Screvier20

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I'm impressed they could spell 'Dybowski' and 'Przewalski' but not 'budgerigar'! :D

'Lorry' also made me smile - nothing like a majestic herd of Eddie Stobarts roaming the savannah...*





*this joke may not work outside the British Isles. If you're really interested, Google is Your Friend :D
 
Maguari said:
I'm impressed they could spell 'Dybowski' and 'Przewalski' but not 'budgerigar'!
budgerygah is actually an older variation on the more usual budgerigar. Its not as widely used but still correct.

Lorry did make me smile though.
 
Fair do's then - can honestly say I've never come across that one. I did wonder after posting if it might be an American spelling, but I left it there knowing someone would soon put me right!

As an aside, my favourite 'older' spelling of an animal name is 'Nylghaie', which I first encountered in an old Dudley guide. Just thought I'd share that.
 
Stupid question here, because I did not find the answer somewhere:

When and why was this zoo closed?
 
Stupid question here, because I did not find the answer somewhere:

When and why was this zoo closed?

The owner wanted to retire and with business down to only about 100,000 a season continuing to operate the zoo wouldn't be feasible. She estimates it would take about 150,000 to 200,000 visitors annually to make the operation viable. Plus the zoo need a 5 million uplift. At its peak in the 1960s, the game farm had an average season of up to half a million visitors.
 
Maguari said:
Fair do's then - can honestly say I've never come across that one. I did wonder after posting if it might be an American spelling, but I left it there knowing someone would soon put me right!
it does seem like it was much more an American spelling than anywhere else (although I've occasionally seen it in older Australian texts as well)
 
The owner wanted to retire and with business down to only about 100,000 a season continuing to operate the zoo wouldn't be feasible. She estimates it would take about 150,000 to 200,000 visitors annually to make the operation viable. Plus the zoo need a 5 million uplift. At its peak in the 1960s, the game farm had an average season of up to half a million visitors.

The zoo also took a real downturn during the last 5 or 6 years it was opened. The smell of the place got really bad in the final years beyond what is normal for an zoo. I think they were just running out of money to keep in running.
 
Stupid question here, because I did not find the answer somewhere:

When and why was this zoo closed?

More on why it closed. Catskill Game Farm was really the last surviving on the great Catskills tourist attraction. It join the Friar Tuck Resort & Spa, Carson City and Indian Village, Ted Martin's Reptile Adventure(also know as in the past as Clyde Peeling’s Reptiland and Catskill Reptile Institute) and many smaller attraction.

The Catskill Game Farm was part of the Borscht Belt. [ame=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borscht_Belt]Borscht Belt - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia[/ame]

The zoo also took a real downturn during the last 5 or 6 years it was opened. The smell of the place got really bad in the final years beyond what is normal for an zoo. I think they were just running out of money to keep in running.

Unfortunately I have to agree with Scott90 here.
 

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Catskill Game Farm (Closed)
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