{"agentCard":{"schemaVersion":"0.1.0","name":"Amazona Zoo","description":"Amazona Zoo — experience in Cromer","url":"https://amazonazoo.co.uk","capabilities":{"extensions":[{"uri":"https://agenticbooking.org/venue/v1","required":true}],"skills":["assess-fit"]},"identity":{"did":"did:web:selfe.ai:orgs:amazona-zoo","didDocument":"https://selfe.ai/api/did/amazona-zoo","verificationStatus":"unverified"},"provider":{"name":"Selfe","url":"https://selfe.ai"}},"venue":{"type":"experience","location":{"address":"Woodcock Road","city":"Cromer","country":"United Kingdom","postcode":"NR27 0FA"},"vibe":{},"evidence":{"totalAtoms":25,"verified":0,"highestTrust":"unverified","averageConfidence":0.25,"sourceCount":41,"verifyEndpoint":"https://selfe.ai/api/verify/{atomId}","highlights":[],"atoms":[{"id":"05a1c5563cbb5c81","spikyText":"Zoo, 200 animals, South American wildlife, primates, big cats, birds","text":"On Woodcock Road in Cromer, a few minutes from the seafront, Amazona Zoo makes an unusual claim for a Norfolk attraction: its entire collection is drawn from tropical South America. Over 200 animals live here, among them a jaguar, ocelots, pumas, flamingos, a tapir, several species of monkey, and various snakes. The zoo sits within the Visit North Norfolk listings and holds a Tripadvisor Travellers' Choice designation, ranking eighth of 27 things to do in Cromer across 981 reviews.","confidence":0.3,"sentiment":"neutral","sources":2,"verified":false},{"id":"d75bd51fbf5b86f8","spikyText":"Play areas, indoor, outdoor, café, gift shop, parking, education sessions","text":"The collection The South American brief is applied consistently. Primates include common marmosets — small New World monkeys of the genus Callithrix, recognisable by their large white ear tufts and banded tails — alongside other monkey species. The big cats are the centrepiece for many visitors: the jaguar and the pumas draw attention, as do the ocelots. Flamingos add colour to the bird section, which contributes significantly to the overall count of more than 200 birds and animals. A tapir rounds out a roster that reads less like a general zoo and more like a focused regional collection. The zoo's own description leans into the theme with the phrase \"Braziliant\" — a portmanteau that appears on the homepage and signals the tone of the place: family-facing, not po-faced.","confidence":0.3,"sentiment":"neutral","sources":2,"verified":false},{"id":"e94ab781c899688f","spikyText":"Conservation, adoption, habitat protection, endangered species","text":"On the ground The site includes both indoor and outdoor play areas, accessible paths throughout, a café, and a gift shop selling souvenirs. Free parking is available on site. The zoo runs a Little Keepers' play programme and hosts interactive sessions in a yurt, aimed at younger children. School and home education groups can book at special rates, and the zoo positions its educational offer — conservation messaging, species information, animal adoption schemes — as a core part of the visit rather than an afterthought. The contact email listed publicly is imogen@amazonazoo.co.uk, which suggests a small operation where named staff are reachable directly.","confidence":0.3,"sentiment":"neutral","sources":2,"verified":false},{"id":"8154959772b7034d","spikyText":"Marmosets, smaller primates, distinctive ear tufts, wild Brazil","text":"Conservation and adoption Amazona runs an animal adoption programme and frames its broader purpose around habitat protection and the preservation of endangered South American species. The zoo describes its role in terms of conservation, education, and maintaining diversity among species that face pressure in the wild. Whether that translates into formal partnerships with field programmes isn't detailed in publicly available material, but the framing is consistent across the site — this isn't presented purely as entertainment. Visitors can adopt an animal as part of a visit or separately, which functions both as a fundraising mechanism and as a way of extending engagement beyond the day itself.","confidence":0.3,"sentiment":"neutral","sources":2,"verified":false},{"id":"0daae99a892d9c9c","spikyText":"Victorian seaside town, pier, crab, coastline, Amazona Zoo, 2 Woodcock Road, NR27 0FA, car, train, bus, brown ZOO signage","text":"Where it sits Cromer is a Victorian seaside town on the north Norfolk coast, known for its pier, its crab, and a stretch of coastline that draws visitors year-round. Amazona Zoo sits inland from the beach, signposted with brown zoo signs that are visible on approach by road. The address is 2 Woodcock Road, NR27 0FA. It is reachable by car, train — Cromer has a station — or bus. The zoo's own guidance says to follow the brown ZOO signage once in town. It sits within the broader North Norfolk tourism offer, listed alongside coastal walks, nature reserves, and the area's beaches.","confidence":0.3,"sentiment":"neutral","sources":2,"verified":false},{"id":"70f6661f96ad481e","spikyText":"zoo opens 10am, last entry 3:30pm, tickets online, gate purchase, membership discounts, picnic recommended, phone number 01263 510741, Tripadvisor 3.9 rating, top 10 per cent attractions","text":"Practical details The zoo opens at 10am and last entry is at 3:30pm. Tickets can be booked online at amazonazoo.co.uk or purchased at the gate. The zoo accepts partner membership discounts — worth checking before you go if you hold membership with another attraction. The site recommends bringing a picnic, which suggests the outdoor space is set up for it and that the café isn't the only option for food. The phone number is 01263 510741. Tripadvisor's 981 reviews give it a 3.9 rating, placing it in the top 10 per cent of attractions in its category — a reasonable signal for a small regional zoo, though the score also reflects the usual range of family-day-out variables: weather, queues, whether the jaguar was visible.","confidence":0.3,"sentiment":"neutral","sources":2,"verified":false},{"id":"692a5d33fd45a039","spikyText":"small zoo, specific region, yurt sessions, Little Keepers' programme, weekday term time, animals alone","text":"Amazona is a small zoo with a clear identity. It doesn't try to be comprehensive — it picks a region of the world and sticks to it, which gives the collection coherence that larger, more diffuse zoos sometimes lack. For families in north Norfolk looking for something beyond the beach, it fills a specific gap. The yurt sessions and Little Keepers' programme make it more useful for a half-day with young children than a quick walk-through suggests. Go on a weekday in term time if you want the animals to yourself.","confidence":0.3,"sentiment":"positive","sources":2,"verified":false},{"id":"835a9cf9c622b0b1","spikyText":"Brazilian zoo, 200 animals, family visit","text":"WebSite — Amazona Zoo — Amazona is a Braziliant zoo and it&#039;s a fun visit for the whole family! Home to over 200 birds and animals from tropical South America.","confidence":0.3,"sentiment":"positive","sources":2,"verified":false},{"id":"2049d0a599af6808","spikyText":"Cromer zoo, 200 animals, indoor play, outdoor adventure","text":"Amazona Zoo in Cromer, Norfolk, is one of the county’s most unique and fun days out where families can discover South American wildlife. The zoo is home to over 200 tropical animals including jaguars, monkeys, snakes, flamingos and tapirs. There is also a large well-equipped indoor soft play area, for under-12's.","confidence":0.3,"sentiment":"positive","sources":2,"verified":false},{"id":"887900178bc044c4","spikyText":"Cromer zoo, 200 animals, Jaguarundi, Spider House, outdoor play","text":"Plan a visit to Amazona Zoo in Cromer, one of Norfolk’s most unique and fun days out where families can explore animals native to South America. It is home to over 200 tropical animals including new Jaguarundi, birds of prey, Pumas, Parrots, Monkeys, Snakes, Flamingos and Tapirs. Also you can find a Spider House and a cute Guinea Pig Village. OUTDOOR ADVENTURE PLAY The zoo also has an outdoor adventure play and picnic area featuring the popular Jumping Pillows! INDOORS","confidence":0.3,"sentiment":"positive","sources":2,"verified":false},{"id":"0e4004e7dacca3db","spikyText":"Yurt, education, indoor soft play, food, gift shop, conservation","text":"The Yurt is the hub for educating visitors and includes the history of South America and facts on the animals who call Amazona home. It’s also available for birthday parties. Also there is an indoor soft play area named 'Jungle Tumbles'. Open all-year-round, Jungle Tumbles soft play centre is a fun and safe adventure for under 12's. FOOD & GIFTS There is the Jungle Café for homemade lunches and a gift shop on site. The zoo is committed to helping visitors discover nature and provides education on conservation issues set within 15 acres on the north Norfolk coast.","confidence":0.3,"sentiment":"neutral","sources":2,"verified":false},{"id":"01f50fb99c3016ff","spikyText":"Zoo, feed events, pumas","text":"WHAT ANIMALS AND BIRDS CAN YOU SEE? There are at least four 'feed the animal' events a day, including pumas.","confidence":0.3,"sentiment":"neutral","sources":2,"verified":false},{"id":"a6627896c153137b","spikyText":"Feline Forest, Tropical House, South American Wildfowl, Birds of Prey","text":"Feline Forest - Pumas, Jaguarundi and Ocelot Tropical House: Entering from the Capuchin walkway, visitors will encounter the Currasow and the Piping Guan. After the bridge, see the Spectacled Caiman and spot the Red-tailed Catfish or the Black Pacu. Follow the path into the shadows to find the Iguanas, the Anaconda and the Boa Constrictors. South American Wildfowl: See native migratory species such as Greylag Geese and Mallard, as well as Chiloe Wigeon, Brazilian Teal, Coscoroba Swan and the iridescent Comb Duck Chilean Flamingos Birds of Prey: Red-legged Seriema are South America's nearest relation to birds, known in the rest of the world as cranes. Striated Caracara, also known as Johnny Rook, are found predominantly in the Falkland Islands and small islands off Tierra del Fuego. Once ab","confidence":0.3,"sentiment":"neutral","sources":2,"verified":false},{"id":"925f786727276c7e","spikyText":"Facilities, play area, gift shop, café, parking","text":"Facilities: Play area, Gift shop, Toilets, Picnic area, On-site café, Garden or outdoor space, Free parking, Family friendly, On-site parking","confidence":0.3,"sentiment":"neutral","sources":2,"verified":false},{"id":"8d8d0beeeebcb8b1","spikyText":"Cromer zoo, 200 animals, unique day out, family","text":"Amazona Zoo in Cromer, Norfolk, is one of the county’s most unique and fun days out where families can discover South American wildlife.","confidence":0.3,"sentiment":"positive","sources":2,"verified":false},{"id":"2aa85a225ee7665e","spikyText":"Camping, social media, facilities","text":"Pitch your tent and visit the zoo! www.CromerCamping.com. Follow @AmazonaZoo on twitter and AmazonaZoo on Facebook.","confidence":0.3,"sentiment":"neutral","sources":2,"verified":false},{"id":"2708313e421476d0","spikyText":"Amazona Zoo, Brazil, 200 birds, animals, tropical South America","text":"WebSite — Amazona Zoo — Amazona is a Braziliant zoo and it&#039;s a fun visit for the whole family! Home to over 200 birds and animals from tropical South America.","confidence":0.15,"sentiment":"neutral","sources":1,"verified":false},{"id":"72aa18c8c97875a4","spikyText":"Amazona Zoo, Cromer, Norfolk, 200 animals, jaguar, ocelots, pumas, flamingos, tapir, monkeys, snakes, Tripadvisor, 981 reviews","text":"On Woodcock Road in Cromer, a few minutes from the seafront, Amazona Zoo makes an unusual claim for a Norfolk attraction: its entire collection is drawn from tropical South America. Over 200 animals live here, among them a jaguar, ocelots, pumas, flamingos, a tapir, several species of monkey, and various snakes. The zoo sits within the Visit North Norfolk listings and holds a Tripadvisor Travellers' Choice designation, ranking eighth of 27 things to do in Cromer across 981 reviews.","confidence":0.15,"sentiment":"neutral","sources":1,"verified":false},{"id":"8190baf9d005f948","spikyText":"Amazona Zoo, South America, 200 birds, animals, common marmosets, jaguar, pumas, ocelots, flamingos, tapir, monkeys, snakes","text":"The collection The South American brief is applied consistently. Primates include common marmosets — small New World monkeys of the genus Callithrix, recognisable by their large white ear tufts and banded tails — alongside other monkey species. The big cats are the centrepiece for many visitors: the jaguar and the pumas draw attention, as do the ocelots. Flamingos add colour to the bird section, which contributes significantly to the overall count of more than 200 birds and animals. A tapir rounds out a roster that reads less like a general zoo and more like a focused regional collection. The zoo's own description leans into the theme with the phrase \"Braziliant\" — a portmanteau that appears on the homepage and signals the tone of the place: family-facing, not po-faced.","confidence":0.15,"sentiment":"neutral","sources":1,"verified":false},{"id":"1a170c6324b2c960","spikyText":"Amazona Zoo, indoor, outdoor play areas, accessible paths, café, gift shop, free parking, Little Keepers' programme, interactive sessions, yurt, school groups, conservation, education, animal adoption","text":"On the ground The site includes both indoor and outdoor play areas, accessible paths throughout, a café, and a gift shop selling souvenirs. Free parking is available on site. The zoo runs a Little Keepers' play programme and hosts interactive sessions in a yurt, aimed at younger children. School and home education groups can book at special rates, and the zoo positions its educational offer — conservation messaging, species information, animal adoption schemes — as a core part of the visit rather than an afterthought. The contact email listed publicly is imogen@amazonazoo.co.uk, which suggests a small operation where named staff are reachable directly.","confidence":0.15,"sentiment":"neutral","sources":1,"verified":false},{"id":"8673196c732a56c6","spikyText":"Amazona Zoo, animal adoption, conservation, education, endangered species, habitat protection, animal adoption, fundraising, engagement","text":"Conservation and adoption Amazona runs an animal adoption programme and frames its broader purpose around habitat protection and the preservation of endangered South American species. The zoo describes its role in terms of conservation, education, and maintaining diversity among species that face pressure in the wild. Whether that translates into formal partnerships with field programmes isn't detailed in publicly available material, but the framing is consistent across the site — this isn't presented purely as entertainment. Visitors can adopt an animal as part of a visit or separately, which functions both as a fundraising mechanism and as a way of extending engagement beyond the day itself.","confidence":0.15,"sentiment":"neutral","sources":1,"verified":false},{"id":"ed36fc9e3b3c4916","spikyText":"Amazona Zoo, common marmosets, Callithrix jacchus, grey, black, white ear tufts, striped tails, north-east Brazil, New World monkeys","text":"The marmosets, specifically The common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus) is worth pausing at. They are among the smaller primates in the collection — grey and black coated, with the distinctive white ear tufts that make them immediately recognisable. Their tails are striped in alternating dark and pale bands. In the wild they are found across north-east Brazil; here they are one of several New World monkey species that give the primate section of the zoo its particular character. For visitors who haven't encountered them before, the scale is surprising — they are considerably smaller than most people expect a monkey to be.","confidence":0.15,"sentiment":"neutral","sources":1,"verified":false},{"id":"106d244adeaa8251","spikyText":"Amazona Zoo, Cromer, North Norfolk, Woodcock Road, NR27 0FA, car, train, bus, brown ZOO signage, North Norfolk tourism, coastal walks, nature reserves, beaches","text":"Where it sits Cromer is a Victorian seaside town on the north Norfolk coast, known for its pier, its crab, and a stretch of coastline that draws visitors year-round. Amazona Zoo sits inland from the beach, signposted with brown zoo signs that are visible on approach by road. The address is 2 Woodcock Road, NR27 0FA. It is reachable by car, train — Cromer has a station — or bus. The zoo's own guidance says to follow the brown ZOO signage once in town. It sits within the broader North Norfolk tourism offer, listed alongside coastal walks, nature reserves, and the area's beaches.","confidence":0.15,"sentiment":"neutral","sources":1,"verified":false},{"id":"17709f2b98a9588c","spikyText":"Amazona Zoo, 10am open, 3:30pm last entry, online tickets, amazonazoo.co.uk, partner membership discounts, picnic, 01263 510741, Tripadvisor, 981 reviews, 3.9 rating","text":"Practical details The zoo opens at 10am and last entry is at 3:30pm. Tickets can be booked online at amazonazoo.co.uk or purchased at the gate. The zoo accepts partner membership discounts — worth checking before you go if you hold membership with another attraction. The site recommends bringing a picnic, which suggests the outdoor space is set up for it and that the café isn't the only option for food. The phone number is 01263 510741. Tripadvisor's 981 reviews give it a 3.9 rating, placing it in the top 10 per cent of attractions in its category — a reasonable signal for a small regional zoo, though the score also reflects the usual range of family-day-out variables: weather, queues, whether the jaguar was visible.","confidence":0.15,"sentiment":"neutral","sources":1,"verified":false},{"id":"926b0bb661a08121","spikyText":"Amazona Zoo, small zoo, Brazil, 200 birds, animals, tropical South America, families, north Norfolk, weekday, term time","text":"Amazona is a small zoo with a clear identity. It doesn't try to be comprehensive — it picks a region of the world and sticks to it, which gives the collection coherence that larger, more diffuse zoos sometimes lack. For families in north Norfolk looking for something beyond the beach, it fills a specific gap. The yurt sessions and Little Keepers' programme make it more useful for a half-day with young children than a quick walk-through suggests. Go on a weekday in term time if you want the animals to yourself.","confidence":0.15,"sentiment":"neutral","sources":1,"verified":false}]},"actions":{"assess-fit":{"endpoint":"https://selfe.ai/api/search","description":"Check if this venue fits a traveller's intent"},"check-availability":{"endpoint":"https://selfe.ai/api/availability","description":"Check room/table availability for dates"},"book":{"endpoint":"https://selfe.ai/api/book","description":"Create a booking"}},"meta":{"generatedAt":"2026-04-18T13:22:00.816Z","generatedBy":"selfe.ai","echoVersion":"0.2.0"}}}