Wicksteed Park now has a new Meerkat Manor exhibit. Last year it went to administration but the brilliant news is Wicksteed Park has now been saved and it's reopened
Wicksteed Park did not go into administration and did not need saving.Wicksteed Park now has a new Meerkat Manor exhibit. Last year it went to administration but the brilliant news is Wicksteed Park has now been saved and it's reopened![]()
A simple Google search would show that the Park and the charitable trust which owns it did not go into administration. It was the separate company which ran the place which did so.really now. How do you know about this
they will indeedIt looks a very impressive enclosure and I'm sure they'll be a very happy mob of meerkats.
Well, it's one way of describing it.Cool isn't it
Think you have to book for theme parks same as with zoos.Are theme parks such as this exempt from pre-booking requirements, because Wicksteed do not have a system in place yet?
Okay, I'm assuming that most places have pre-booking in place voluntarily.
Are theme parks such as this exempt from pre-booking requirements, because Wicksteed do not have a system in place yet?
Okay, I'm assuming that most places have pre-booking in place voluntarily.
I checked out Alton Towers, Chessington and Thorpe Park which had their on the gate prices crossed out. Then I found Legoland, with the same website format, did not have theirs crossed out.Think you have to book for theme parks same as with zoos.
Definitely do for Alton towers so would imagine others are the same.
Well, it's one way of describing it.
Vulgar would be another.
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That was really goodif you have facebook, there is a photo there
or during construction here
New Meerkat Manor - Wicksteed Park
Well for your information about this in fact it's not just meerkats as there's also Alpacas, Goats, Ponies, Sheep, Spanish Mule and BirdsWicksteed is a Theme Park, not a zoo under anything other than the specific legal definition, set up specifically as a leisure park by Charles Wicksteed for the benefit of the people of Kettering from the proceeds of the engineering businesses he owned, one of which made playground equipment.
This latest meerkat enclosure replaces another only built very recently; a couple of years ago - which was based around underground tunnels for children,which presumably had an access issue for social distancing under Covid measures. This was basically a children's tunnel maze, with sand covering the tunnels and meerkats living on top of it. I'm sure that children would have considered it 'cool' too, but perhaps not many on here.
They have also built an 'aviary' of some kind, replacing/expanding on the budgie walk-through also very recently constructed. So - far from any threat, the Park has considerably expanded with many new rides too, during its closure last year. It is still owned by the same charitable trust, which put its management company in administration with the loss of 115 jobs. Presumably the new company which it created is much more streamlined?
All of this is public knowledge, well covered by the local media.
edit - being very local to us, it is a place we know very well. I personally was taken many times as a child. A wrist-band and ticketing system allows access into the 'rides' in which the meerkats and aviaries are now included. Historically there have always been animals of some kind on the site, and when I was a child in addition to public aviaries and bird paddocks, a ticketed children's zoo (called a 'pets corner') also existed, where I remember seeing a Sun Bear and a Kinkajou.
Postcards exist of this, but are rare - and I do not have any personal photos.
Oh yes alot betterIt'll be interesting to see what it actually *looks* like when photographs pop up anon.... in my experience concept art often looks a lot better (and more ambitious) than the real thing!
They may have had in the past Jedd, but having just asked via facebook, they only have "meerkats, an aviary with parrots etc, goats and ducks" these days.Well for your information about this in fact it's not just meerkats as there's also Alpacas, Goats, Ponies, Sheep, Spanish Mule and Birds
Wicksteed is a Theme Park, not a zoo under anything other than the specific legal definition, set up specifically as a leisure park by Charles Wicksteed for the benefit of the people of Kettering from the proceeds of the engineering businesses he owned, one of which made playground equipment.
This latest meerkat enclosure replaces another only built very recently; a couple of years ago - which was based around underground tunnels for children,which presumably had an access issue for social distancing under Covid measures. This was basically a children's tunnel maze, with sand covering the tunnels and meerkats living on top of it. I'm sure that children would have considered it 'cool' too, but perhaps not many on here.
They have also built an 'aviary' of some kind, replacing/expanding on the budgie walk-through also very recently constructed. So - far from any threat, the Park has considerably expanded with many new rides too, during its closure last year. It is still owned by the same charitable trust, which put its management company in administration with the loss of 115 jobs. Presumably the new company which it created is much more streamlined?
All of this is public knowledge, well covered by the local media.
edit - being very local to us, it is a place we know very well. I personally was taken many times as a child. A wrist-band and ticketing system allows access into the 'rides' in which the meerkats and aviaries are now included. Historically there have always been animals of some kind on the site, and when I was a child in addition to public aviaries and bird paddocks, a ticketed children's zoo (called a 'pets corner') also existed, where I remember seeing a Sun Bear and a Kinkajou.
Postcards exist of this, but are rare - and I do not have any personal photos.
