Nonsense?

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much of this article is utter nonsense. the park opened as marine world in 1968, it did not start as africa USA then 'merge' with marine world. there's no evidence that daktari was ever shot there, nor any star trek episodes. sorry, but the article is too broken for me to fix, maybe someone who has time and a clue can actually make it right. Anastrophe 03:41, 8 May 2007 (UTC)Reply

  • This is obviously verifiable. Just google Daktari and Africa USA and you will find lots of references. And by the way, in real life, Judy, the "star" of Daktari, was owned by Ralph Helfer, the creator of Africa, USA. Hektor 18:39, 8 May 2007 (UTC)Reply
unless you can provide a link to a verifiable source - not one that ultimately returns back to this article - all this other stuff unsourced, and i have removed it. i googled and googled and googled - and all the references either returned here eventually, or were to dead ends that provided no source (like the IMDB page that lists it as a shooting location for daktari - the entry is user-provided with no source, and likely they got the idea from this article again! Anastrophe 18:44, 8 May 2007 (UTC)Reply
      • This is user provided ?
that only bolsters the facts as i've presented them. marine world/africa usa is in northern california, not southern california. it is 400 miles away from the afica usa site that page references. Anastrophe 18:49, 8 May 2007 (UTC)Reply
furthermore, the site you references states that africa usa was created by Ralph Helfner, not Ivan Tors as the former version of this article incorrectly states! Anastrophe 18:52, 8 May 2007 (UTC)Reply

I have reworked the article to conform to verifiable facts, as found at http://www.rcpl.info/services/redwoodshorehistory.html that information was compiled by the Redwood City Public Library from their own local history collection. I am not referencing my own experience - as that would be Original Research - but the fact of the matter is that I was born in redwood city, and visited marine world three months after it first opened. most of the former article was erroneous. Anastrophe 18:54, 8 May 2007 (UTC)Reply

  • The park was created by Ivan Tors and Ralph Helfer near Los Angeles, and this was the shooting location of Daktari [1]

Obviously I now understand there have been two successive Africa USA parks in California, one near Los Angeles where Daktari was shot, and the second one north of California. Daktari was not shot in Mozambique.Hektor 19:01, 8 May 2007 (UTC)Reply

excellent, thanks for the acknowledgement. i'll happily concede that the show may not have been shot in mozambique, although the liner notes seem to be a reasonably reliable source. perhaps it was shot in both locations?? Anastrophe 19:02, 8 May 2007 (UTC)Reply

The first Africa USA park seems to have been located in Soledad Canyon according to this source. My information is that the actors where based in California, and that the scenes with actors where shot there, and shots of animals in African landscape where shot in Africa, possibly in Mozambique, and put inbetween the actors scene. The interior scenes where shot in Florida. You have an indication in the bio of Marshall Thompson. http://www.marshall-thompson.com/biography/lifetimestory.htm

There was one incident that almost cost him his life. The scene called for him to be in a pit with a leopard. Shot in the San Fernando Valley near Ventura, the animals, actors and crew worked in very hot temperatures.

Here is an excellent source. I think it explains it all... So there were two parks... the first Africa USA where Daktari and many others were shot and a second one in Redwood Shores... Hektor 19:14, 8 May 2007 (UTC)Reply

  • I see this is the source that apparently claimed "Gentle Ben" was filmed at the first Africa USA complex. I don't think that's a particularly "excellent source" since it's not saying where it got this information and there are plenty of book sources with actual interviews by people involved in these shows. Still, as far as I can tell that website is right about Daktari and the "Shore Leave" episode of "Star Trek" being filmed at least in part at Africa USA (there was some actual Africa footage in Daktari, and some footage from Vasquez Rocks in "Shore Leave"). I am still dubious about "Gentle Ben" being filmed there for the reasons I stated in the separate section on "Gentle Ben" below - plus the actors have given interviews saying that episodes of "Gentle Ben" were filmed really fast so they would be doing the whole thing in Florida I'd imagine, not getting additional footage at Africa USA...but still looking for an actual book, newspaper article, or something more than a website focusing on a different show and just mentioning "Gentle Ben" in passing to confirm that any of "Gentle Ben" was actually filmed at Africa USA in Soledad Canyon.TheBlinkster (talk) 16:53, 25 May 2015 (UTC)Reply

nicely done job reworking the article. i'm not certain if the format is within wikipedia standards, since the article describes two completely different parks now. however, at least the historical data is closer to being truly accurate, which to my mind is the most important factor. Anastrophe 20:17, 8 May 2007 (UTC)Reply

Merge

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I am thinking about merging this entire article to Six Flags Discovery Kingdom#History. The content is basically redundant. Zzyzx11 (Talk) 03:02, 19 June 2007 (UTC)Reply

  • Oppose - these are historically three different and successive locations, I don't think the content is redundant, especially the one about the original animal affection training facility. The section in the Six Flags article can refer to this article. I think this is better this way. Hektor 14:27, 19 June 2007 (UTC)Reply
  • Weak Oppose - for same reason as Hektor, but I do feel the History section overpowers the rest of the article. It should be moved further down in the article, imo. Fcsuper 16:19, 30 June 2007 (UTC)Reply

OK, for now it will be treated as a more detailed sub-article of Six Flags Discovery Kingdom. Zzyzx11 (Talk) 05:02, 8 July 2007 (UTC)Reply

Soledad Canyon

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The thing that sticks out to me is that it says all of the animals died during the flood in Soledad Canyon, when in both "Beauty of the Beasts" and "Zamba", written by Ralph Helfer, he says ultimately only 9 animals died and the rest were all eventually recovered. I'd like to change this, but first know if anybody has evidence that supports what is currently up there before I do. The original facility he had was near Thousand Oaks in the Santa Monica Mountains, then he moved to the one in Soledad Canyon. I'm unsure of the dates, only that this happened between the 1950's and 1960's. I'm unsure if the original facility in Thousands Oaks was Africa USA, he just refers to it as the "ranch", where his affectionate training facility chain started. Not sure it's worth the mention in this particular article though. Otherwise, good on the Africa USA end. --Zen (talk) 03:29, 7 March 2008 (UTC)Reply

it would be good to find a reliable source that actually documents this; are 'beauty and the beasts' and 'zamba' books, films, articles? if you can provide quotes and cite them to the original material, that would be acceptable. the current material is unsourced, so anything citable would be an improvement. Anastrophe (talk) 03:35, 7 March 2008 (UTC)Reply

In January of 1969, Africa USA would take a turn for the worse. A powerful storm materialized over Soledad Canyon and dropped large amounts of rainfall in the region. This resulted in severe flooding and mudslides in the canyons. The phone rang at the Helfer residence at 6:00 A.M. They were being notified of the storm and drove out to the ranch in a fruitless attempt to save the animals.
They were driving up Soledad Canyon Road and it was being washed out from the heavy rains. By the time they got in the ranch, most of their animals had been killed by the torrential flooding. The so-called 100-year flood devastated Soledad Canyon. Two years before, the Helfers had a flood channel installed for $75,000 that was said to protect the ranch from any flooding. It was approved by the county. Ironically, it couldn't stop the flooding of the property.

ABC Marine World

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I copy this from a removed edit by Arlene Zinkel of the main page because it is interesting stuff and if it could be sourced from valid documentation it could lead to good additions to the article. Judy was euthanized in 1999 due to arthritis attributed to leg deformities at age 33. Hektor (talk) 00:22, 23 March 2014 (UTC)Reply

OOps you got that incorrect, When we first opened we were ABC Marine World, Bing Crosby did a special when we opened and I was chosen along with Tony to be his servants (happily) he sang a wonderful song which he called "down in the little Icthyariam, not sure of spelling, We had Judy the Water Skiing Elephant, she was So little when she came to us I could ride her like a small pony, She thought it was very funny at the end of the Water Ski show when we all came out and waved at the audience, Judy would be beside me and all of a sudden I would feel her trunk come up between my legs in my Bikini, I think her trainers might have taught her this, the audience loved it when I turned bright RED, Arlene Zinkel, Water Ski Show and admissions.

Gentle Ben filming location

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Do you have a source for the claim that Gentle Ben was filmed at Africa USA? From what I've read, I know Daktari and some other Ivan Tors shows were shot at Africa USA, also that Africa USA provided the animals used on these shows and also on Gentle Ben. However, everything I've read about Gentle Ben says it was filmed in Florida. Which makes sense, as Gentle Ben was set in the Florida Everglades, so you would need a landscape that looks like Florida. There are many books and articles describing how the bears would get very hot because they weren't used to the temperatures in Florida, how the main bear Bruno lived in an apartment in Miami with trainer Monty Cox, and how the Ivan Tors film studio in Miami was used for many of the scenes. The filming locations I've found referenced so far for Gentle Ben besides the Ivan Tors studio include a remote area outside Miami, a botanic garden in the Miami area, and for at least one episode, the Miami Seaquarium. I also have information that after the flood mentioned in this article (during which Bruno, the main bear who played Gentle Ben, was washed away and not found for two days) they relocated Bruno to Florida permanently and also eventually relocated a number of other Gentle Ben bears to the Homosassa Springs Attraction in Florida where Ivan Tors was planning to have an animal training facility.

So if any of Gentle Ben besides maybe initial screen tests was actually filmed at Africa USA in California, I'd be interested in seeing a citation to a source. I'm trying to fix up the Gentle Ben article. Thanks, TheBlinkster (talk) 03:04, 25 May 2015 (UTC)Reply

Edited to add, I see there is a fan website for "Bonanza" referenced in an above section that makes this claim re "Gentle Ben"...since that website is focused on a completely different show and doesn't have much info backing up its claim, I'm not believing it just yet. Has anyone got an actual book or a newspaper or magazine article?TheBlinkster (talk) 16:55, 25 May 2015 (UTC)Reply

Shambala Preserve is not on the site of the former Africa USA complex

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In doing research regarding Gentle Ben and its star Bruno the Bear, I happened to notice this discussion on the Daktari website. In the comments, Ken Lynch (who contributes a lot of material to the Daktari fan site) states that he contacted Shambala Preserve and was told that they are NOT located on the former Africa USA complex, but rather on property acquired from Ron Oxley. https://daktaritvshow.wordpress.com/2013/05/22/the-story-of-africa-u-s-a-and-its-proprietors-animal-trainer-ralph-helfer-and-daktari-producer-ivan-tors/

I know from my own research that in the 1970s, Ron Oxley, who formerly had been an animal trainer working with Steve Martin and others on Gentle Ben and probably other productions, obtained a permit (with someone named Clyde Totten) to have an animal facility in Soledad Canyon near Saugus, "about a mile east of the ill-fated Africa USA complex" (source: "Wild Animals Will Get New Home", Los Angeles Times, Feb. 22, 1972). Oxley's permit stated the address of his new facility as "7433 Soledad Canyon Road". If you look on Google Maps, 7433 Soledad Canyon Road is at least a half mile west of Shambala Preserve, which is not only shown on the Google Map but has an address on its website of 6867 Soledad Canyon Road. So if Shambala Preserve is east of 7433 Soledad Canyon Road, and 7433 Soledad Canyon Road was a mile east of Africa USA, then it's pretty clear that Shambala and the former Africa USA are not on the same location...just what Shambala reportedly said to the person who wrote in.

In the early 1970s, Ron Oxley was the trainer of Neil the Lion. Oxley was also a friend of Tippi Hedren and was the one who suggested that she should get to know lions by having Neil the Lion live in the house with her and her family (including Melanie Griffith). There's a recent Daily Mail article about all this here. http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2797870/tippi-hedren-reveals-regrets-letting-beast-share-family-home-letting-sleep-daughter-melanie-griffiths-bed.html Therefore, it makes sense that Hedren would have bought land from him to open the Preserve. It would not make much sense to operate the preserve on the former site of Africa USA because that place had already had at least one devastating flood (possibly more than one, I'm trying to sort that out, but at least one).

I note that the source cited in the article for Shambala Preserve being the former Africa USA just links to the Shambala website - not to any specific source that says Shambala is on the site of the former Africa USA. Therefore I'm tagging that statement with "disputed-inline" . This is significant partly because people might travel there wanting to see the filming location for Daktari (as the Daktari fan site points out), or even the "Shore Leave" episode of Star Trek, and despite some misinformation on the web to the contrary, Shambala Preserve location is not the location where that stuff was filmed.

Edited to add, I see that the Bonanza website I am already questioning with respect to the claim about filming of "Gentle Ben" also claims Shambala Preserve renovated the former Africa USA site. Two pieces of questionable info without a source cited on that website, in my mind, make it an untrustworthy source despite whoever is claiming that it's "excellent"...it's not excellent, it's not even good. Maybe for Bonanza info but not for anything else!

Side note: I think at this point the article as regards the 1960s "Africa USA" animal training complex needs to split off from the rest of the article being about later tourist attractions. "Africa USA" as it's known to fans of the Ivan Tors animal shows and people who've read the books by people like Ralph Helfer and Pat Derby is a completely different thing than what this article seems to be about. TheBlinkster (talk) 16:43, 25 May 2015 (UTC)Reply

  • Ok, I've just found the 1968 address for "Africa USA" in a newspaper article: 8237 Soledad Canyon, Saugus, California. (Source: "Fun and Games" (newspaper column), Long Beach (California) Independent, July 1, 1968, p. 1.) Again, if you google map this, you can see it is quite a distance west of Shambala Preserve. I hope this puts the whole "Shambala is located on Africa USA site" business to rest. TheBlinkster (talk) 17:58, 25 May 2015 (UTC)Reply
  • And in addition - the year 1987 for the founding of Shambala is also wrong. Shambala Prserve was founded in 1972. This is supported by many sources, here is one, the Philadelphia Inquirer: http://articles.philly.com/2002-12-22/news/25359051_1_big-cats-hedren-lives-shambala-preserve . In Pamela Des Barres' book "I'm With the Band", she talks about the period when she and Don Johnson were dating (and he was also friendly with Tippi Hedren and her daughter Melanie Griffith, then a young teenager) and mentions being invited by Melanie to her mom's "lion ranch"; this was some time in the early 70s, so it sounds like Tippi had already established the lion ranch and it just wasn't open to the public. Even if you go by the date 1983 in the Inquirer article, it's still earlier than 1987. TheBlinkster (talk) 19:28, 25 May 2015 (UTC)Reply