Take a peek inside the unique zoo home of Blackpool Zoo's manager - and find out what it's really like to live alongside the animals
and live on Freeview channel 276
With more than 40 years’ experience in looking after some of the world’s most endangered animals you would think Mike had seen it all when it came to zoo keeping.
However, in a career first, he now lives on site in a converted air traffic control tower with a 37-acre garden that is home to more than 1000 animals.
And it’s never a dull moment.
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Hide AdMike, who is 56, was born in Chester and started his career at the city’s zoo when he was just 16.
While he has always lived very close to the zoos he has worked in, his new home has been a real eye, and ear, opener when it comes to his somewhat noisy neighbours.
Mike said: “Living in the zoo is brilliant, although I do get a 4.30am wakeup call from the peafowl that roam freely in the park!
“I can hear lots of animals from my flat; the gibbons, lemurs, parrots and the sea lions are probably the most vocal after the peafowl and there is a pair of visiting barn owls that sit outside my living room window.
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Hide Ad“Having the zoo to myself in the evening is a privilege I have always enjoyed, but actually living on site makes it easier to take a look around once all the visitors have left.
“If we have had a baby born or a new arrival I will also go and check on them later at night, for example, we recently welcomed a new male orangutan called Kawan as part of the European breeding programme so I have been visiting him when the zoo is closed to see how he is settling in.
“After 40 years in the best job in the world I thought I had done most things, but I can now tick ‘have a zoo for a garden’ off my list too!
“It is great to be back in the North West; Lancashire has always had a special place in my heart so working at Blackpool Zoo is perfect for me,” added Mike.
Is Mike the first keeper to live at the zoo?
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Hide AdMany keepers have lived in the converted air traffic control tower during Blackpool Zoo’s 50-year history.
Zoo Director Darren Webster lived on site with his family when he joined the team in 1996 and the zoo’s Section Head of Mammals, Luke Minns and his partner Charlotte Pennie, who is Deputy Section Manager for Elephants, also resided there after meeting and falling in love at work.
The keeper flats are located in a former air traffic control tower, which dates back to 1931 when the site was Blackpool Municipal Airport.
When World War II broke out on September 3rd the site requisitioned as an RAF parachute training centre. To begin with, there was the air traffic control building and one hangar, now known as Hangar E.
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Hide AdLater, four more large hangars were built and Wellington bombers were assembled and flown off the site. After the war ended, the airport was moved to the current Squires Gate site as it was deemed more suitable.