Lions of Windsor 2019 Timeline
August
- Lions trail official starts on World Lion Day (10 August)
- Trail maps on sale throughout region
- Lion events, decorating workshops, talks, competitions and merchandising
September
- Lions of Windsor 2019 trail continues
- Trail maps on sale throughout region
- Lion events, decorating workshops, talks, competitions and merchandising
- Sponsor/Artist networking events
October
- Lions of Windsor & Maidenhead trail continues
- 28th October trail ends.
- Lions head back to Den HQ for grooming by their artists
- Sponsor/Artists networking events
November
- 8 November - Sponsor/Artists Roar Goodbye weekend VIP preview evening (date TBC)
- 9-10 November - Lions Roar Goodbye weekend festival - all lions and cubs gathered together in one giant pride for lion fans to say their farewells (date TBC)
- 22 November - Lions of Windsor 2019 charity auction (date TBC)
December/January 2020
- Lions head off to their new homes across the UK and beyond
- 100% profits distributed to local charities
Would you like to sponsor a Lion?
- Join the pride today and be part of this roarsome, high profile event!
- Click below or email sponsors@lionsofwindsor.org for details
LATEST NEWS
Lions in new homes for Christmas!
December 18, 2019Bid for the LAST LION today!
December 14, 2019Raffle to win a Large Lion sculpture – draw 14 December
December 4, 2019Lions Head off to Pastures New…
November 30, 2019Place your bids for Thursday’s charity auction!
November 23, 2019Auction Host Tim Brooke-Taylor visits the Pride!
November 23, 2019Lions run at a speed of up to 81km/h.
Lions are the most sociable of all big cats. They live in groups of 10-15 lions, known as prides.
Numbers of wild lions in Africa have gone down by over 40% in the last three generations, due to loss of living space and conflict with people.
The Lion’s scientific name is Panthero Leo.
A female lion needs 5kg of meat a day. A male needs 7kg or more a day.
An adult male’s roar can be heard up to 8km away.
Lions used to be spread across most of Africa, but now are only found in sub-Saharan Africa. Lions have disappeared from 12 sub-Saharan countries in recent decades.
Although known as the ‘king of the jungle’, most lions live on open grasslands or savannah. Only one group of wild forest-dwelling lions remains in the Gir Forest in India.
Lions hunt large animals such as zebra and wildebeest.
In the wild, lions live for an average of 12 years and up to 16 years. They live up to 25 years in captivity.
The name for a baby lion is a cub, whelp or lionet.
Female lions do 85-90% of the hunting, whilst the males patrol the territory and protect the pride.
Headline sponsor – Windsor Yards