Anyone taking a stroll through the park on a quiet summer day will certainly not be bored. Accompanied by the chorus of crickets, they can observe deer grazing, listen to the croaking of frogs, or even watch beavers building their dams. In spring, the call of the cuckoo echoes through the park, and in the evening, with a bit of luck, one might even hear nightingales singing or observe bats on their silent flight through the night. Woodpeckers, orioles, blue tits, great tits, robins, and wood pigeons nest in trees or in the nesting boxes specially designed by the parks department to meet their needs. Grey herons and ducks have settled around the ponds, pheasants, partridges, and hares can be found in the meadows, and foxes in the wooded areas. Countless animal species, which would otherwise not find suitable living conditions in an urban environment, make their home in this wildly romantic and, above all, natural landscape.