A Zoo That Was

About two and a half hours from New York City, up the Thruway to Exit 20 and off State Route 32 lies what was once the first privately owned zoo in the U.S. - the Catskill Game Farm. Founded in 1933 by Roland Lindemann, the zoo grew from a single enclosure with a small variety of deer to a 1,000 acre farm with 2,000 animals from all over the world. The game farm peaked in the 1960s, drawing half a million visitors each season. For decades, families would travel from near and far to visit the rural gem. Its primary attraction was the animal nursery and feeding ground where visitors were able to pet, feed, and interact with a variety of quadrupeds including deer, goats, and llamas.

Verdurous Growth.JPG

I had visited it several times as a kid. While going through old pictures, I found that I had last been there at seven. Now at 32, visiting the game farm well after its closing, I was nostalgic just as much now as I was then. The reasons for my feelings were different though. As a child, I enamored with the idea of seeing animals not native to the U.S. I had read about them in books and visiting them up close turned the intangible, tangible. Revisiting the zoo 13 years after its closing and 25 years since my last visit, I was curious to see how far gone it had become.

When I pulled into the main lot of the Game Farm, the red admissions booth brought back the same excitement I had felt years ago. Once inside, the cages and pens seemed much smaller than from what I remembered. It was such a contrast from what I had once felt being here. Their emptiness carried an aura of sadness; a stark reminder of how I grew to hate the idea of zoos. Despite the Game Farm once being a magical place for me, I had come to learn that the zoo had its own share of dark secrets.

Prior to the zoo’s closing, Kathie Schultz, the owner of the Game Farm and daughter of Roland Lindemann, received several citations during the annual USDA inspections in 2004 and 2005. They included excess accumulation of manure, poor water drainage, and spoiled food. Finally, in 2006, Schultz was forced to close the doors to the Catskill Game Farm citing years of declining attendance.

The controversy didn’t end there. After the closure, there was considerable concern over the sale of the animals to unlicensed dealers for ‘canned hunts.’ A canned hunt is a trophy hunt where animals are kept in an expansive enclosure making it easier for a hunter to attain a kill. Schultz refused to donate them to sanctuaries leading protestors to picket the zoo. As a result of the press attention, animal advocated pooled their resources to form the Coalition for Catskill Game Farm Animals; the goal being to purchase as many animals as possible at the auction. They targeted the most ‘at risk’ animals including the nilgae, a type of antelope, the aoudad sheep, and two white rhinos. Although many of the animals were saved, several mammals including bison, wisent, a red stag, and other rare antelope, were sold to traders tied to canned hunts.

The property was purchased in 2012 by Ben and Cathy Ballone with the goal of turning the grounds into a campsite. In 2018, renovation work began to turn the old giraffe house into a mini inn. Today, the Ballones open up the grounds to explorers who wish to roam the vast acreage. I took full advantage of this opportunity back in July 2019.

Looking back at the zoo that was once the pride of my childhood, I couldn’t help but reflect on the true story behind what was once a magical place. There was such a contrast to the joy I once experienced as a child to the sadness I felt as an adult being on the grounds.

2W4A9830.JPG