traumahawk
Member
Are there any benefits to a season ticket at CWP similar to the Marwell Zoo one, i.e., discounts off food and gifts?
Thanks,
Ashley
Thanks,
Ashley
£72.50 is expensive. At Yorkshire Wildlife Park, I pay £55 for the first year annual membership, which drops to £52 for single Adult when you renew. You get free entry anytime and also free entry to any events.Currently an annual pass is £72.50 and an e ticket is £14, so you need to go more than 5 times in the year to be ahead.
Seems good value to me, provided you live near enough.
I have a Dudley zoo pass and its great to pop for a couple of hours frequently rather than spend all day there once or twice a year.
I'd agree that it is on the expensive side, but, in many ways, this is an unfair comparison: Doncaster and South Yorkshire are a great deal less prosperous than Burford and the Cotswolds; I'd guess that the average income of visitors to the CWP is significantly higher than that of visitors to the YWP.£72.50 is expensive. At Yorkshire Wildlife Park, I pay £55 for the first year annual membership, which drops to £52 for single Adult when you renew. You get free entry anytime and also free entry to any events.
I would suggest £70 for a single zoo that you have to visit 5 times to break even is terrible value for money unless you live locally! Within 20 miles maybe!I'd agree that it is on the expensive side, but, in many ways, this is an unfair comparison: Doncaster and South Yorkshire are a great deal less prosperous than Burford and the Cotswolds; I'd guess that the average income of visitors to the CWP is significantly higher than that of visitors to the YWP.
I see what you are saying, if the market is willing to pay £72 then that's fine. The zoos themselves create their own market and they have to consider the price levels - set it too low and you might create more demand than you can supply, risking causing overcrowding and spoiling the experience for a large number of visitors who will not return again and your market dwindles as you get bad review after bad review. However, if you set the price at what is perceived to be too high, then you limit the size of your market and risk never having enough revenue to be able to sustain your zoo in the long term. At the end of the day, it is the visitors who decide what is a fair entry price.I'd agree that it is on the expensive side, but, in many ways, this is an unfair comparison: Doncaster and South Yorkshire are a great deal less prosperous than Burford and the Cotswolds; I'd guess that the average income of visitors to the CWP is significantly higher than that of visitors to the YWP.
I've always thought this is the worst value annual pass I've come across! You can't even get in on bank holidays ( or couldn't when I last looked)! Though this year you can get into around 10 other zoos in the East for half price . But Linton, has the same deal & charges only £35 per year!The surprisingly eye-watering annual pass I came across was Shepreth. £12 adult ticket entry on the door, adult annual pass £75, and it is not a big place! I assume this says a lot about the wealth of the people who live nearby?
I've always thought this is the worst value annual pass I've come across! You can't even get in on bank holidays ( or couldn't when I last looked)! Though this year you can get into around 10 other zoos in the East for half price . But Linton, has the same deal & charges only £35 per year!
My comments related to Shepreth not Cotswold!Would you want to (go on a bank holiday)? I wouldn't.
At the end of the day, you pay your money and make your choice. If Cotswold was on my doorstep I could probably swallow the fee for regular access over a year.
My comments related to Shepreth not Cotswold!