Noah'S Ark Zoo Farm

About Noah'S Ark Zoo Farm

Noah's Ark Zoo Farm is a 100acre zoo developed on a working farm in Wraxall, North Somerset, west of Bristol, England, which promotes a form of creationism that includes a belief that the biblical story of Noah's Flood was an actual cataclysmic event. In 2009 the zoo was expelled from the British and Irish Association of Zoos and Aquariums, the main industry regulatory body, "for bringing the association into disrepute". The zoo has the largest elephant enclosure in northern Europe. HistoryAnthony BushNoah’s Ark Zoo Farm was conceived by Anthony Bush, the son of a Wiltshire farm manager. Bush attended Monkton Combe School, served a stint as an officer in National Service with the Somerset Light Infantry, and attended Worcester College, Oxford, for a year before deciding to return to farming. In 1960 he became a tenant of Richard Gibbs, Lord Wraxall, at Moat House Farm, near Bristol, which Bush operated as a dairy farm. In 1962 he married Christina James, an art teacher, and they had four children. In 1968 Bush was elected onto the Somerset County Executive Committee of the National Farmers Union, and in 1980, he began a Farming and Wildlife Advisory Group to encourage farmers to conserve wildlife.

Noah'S Ark Zoo Farm Description

Noah's Ark Zoo Farm is a 100acre zoo developed on a working farm in Wraxall, North Somerset, west of Bristol, England, which promotes a form of creationism that includes a belief that the biblical story of Noah's Flood was an actual cataclysmic event. In 2009 the zoo was expelled from the British and Irish Association of Zoos and Aquariums, the main industry regulatory body, "for bringing the association into disrepute". The zoo has the largest elephant enclosure in northern Europe. HistoryAnthony BushNoah’s Ark Zoo Farm was conceived by Anthony Bush, the son of a Wiltshire farm manager. Bush attended Monkton Combe School, served a stint as an officer in National Service with the Somerset Light Infantry, and attended Worcester College, Oxford, for a year before deciding to return to farming. In 1960 he became a tenant of Richard Gibbs, Lord Wraxall, at Moat House Farm, near Bristol, which Bush operated as a dairy farm. In 1962 he married Christina James, an art teacher, and they had four children. In 1968 Bush was elected onto the Somerset County Executive Committee of the National Farmers Union, and in 1980, he began a Farming and Wildlife Advisory Group to encourage farmers to conserve wildlife.

More about Noah'S Ark Zoo Farm

Noah'S Ark Zoo Farm is located at Wraxall, North Somerset, United Kingdom
http://www.noahsarkzoofarm.co.uk/