Jump to content

Paradise Wildlife Park

Coordinates: 51°44′32″N 0°03′14″W / 51.742124°N 0.053988°W / 51.742124; -0.053988
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Paradise Wildlife Park
Map
51°44′32″N 0°03′14″W / 51.742124°N 0.053988°W / 51.742124; -0.053988
Date opened1960s
LocationWhite Stubbs Lane
Broxbourne, Herts EN10 7QA
Major exhibitsLand of the Tigers, Amazon & Beyond, Lion Pride lands, Sun Bear Heights, Jaguar Jungle, Penguin Falls, Farmyard, Rainforest Experience, Reptile Temple
Websitehertfordshirezoo.com

Hertfordshire Zoo, previously known as Paradise Wildlife Park and before that as Broxbourne Zoo, is a family-run wildlife park and charity in Broxbourne, in Hertfordshire, England. It came under the management of the Peter and Grace Sampson family in 1984; in 2017, their daughter Lynn Whitnall became chief executive and continued the family business.[citation needed] Also in 2017, the family founded the Zoological Society of Hertfordshire, a registered charity (no.1108609). The zoo receives no government funding.[citation needed]

Among the animals in the zoo are Amur tigers, white lions, snow leopards and European wolves, as well as African penguins, red pandas, green anacondas, two-toed sloths, lemurs, meerkats, Bactrian camels, plains zebras and Brazilian tapirs.[citation needed]

On 4 April 2022, the park announced that it would be rebranding to Hertfordshire Zoo as part of its 40th anniversary celebrations in 2024.[1]

History

[edit]

The zoo opened in the early 1960s as Broxbourne Zoo. By 1984, it had earned a reputation as one of the UK's worst zoos.[2][3][4]

In 1984, the Sampson family purchased the site with the intention of re-housing the animals into larger enclosures that mimicked their natural habitat, making them as comfortable as possible. The zoo was closed down for two years to undergo this transformation and re-opened as "Paradise Park and Woodland Zoo", which was then shortened to Paradise Wildlife Park in the 1990s.[citation needed]

Paradise Wildlife Park, like many animal attractions in England, was forced to close by the Foot and Mouth epidemic in the spring of 2001.[citation needed]

In 2000, Parkside Leisure, the parent company of Paradise Wildlife Park, purchased the site of the Big Cat Foundation in Kent, a sanctuary operated at the time by the Born Free Foundation. A new organisation was established by Paradise Wildlife Park called the Wildlife Heritage Foundation (WHF).[5]

Since becoming the Zoological Society of Hertfordshire in 2017 (registered charity no.1108609), the zoo has made significant investment in upgrading and expanding its facilities.[citation needed]

Since 2020, CBBC show 'One Zoo Three' has been filmed at the zoo, featuring brothers Aaron, Tyler and Cam Whitnall.[4]

Animals

[edit]

The zoo is home to several hundred animals, including small mammals, paddock and farmyard animals, birds, primates, reptiles, and big cats. It has Siberian tigers, snow leopards, ocelot, jaguars and white lions.[6]

The Angkor Reptile Temple houses the largest anaconda in the UK, named Optimus Prime.[7]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "WE ARE HERTFORDSHIRE ZOO!". pwpark.com. 4 April 2022.
  2. ^ "Creating Paradise in Broxbourne". Hertfordshire. Retrieved 7 October 2016.
  3. ^ "Paradise Wildlife Park's journey from 'UK's worst zoo' to one of Europe's best - HertsLive". www.hertfordshiremercury.co.uk. Retrieved 29 June 2024.
  4. ^ a b "From 'the worst zoo in the UK' to popular attraction: Looking back on Paradise Wildlife Park's 37 years". The Comet. 7 April 2021. Retrieved 29 June 2024.
  5. ^ "Home - The Big Cat Sanctuary | Wildlife Heritage Foundation". The Big Cat Sanctuary | Wildlife Heritage Foundation. Retrieved 7 October 2016.
  6. ^ Paradise Wildlife Park
  7. ^ "IS THIS THE BIGGEST ANACONDA IN THE UK?". abcmagazines.blogspot.co.uk. Retrieved 7 October 2016.