an extended family visit of considerable variety.
BirdworldHampshire • GU10 4LD • Attraction
Birdworld is a bird park and garden centre located near Farnham in Surrey, England, situated on the border between Surrey and Hampshire in the village of Holt Pound. It is one of the largest bird collections in the United Kingdom, home to hundreds of species of birds from across the globe, ranging from penguins and flamingos to parrots, birds of prey, and exotic tropical species. The park occupies a substantial site of around 26 acres and draws families, birdwatching enthusiasts, and nature lovers from across the south of England and beyond. What sets Birdworld apart from a conventional zoo is its singular focus on avian life, creating a genuinely immersive experience where visitors can observe birds in a variety of carefully designed habitats and enclosures, many of which allow for close and sometimes interactive encounters.
The park was established in 1968 and has grown considerably from its original modest collection into a substantial attraction that today holds conservation and educational significance alongside its appeal as a family day out. Over the decades it has developed specialist facilities including Underwater World, an aquarium section that complements the bird collections, and Jenny Wren Farm, a children's farm area that adds appeal for younger visitors. The site has consistently developed its infrastructure and expanded its collection, building relationships with breeding programmes for endangered species and contributing to wider conservation efforts for birds under threat in the wild. The long-running nature of the park means it carries considerable institutional knowledge and experience in avian husbandry.
Physically, the park has the feel of a mature, well-established green space with substantial trees providing natural canopy over many of the walking routes. The sounds of the place are one of its most distinctive qualities — a constant, layered chorus of calls, squawks, whistles, and songs emanating from enclosures and aviaries throughout the site, creating an atmosphere that is both lively and genuinely wild-feeling. Tropical houses provide warm, humid environments where brilliantly coloured birds can be observed at very close quarters, while open paddocks and lake areas give a more expansive feeling to sections of the park. The grounds are generally well-maintained with accessible paths, and the combination of formal enclosures and more naturalistic planted areas gives the site visual variety.
The surrounding landscape is characteristic of the Surrey and northeast Hampshire heathland and woodland fringe, with Alice Holt Forest sitting immediately to the south and west of the site — a large Forestry England managed woodland that is popular with cyclists and walkers and adds considerable natural depth to the area. The village of Farnham lies a few miles to the north, offering a historic market town with good facilities. The A325 road runs close to the site, connecting Farnham southward through Bordon toward Petersfield. This part of Surrey and Hampshire is rich in countryside and the Birdworld visit can easily be combined with walks in Alice Holt Forest, making it a full day in nature for families.
In terms of visiting practicalities, Birdworld is accessible by car via the A325 and has its own car parking on site. The nearest railway stations are Farnham and Bentley, both on the South Western Railway line from London Waterloo, though the site is not particularly easy to reach from either station without a taxi or private vehicle as it sits in a semi-rural location. The park is open most of the year, typically closed on Christmas Day, and opening hours vary seasonally, with longer hours in the summer months when the gardens and bird collection are at their most vibrant. Spring and early summer are widely considered the best times to visit, when breeding activity makes bird behaviour particularly animated and the grounds are in full colour. Visitors should allow at least three to four hours to do the site justice, and more if exploring the full range of habitats.
One of the more charming and unusual aspects of Birdworld is the presence of free-roaming birds within parts of the site, meaning that certain species — particularly some of the tamer waterfowl and ground-dwelling birds — may wander the pathways and interact with visitors directly, lending the experience an unexpectedly intimate quality. The park's dedication to a single animal class — birds — rather than the broad sweep of a general zoo gives it a pleasing coherence and depth, and it is genuinely possible to come away with a much enriched understanding of avian diversity from a visit. The adjacent garden centre adds a practical dimension that makes the site popular with a broad demographic, and the combination of the aquarium section with the bird collection means that even visitors who have been before tend to find new things to engage with.