Philadelphia Zoo Bringing Back Popular Summer Event
Summer is in full swing, the Philadelphia Zoo is bringing back a very popular summer event. Philadelphia is so fortunate to have this great zoo right in our backyard, as well as events like these.
Philadelphia Zoo: The Popular Summer Ale Festival is Back
The Philadelphia Zoo has announced that it’s back with its famed Summer Ale Festival. This is always such a great combination of zoo fun and good drinks. The event will offer more than 100 craft beers, ciders, hard iced teas, hard seltzers, local food trucks and live music on its 42-acre campus.
The Summer Ale Festival is unique, in that it’s the only beer celebration in the area where you can see animals and drink beer. The event will take place Saturday (July 20) from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. You have to be 21 or older to attend.
New this year are musical performers Moon Poodle, Marielle Kraft and Nik Greely & the Operators. The event will also have DJs. As for the brews, this year’s brewery lineup features Tired Hands Brewing Company, Three 3’s Brewing Company, Two Locals Brewing, Dock Street Brewing, and amazing out-of-towners like Neshaminy Creek Brewing Company, Desperate Times Brewery, New Trail Brewing Company, Ship Bottom Brewery and more. For those who don’t drink, there will be plenty of non-beer beverages, too.
“We hear year after year from our guests that this festival offers a great variety of beverages and gives them the chance to see our animals up close with fewer crowds,” vice president of guest experience Cara Treadway said in a statement. “Not only is Summer Ale Festival an incredibly fun night, but more importantly, supports the animals in our care, our global conservation work, and our local community programs.”
If you want to attend this event, you have to get tickets in advance via the Zoo’s website, as tickets won’t be available for purchase at the door. The cost of tickets includes admission to the Zoo. Discount tickets for groups are available, too.
Summer Ale Fest is for a good cause, too, as it’s a fundraiser. The event helps the Philadelphia Zoo in its “mission to create joyful discovery and inspire action for animals and habitats.” While you’re there, check out Pioneering Zoo360, which the Zoo describes as a first-in-the-world system of animal exploration trails, which has “inspired more than 70 zoos around the globe to design new ways to invite animals to travel and roam through their own campuses.”