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Has there been a definitive answer about whether or not bring a friend passes are allowed in with pass member previews?
Actually I will contradict @Zachary and say that they are allowed in. Initially they weren't last year but they were allowed to attend on HOS member sneak peak. I was there with a few friends that have friends and family passes.
 
Alright. I’ll call, see what they say and report back.

Edit: I messaged them on Facebook and got a response.
Only guests with Basic, Unlimited, Premier, or Platinum Memberships purchased in 2018 or later can enter on Member Preview Days. Bring a friend tickets cannot be used for entry on Member Preview Day.
 
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Has there been a definitive answer about whether or not bring a friend passes are allowed in with pass member previews?
I can confirm that they were not allowed at HOS preview this season even though you can print them from the kiosk on that day.
 
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Yes sorry to all. I read bring a friend and thought what was being referred to were the employee friend and family passes. Those are allowed to member sneak peaks. The bring a friend member perks do not work for the sneak peaks.
 
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Anyone know what the animal kennels by some of the attractions are for? There's one by the Quick Queue line for Verbolten for example. I had assumed it was for a service animal while the guest was on the ride?

Can't 100 percent confirm this. But I was told that the park participates in periodic trap and lease in farrel cat that live in the area and that if you see the kennels there is likely a trap nearby. Also told that sometimes there for humane trapping of animals that you might not want in guest area such as raccoons and such. The idea is to have the larger kennels close at ha d to remove th er annimal from the trap to a larger secure container to relieve some of the stress. No idea if that true up it sounded reasonable
 
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If no one in a party with a service animal can or wants to wait with the animal, they have the kennel to keep them in. Every area of the park has at least one kennel, usually a few, ready to go to a ride when the call comes for it.
 
Maybe this is found somewhere in this forum but I can’t find it...I’ve always wondered how the transition from ownership under Busch to Seaworld went down. Did anything change about the park? Did it occur gradually or was just he parked closed for the season under one owner and opened up under another?
 
I think it went through a holding company first for a year or two before being spun-off to become SEAS. I think in that time period the AB logos were permitted to stay to some degree, but ultimately had to come down.

Personally, I think it would have been smarter for the company to brand themselves under the BG name with the same parks.
 
Maybe this is found somewhere in this forum but I can’t find it...I’ve always wondered how the transition from ownership under Busch to Seaworld went down. Did anything change about the park? Did it occur gradually or was just he parked closed for the season under one owner and opened up under another?

The parks went from AB -> InBev -> Blackstone -> Publicly Traded. Despite all of those changes in ownership, nothing really changed much aside from the removal of some AB logos, the loss of the real AB Clydesdales, changes to beer selection, etc. Pretty minor stuff that most people wouldn’t notice overall.
 
The parks went from AB -> InBev -> Blackstone -> Publicly Traded. Despite all of those changes in ownership, nothing really changed much aside from the removal of some AB logos, the loss of the real AB Clydesdales, changes to beer selection, etc. Pretty minor stuff that most people wouldn’t notice overall.

Hey now, I really noticed the positive change in beer selection long before I discovered ParkFans!
 
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To add on to Zachary's response, the real main changes that occurred were all mostly corporate.

Specifically, about your closing comments, the parks went from AB to InBev to Blackstone in a matter of of one month back during ChristmasTown in 2009, I believe. Obviously the parks still were operating at this time. InBev was not interested in the Busch Entertainment Division and tried selling it almost immediately. There weren't going to be any major changes directly in the park until a more seriously interested owner came by.

The parks each operate fairly autonomously without too much direct interference from corporate, not to say corporate doesn't do much, but my point is the parks can operate without corporate direction, if need be.
 
Not to mention the loss of Eagle One and the brewery tour (with free samples!).

To be fair, the Eagle One Monorail closed many years before AB was sold. I don’t know the exact year off the top of my head, but it was a fair chunk of time.

The tasting room where Annie’s is now lasted a lot longer, but I’m not sure if it even made it all the way to the InBev sale.
 
To be fair, the Eagle One Monorail closed many years before AB was sold. I don’t know the exact year off the top of my head, but it was a fair chunk of time.

The tasting room where Annie’s is now lasted a lot longer, but I’m not sure if it even made it all the way to the InBev sale.
1998. It was more of a tongue in cheek reference. Something @Thomas would normally do. ?
 
I heard the issue with the brewery tours were that the 2 free beers and local lightweights didn't mix so well in the park, though that came from my dad who still believes DF was built on unstable ground and that's why it was so rough, so take that as you will.
 
I heard the issue with the brewery tours were that the 2 free beers and local lightweights didn't mix so well in the park, though that came from my dad who still believes DF was built on unstable ground and that's why it was so rough, so take that as you will.
Not the lightweights....but the fact you could get two from each person at each line, then wait for someone to go on break or shift change then get 2 more. Some days if you worked it right you could get quite a few to go with your pizza.
 
The parks went from AB -> InBev -> Blackstone -> Publicly Traded. Despite all of those changes in ownership, nothing really changed much aside from the removal of some AB logos, the loss of the real AB Clydesdales, changes to beer selection, etc. Pretty minor stuff that most people wouldn’t notice overall.
You forgot the biggest change: Pepsi to Coke in 2012... Though that wasn't related to the Blackstone->Publicly Traded transition, but rather an expired contract that AB started and Blackstone didn't care to continue to my knowledge.
 
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