Confirmation that YWP had 25,000 visitors over the Easter weekend - with 10,500 alone on Monday. A new record! from Facebook:
An incredible 25,000 visitors enjoyed the thrills and charms of the award-winning Yorkshire Wildlife Park over a record-breaking Easter weekend.
The innovative walk-through park had plenty to offer with a new polar bear and a baby camel making their first public holiday appearances along with Easter egg hunts for children.
The 70-acre park, one of the fastest growing attraction in the UK, had a record 10,500 visitors on Easter Monday and director John Minion said: “It was our busiest day ever.
“We have never had over 10,000 on a normal day before. We can't thank everyone enough for all their support."
YWP, near Doncaster, is a home for the world’s most beautiful and endangered animals and has a global reputation for its conservation and welfare work through
the charity, the Yorkshire Wildlife Park Foundation.
The baby Bactrian camel, named Hadara (meaning adorned with beauty), made her public debut on Saturday following her birth to first time mum Elizabeth on March 22nd.
She had a difficult first week and had to have a helping hand from the rangers as she was struggling to stand. Staff helped out with extra bottle feeds and this weekend she was able to walk outside next to her proud mother.
The exciting appearance came just days after the arrival of Pixel, YWP’s second polar bear who quickly broke the ice with veteran Victor, 16, who arrived at the park last year.
The pair are getting to know each other. Pixel, from a zoo near Eindhoven, in the Netherlands, is enjoying his new Project Polar home - one of the world's largest polar bear reserves spanning ten acres (about 8.5 football pitches) and divided into four sections, featuring landscaped hills, valleys as well as lakes and pools up to 8metres deep.
YWP, at Branton, was full of the sounds of fun and laughter over the weekend as children enjoyed the celebrated Easter Egg trail with prizes for those who completed a route taking in the unique animal collection including Amur Tigers and Leopards, and Painted Hunting Dogs along with Lions, Giraffes, Baboons, Lemurs and Meerkats.
They also enjoyed the weatherproof 600 sq m Monkey Play barn with three levels of play equipment, including climbing frames, dens, slides and rope bridges in full view of the baboon reserve through a glass wall.