Probably individual(s) in the PR department have a depraved fad for automatons and sci-fi stories anyway.
Pretty pathetic and pointless for a zoo PR.
Pretty pathetic and pointless for a zoo PR.
Twycross Zoo have announced their 50 year celebration plans which will take place in Spring Week, 51 years after the zoo first opened.Monday 26th May, Live Music. Tuesday 27th Area 51 co, performance artist. Wednesday 28th, Adventures in time and space, including Daleks.Thursday 29th, Classic Car Day, Friday 30th, Bert and Gents Vintage Markets. What, may I ask do any of these events have relating to zoology, animals or indeed Twycross Zoo itself?
I am 51, this year celebrating my 50th!.
even if they dont look at the animals at least they'd be paying entry?
i know it's probably a long shot but surely having the various different things at the zoo could pull in a different type of audience - classic car fans, darlek fans? even if they dont look at the animals at least they'd be paying entry?
But that's not really the point, it's supposed to be a celebration of the zoo, it's history and it's animals. Something this half-Rst a year late just looks pathetic. If it's about getting people in the zoo and getting a little extra revenue (if it does) then fine, I just wish they wouldn't claim it's any kind of anniversary celebration without making a little more effort in that direction.
A vote has been opened to name the new elephant calf: The three choices are...
Kesari - After a place in Bengal
Esha - meaning pure
and.... NISHA!meaning night
101 Touch FM
We will have our very own Zoochat mascot, an elephant
Doesn't pertinax still count![]()
Well if Nisha wins we will never hear the last of it![]()
Article about Molly Badham
worth looking at for the old photos. The text of the article is as follows. It's a bit wierd, the journalist obviously had a quick skim-read of Chimps With Everything and jotted down some notes, but then just jammed on the last couple of sentences with no context at all.Article about Molly Badham :
Gallery: The zoo that Molly built | Leicester Mercury
It all began with a scene plucked straight from the script of 1980s sitcom Never The Twain. Sutton Coldfield pet shop owner Molly Badham fell in love – with a woolly monkey.
It was in the window of Nathalie Evans’ rival store in the West Midlands town. She couldn’t really afford the £35 price tag – but felt she simply had to buy it and grudgingly gave her competitor the trade.
Over the years, the women’s shared love of primates took the sting out of their business hostility. They patched up their differences and joined forces.
They had a bungalow built to house their increasing collection of animals at Hints, near Tamworth.
But before long the constant stream of visitors was upsetting the neighbours. And the straw that broke the camel’s back came when a large antelope escaped into the next-door orchard.
The duo needed to move – and quickly. In 1962, they borrowed £10,000 from the bank to relocate. They settled on a red-brick Victorian house with 12 acres of land in west Leicestershire, and the county’s best-loved tourist attraction was born.
As it was, Twycross Zoo might never have happened. At first, the pair thought the site was an eyesore and too pricey to restore. But when they realised it was all they could afford on their limited budget, they pressed on with the purchase.
The zoo first opened its doors to the public at 3pm on Sunday, May 26, 1963, and life in this small Leicestershire village was never quite the same again.
The car-loads of punters queued up to see the beasts, and to get a glimpse of telly star Jean Morton, one of the original announcers from ATV, who was known to kids across the Midlands as Auntie Jean from the children’s show Tingha and Tucker.
As they settled down to life in the zoo, Molly and Nathalie used to bring chimps in their house for tea parties, which soon became firm favourites with visitors.
PG Tips had been running ad campaigns starring chimps since the mid-1950s and word reached London about the teatime antics at Twycross.
In 1968, Sam the chimp made his TV debut, drinking a cuppa in an advert. It was a hit and a series was born.
Over the years, chimps from the zoo became synonymous with the commercials. Scriptwriters would tell Molly what they wanted the chimps to do – and she would set to work training them.
“It’sh the tashte!” went the old PG Tips slogan. But public tashtes changed.
Recent studies suggest the apes were damaged by the experience.
The zoo now calls itself the World Primate Centre. Molly died in 2007.
Article about Molly Badham :
Gallery: The zoo that Molly built | Leicester Mercury