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UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
 
FORM 10-Q/A
AMENDMENT NO. 1
 
(Mark One)
     
þ   QUARTERLY REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
For the Quarterly period ended March 31, 2005
OR
     
o   TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
Commission File Number 000-51064
 
GREAT WOLF RESORTS, INC.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter)
 
     
Delaware
(State or other jurisdiction of
incorporation or organization)
  51-0510250
(I.R.S. Employer
Identification No.)
     
122 West Washington Avenue
Madison, Wisconsin 53703

(Address of principal executive offices)
  53703
(Zip Code)
Registrant’s telephone number, including area code
608 661-4700
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days. Yes o No þ
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is an accelerated filer (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act). Yes o No þ
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act). Yes o No þ
The number of shares outstanding of the issuer’s common equity was 30,262,308 as of May 12, 2005.
 
 

 


Great Wolf Resorts, Inc.
Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q/A
For the Quarter Ended March 31, 2005
INDEX
         
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    30  
 Revolving Credit Agreement
 Certification of Chief Executive Officer
 Certification of Chief Financial Officer
 Certification of Chief Executive Officer
 Certification of Chief Financial Officer

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EXPLANATORY NOTE
     Great Wolf Resorts, Inc. (the Company) is filing this Report on Form 10-Q/A for the quarterly period ended March 31, 2005 to reflect the restatement of its condensed consolidated financial statements, the notes thereto, and related disclosures.
     During the fourth quarter of 2005, the Company determined that it was necessary to restate previously issued financial statements for changes in the application of purchase accounting for certain transactions entered into in December 2004. Due to errors in the application of purchase accounting for those transactions, and due to other reclassifications of assets, the Company has recorded adjustments (the Adjustments) to restate the previously issued financial statements for the quarterly period ended March 31, 2005.
     The Adjustments result primarily from the application of Emerging Issues Task Force (EITF) Issues No. 98-3 and No. 04-1 with regard to the Company’s recording of its formation transactions in December 2004. The Company recorded the formation transactions by applying the purchase method of accounting in connection with the acquisition of seven resort-owning entities. This accounting was presented in the Company’s filings with the SEC for the quarterly period ended March 31, 2005.
     The Adjustments had the effect of decreasing the Company’s cash and cash equivalents by $2.1 million, increasing condominiums under development by $8.9 million, increasing other current assets by $2.1 million, increasing property and equipment by $65.2 million, increasing other intangible assets by $19.1 million, decreasing goodwill by $63.5 million, and increasing deferred tax liability by $29.6 million as of March 31, 2005, increasing the Company’s previously-reported net loss by $13.0 thousand for the three month period ended March 31, 2005, and increasing net cash used in operating activities by $0.6 million and decreasing net cash used in investing activities by $0.5 million for the three month period ended March 31, 2005. The Adjustments are described in the table in Note 9 to the consolidated financial statements.
     This Form 10-Q/A has not been updated except as required to reflect the effects of the restatement. This amendment and restatement includes changes to Part I, Items 1, 2 and 4. Except as identified in the prior sentence, no other items included in the original Form 10-Q have been amended, and such items remain in effect as of the filing date of the original Form 10-Q. Additionally, this Form 10-Q/A does not purport to provide an update or a discussion of any other developments at the Company subsequent to the original filing.

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PART I. FINANCIAL INFORMATION
ITEM 1. FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
GREAT WOLF RESORTS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS (UNAUDITED)
                 
    March 31,     December 31,  
    2005     2004  
    (as restated,          
    see Note 9)          
    (Dollars in thousands, except  
    per share amounts)  
ASSETS
               
Current assets:
               
Cash and cash equivalents
  $ 65,241     $ 79,409  
Accounts receivable, net of allowance for doubtful accounts of $267 and $183
    1,380       881  
Inventory
    2,295       1,848  
Condominiums under development
    8,854       2,412  
Other current assets
    8,704       5,929  
 
           
Total current assets
    86,474       90,479  
Property and equipment, net
    398,498       347,374  
Equity escrow
    6        
Other assets
    10,591       9,862  
Other intangible assets
    19,114       19,114  
Goodwill
    136,856       155,196  
 
           
Total assets
  $ 651,539     $ 622,025  
 
           
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDERS’ EQUITY
               
Current liabilities:
               
Current portion of long-term debt
  $ 1,834     $ 27,794  
Accounts payable
    23,265       31,506  
Accrued expenses
    10,068       10,075  
Advance deposits
    5,227       3,129  
Other current liabilities
    1,776       2,138  
 
           
Total current liabilities
    42,170       74,642  
Long-term debt
    155,620       102,813  
Other long-term debt
    11,981       12,058  
Other long-term liabilities
    391       391  
Deferred tax liability
    52,134       40,909  
Deferred compensation liability
    3,260       2,891  
 
           
Total liabilities
    265,556       233,704  
Commitments and contingencies Stockholders’ Equity:
               
Common stock, $0.01 par value, 250,000,000 shares authorized, 30,262,308 shares issued and outstanding
    303       303  
Additional paid in capital
    394,060       394,060  
Preferred stock, $0.01 par value, 10,000,000 shares authorized, no shares issued or outstanding
           
Accumulated deficit
    (6,180 )     (3,842 )
Shares of common stock held in deferred compensation plan
    (2,200 )     (2,200 )
 
           
Total stockholders’ equity
    385,983       388,321  
 
           
Total liabilities and stockholders’ equity
  $ 651,539     $ 622,025  
 
           
See accompanying notes to condensed consolidated and combined financial statements.

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GREAT WOLF RESORTS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES AND
GREAT LAKES PREDECESSOR
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED AND COMBINED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
                 
    Great Wolf        
    Resorts, Inc.     Predecessor  
    Three months ended  
    March 31,  
    2005     2004  
    (as restated,          
    see Note 9)          
    (Unaudited,  
    dollars in thousands,  
    except per share data)  
Revenues:
               
Rooms
  $ 18,076     $ 7,243  
Food and beverage
    4,695       1,787  
Other resort operations
    4,225       1,617  
Management fees — related parties
          405  
Development and other fees — related parties
          360  
 
           
 
    26,996       11,412  
Other revenue from managed properties
          3,340  
 
           
Total revenues
    26,996       14,752  
 
           
Operating expenses by department:
               
Rooms
    2,638       1,049  
Food and beverage
    3,763       1,461  
Other
    3,268       1,277  
Other operating expenses:
               
Selling, general and administrative
    7,238       3,206  
Property operating costs
    6,057       1,787  
Depreciation and amortization
    7,148       2,716  
 
           
 
    30,112       11,496  
Other expenses from managed properties
          3,340  
 
           
Total operating expenses
    30,112       14,836  
 
           
Net operating loss
    (3,116 )     (84 )
Interest income
    (292 )     (78 )
Interest expense
    1,056       1,283  
Gain on sale of investments
          (1,072 )
Interest on mandatorily redeemable shares
          1,692  
 
           
Loss before income taxes and minority interests
    (3,880 )     (1,909 )
Income tax benefit
    (1,542 )      
Minority interests
          29  
 
           
Loss from continuing operations
    (2,338 )     (1,938 )
Income from discontinued operations
          20  
 
           
Net loss
  $ (2,338 )   $ (1,918 )
 
           
Basic loss per share
  $ (0.08 )        
 
             
Diluted loss per share
  $ (0.08 )        
 
             
Weighted average common shares outstanding:
               
Basic
    30,132,896          
 
             
Diluted
    30,132,896          
 
             
See accompanying notes to condensed consolidated and combined financial statements.

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GREAT WOLF RESORTS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES AND
GREAT LAKES PREDECESSOR
CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED AND COMBINED STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
                 
    Great Wolf        
    Resorts, Inc.     Predecessor  
    Three months ended  
    March 31,  
    2005     2004  
    (as restated,          
    see Note 9)          
    (Unaudited, dollars in thousands)  
Operating activities:
               
Net loss
  $ (2,338 )   $ (1,918 )
Adjustments to reconcile net loss to net cash provided by (used in) operating activities:
               
Depreciation and amortization
    7,148       3,043  
Non-cash employee compensation expense
    338        
Gain on sale of investments
          (1,072 )
Minority interests
          29  
Deferred tax benefit
    (1,542 )      
Changes in operating assets and liabilities:
               
Prepaid expenses and other assets
    (10,870 )     (392 )
Accounts payable, accrued expenses and other liabilities
    (2,023 )     1,353  
 
           
Net cash (used in) provided by operating activities
    (9,287 )     1,043  
 
           
Investing activities:
               
Capital expenditures for property and equipment
    (30,229 )     (21,281 )
Proceeds from sale of assets
          7,925  
Increase in equity escrow
          (14,593 )
Increase in restricted cash
    (96 )      
Decrease in escrows
    248        
 
           
Net cash used in investing activities
    (30,077 )     (27,949 )
 
           
Financing activities:
               
Principal payments on long-term debt
    (48,715 )     (6,608 )
Proceeds from issuance of long-term debt
    75,483       16,049  
Payment of loan costs
    (1,572 )     (2,283 )
Member contributions
          25,191  
Member distributions
          (4,415 )
Changes in mandatorily redeemable ownership interests
          1,692  
Net distributions to minority investors
          635  
 
           
Net cash provided by financing activities
    25,196       30,261  
 
           
Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents
    (14,168 )     3,355  
Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of period
    79,409       3,553  
 
           
Cash and cash equivalents, end of period
  $ 65,241     $ 6,908  
 
           
Supplemental Cash Flow Information- Cash paid for interest, net of capitalized interest
  $ 552     $ 1,294  
See accompanying notes to condensed consolidated and combined financial statements.

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GREAT WOLF RESORTS, INC. AND SUBSIDIARIES AND
GREAT LAKES PREDECESSOR
NOTES TO THE CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED AND COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
(Dollars in thousands, except per share amounts)
1. ORGANIZATION
Background
     The terms “Great Wolf Resorts,” “us,” “we” and “our” are used in this report to refer to Great Wolf Resorts, Inc. Through our controlling interest in GWR Operating Partnership, L.L.L.P., or the “Operating Partnership,” and the subsidiaries of the Operating Partnership, we develop, own and operate family entertainment resorts.
     We were formed to succeed to certain businesses of the Great Lakes Predecessor (the Predecessor), which was not a legal entity but rather a combination of numerous entities. The Predecessor consisted of the following, all of which were under common management:
  The Great Lakes Companies, Inc. (GLC), and its consolidated subsidiaries;
 
  Great Wolf Lodge of Traverse City, LLC;
 
  Great Wolf Lodge of Kansas City, LLC;
 
  Blue Harbor Resort Sheboygan, LLC;
 
  Great Wolf Lodge of Williamsburg, LLC; and
 
  Great Wolf Lodge of the Poconos, LLC.
     The Predecessor financial statements did not include entities that owned Great Wolf Lodges in Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin and Sandusky, Ohio. These entities, although they were managed by GLC, were controlled by affiliates of AIG SunAmerica, Inc.
     The Predecessor had developed and operated hotels and multifamily housing projects since 1995. In 1999, the Predecessor began its resort operations by purchasing the Great Wolf Lodge in Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin and developing the Great Wolf Lodge in Sandusky, Ohio, which opened in 2001. In 2003, the Predecessor opened two additional Great Wolf Lodge resorts, one in Traverse City, Michigan and the other in Kansas City, Kansas. In June 2004, the Predecessor opened the Blue Harbor Resort in Sheboygan, Wisconsin. Additionally in 2004, the Predecessor had two additional Great Wolf Lodge resorts under construction, one in Williamsburg, Virginia and the other in the Pocono Mountains region of Pennsylvania, and had licensed a resort owned by a third party that was under construction in Niagara Falls, Ontario (Canada). The Great Wolf Lodge in Williamsburg, Virginia, opened in March 2005.
     We were incorporated in May 2004 as a Delaware corporation in anticipation of the initial public offering of our common stock (the IPO). The IPO closed on December 20, 2004, concurrently with the completion of various formation transactions (the Formation Transactions).
     Pursuant to the Formation Transactions:
    The Predecessor contributed its hotel management and multifamily housing management and development assets, which were unrelated to the resort business, to two subsidiaries of the Predecessor and then distributed the interests in those subsidiaries to the former shareholders of GLC.
 
    We effected, through our Operating Partnership, the acquisition of GLC and each resort-owning entity. Pursuant to these acquisitions, investors of GLC and the resort-owning entities received cash, unregistered shares of our common stock or a combination of cash and unregistered shares of our common stock. We issued 13,901,947 shares of our common stock and paid approximately $97,600 in cash in connection with these acquisitions.

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    We issued an aggregate of 130,949 shares of unregistered common stock to holders of tenant in common interests in two of our resorts.
     These transactions consolidated the ownership of our resort properties and property interests into Great Wolf Resorts. During the period from our formation until we commenced operations upon closing of the IPO on December 20, 2004, we did not have any material corporate activity.
     The IPO consisted of the sale of 16,100,000 shares of common stock at a price per share of $17.00, generating gross proceeds of $273,700. The net proceeds to us were approximately $248,700 after deducting an aggregate of $19,200 in underwriting discounts and commissions paid to the underwriters and $5,800 in other expenses directly related to the issuance of common stock (such as professional fees and printing fees) incurred in connection with the IPO.
     As of March 31, 2005, we own and operate five Great Wolf Lodge resorts, our signature northwoods-themed resorts, and one Blue Harbor Resort, a nautical-themed property. In addition, we own one Great Wolf Lodge resort in the Pocono Mountains, Pennsylvania, that we are developing and that is under construction and scheduled to open for business in the fall of 2005. We are also the licensor and manager of an additional Great Wolf Lodge resort in Niagara Falls, Ontario that is owned and under development by an affiliate of Ripley Entertainment Inc., or Ripley’s.
Business Summary
     We are a family entertainment resort company that provides our guests with a high-quality vacation at an affordable price. We are the largest owner, operator and developer in the United States of drive-to family resorts featuring indoor waterparks and other family-oriented entertainment activities. We provide a full-service entertainment resort experience to our target customer base: families with children ranging in ages from 2 to 14 years old that live within a convenient driving distance from our resorts. Our resorts are open year-round and provide a consistent and comfortable environment where our guests can enjoy our various amenities and activities.
     We provide our guests with a self-contained vacation experience and focus on capturing a significant portion of their total vacation spending. We earn revenues through the sale of rooms, which includes admission to our indoor waterpark, and other revenue-generating resort amenities. Each of our resorts features a combination of the following revenue-generating amenities: themed restaurants, an ice cream shop and confectionery, full-service spa, game arcade, gift shop and meeting space. We also expect to generate revenues from licensing arrangements, management fees and construction fees with respect to properties owned by third parties, such as the licensing agreement we have entered into and management arrangement we have agreed to enter into with Ripley’s in connection with the Niagara Falls, Ontario resort.
     The following table presents an overview of our portfolio of operating resorts and resorts under construction (including the Niagara resort that will be owned by a third party licensee):
             
            Indoor
    Opened/Target       Entertainment
Location   Opening   Rooms   Area(1)
            (Approx. ft(2))
Existing Resorts:
           
Wisconsin Dells, WI
  May 1997(2)   309(3)   64,000
Sandusky, OH(4)
  March 2001   271   41,000
Traverse City, MI
  March 2003   281   51,000
Kansas City, KS
  May 2003   281   49,000
Sheboygan, WI(5)
  June 2004   183(6)   54,000
Williamsburg, VA
  March 2005   301   66,000
Resorts Under Construction:
           
Pocono Mountains, PA
  Fall 2005   400   91,000
Niagara Falls, ONT(7)
  Spring 2006   404   94,000
 
(1)   Our indoor entertainment areas generally include our indoor waterpark, game arcade, children’s activity room and fitness room, as well as our Aveda concept spa, 3D virtual reality theatre, Wiley’s Woods and party room in the resorts that have such amenities.
 
(2)   We purchased this property in November 1999.

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(3)   Our Wisconsin Dells property also features 77 condominium units currently under construction.
 
(4)   Prior to May 2004, we operated this resort as a Great Bear Lodge.
 
(5)   Our Sheboygan property is branded as a Blue Harbor Resort. This resort is subject to a 98-year and 11-month ground lease with the Redevelopment Authority of the City of Sheboygan.
 
(6)   Our Sheboygan resort includes an additional 64 individually owned two and four bedroom condominium units.
 
(7)   Ripley’s, our licensee, owns this resort. We are assisting Ripley’s with construction management and other pre-opening matters related to the Great Wolf Lodge in Niagara Falls. We have granted Ripley’s a license to use the Great Wolf Lodge name for this resort and other intellectual property for ten years after opening. We have agreed to enter into a management agreement, pursuant to which we expect to operate the resort on behalf of Ripley’s for five years, and a central reservations agreement. In conjunction with this project, we expect to receive a one-time construction fee and ongoing license, central reservation and management fees.
2. SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
     General — We have prepared these unaudited interim condensed consolidated and combined financial statements according to the rules and regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission. Accordingly, we have omitted certain information and footnote disclosures that are normally included in annual consolidated financial statements prepared in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America. These interim condensed consolidated and combined financial statements should be read in conjunction with the consolidated financial statements, accompanying notes and other information included in our Annual Report on Form 10-K/A for the year ended December 31, 2004. Certain 2004 amounts have been reclassified to conform with the 2005 presentation.
     In our opinion, the accompanying unaudited consolidated and combined interim financial statements reflect all adjustments, which are of a normal and recurring nature, necessary for a fair presentation of the financial condition and results of operations and cash flows for the periods presented. The preparation of financial statements in accordance with accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America requires us to make estimates and assumptions. Such estimates and assumptions affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities, as well as the disclosure of contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the financial statements and the reported amounts of revenue and expenses during the reporting period. Our actual results could differ from those estimates. The results of operations for the interim periods are not necessarily indicative of the results to be expected for the entire year.
     Income Taxes — At the end of each interim reporting period, we estimate the effective tax rate expected to be applicable for the full fiscal year. The rate determined is used in providing for income taxes on a year-to-date basis.
     Stock Based Compensation — We have issued stock options under our 2004 Incentive Stock Plan. As permitted under Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 123, “Accounting for Stock Based Compensation,” we have elected to account for such options in accordance with APB Opinion No. 25 (APB 25), “Accounting for Stock Issued to Employees.” Under APB 25, the total compensation expense recognized is equal to the difference between the award’s exercise price and the underlying stock’s market prices at the measurement date. Our stock options were granted with an exercise price equal to their fair market value; therefore no compensation expense was recorded in the three months ended March 31, 2005. Had compensation costs been determined under the fair value method as set forth in SFAS 123, our pro forma net loss and net loss per share for the three months ended March 31, 2005, would have been as follows:
         
Net loss, as reported
  $ (2,338 )
Compensation expense, SFAS 123 fair value method
    (328 )
 
     
Pro forma net loss
  $ (2,666 )
 
     
Pro forma net loss per share — Basic
  $ (0.09 )
Pro forma net loss per share — Diluted
  $ (0.09 )
     The weighted average fair value for the options granted is $4.94. The SFAS 123 fair value of options granted in the three months ended March 31, 2005, was estimated using a Black-Scholes option-pricing model with the following assumptions:
         
Dividend yield
     
Weighted-average, risk free interest rate
    3.65 %
Weighted-average, expected life of option
  6.0 years
Expected stock price volatility
    40 %

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     Segments—We view our operations as principally one segment and the financial information disclosed herein represents all of the financial information related to our principal segment.
     Recent Accounting Pronouncements —In January 2003, the FASB issued FASB Interpretation No. 46, “Consolidation of Variable Interest Entities,” (FIN 46) an interpretation of Accounting Research Bulletin No. 51, “Consolidated Financial Statements.” In December 2003, the FASB issued a revision of FIN 46 (FIN 46R) to clarify some of its provisions. FIN 46R deferred the effective date for FIN 46 for arrangements entered into before February 1, 2003 and results in multiple effective dates based on the nature as well as the creation date of the variable interest entity. Variable interest entities created after January 31, 2003 but prior to December 24, 2003, may be accounted for either based on the original or the revised interpretations. Variable interest entities created after December 24, 2003 must be accounted for under the revised interpretations. FIN 46R is effective for periods ending after March 15, 2004.
     The Predecessor applied FIN 46 to variable interest entities created after January 31, 2003 for the year ended December 31, 2003. The Predecessor applied FIN 46R to variable interest entities effective January 1, 2004. Prior to the implementation of FIN 46 and FIN 46R, the Predecessor consolidated entities for which it controlled major management and operating decisions. There was no financial statement impact from the adoption of FIN 46 and FIN 46R.
     In December 2004, the FASB issued Statement No. 123 (revised 2004), “Share-Based Payment” (SFAS 123R), that requires companies to expense the value of employee stock options, discounts on employee stock purchase plans and similar awards. Under SFAS 123R, share-based payment awards result in compensation expense that will be measured at fair value on the awards’ grant date, based on the estimated number of awards that are expected to vest. SFAS 123R is effective for periods beginning the first fiscal year after June 15, 2005, and applies to all outstanding and unvested share-based payment awards at the adoption date. We have not completed our evaluation of the impact of adopting SFAS 123R.
     Other Intangible Assets — Our other intangible assets consist of the value of our Great Wolf Lodge trade name. This intangible asset has an indefinite useful life. In accordance with Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 142, we do not amortize this intangible, but instead test it for possible impairment at least annually by comparing the fair value of the intangible asset with its carrying amount.
3. PURCHASE ACCOUNTING IN CONNECTION WITH THE IPO
     The IPO closed on December 20, 2004. In conjunction with the Formation Transactions completed on that date, we issued a total of 14,032,896 shares of our common stock. We also paid cash of approximately $97,600 to buy-out certain investors in the resort-owning entities and interests held by AIG SunAmerica, Inc. in the Wisconsin Dells and Sandusky entities.
     For the five resort-owning entities with operating resorts at the time of the Formation Transactions, we recorded the Formation Transactions by applying the purchase method of accounting in connection with our acquisition of those five resort-owning entities. In conjunction with purchase accounting we:
    Recorded property and equipment, other assets, debt and other liabilities at their preliminarily estimated fair values;
 
    Recorded a deferred tax liability resulting from the difference between the preliminarily estimated fair values and the tax bases of assets acquired from the five resort-owning entities. We recorded this liability at our anticipated effective tax rate of 40%;
 
    Eliminated mandatorily redeemable interests of the Predecessor due to the conversion of those ownership interests to our common stock in conjunction with the Formation Transactions; and
 
    Recorded as goodwill the excess of consideration in the purchase transaction over the fair value of net tangible assets acquired from the five resort-owning entities.
     As a result of this process, we had $155,196 of goodwill at December 31, 2004, all of which related to the application of purchase accounting in conjunction with the Formation Transactions. Some of the values and amounts used in the initial application of purchase accounting for our consolidated balance sheet were based on preliminary estimates and assumptions. During the three months ended March 31, 2005, we continued to refine and finalize these estimates and assumptions. As a result of this process, we recorded adjustments to the estimated fair market values of property and equipment acquired, resulting in an increase to property and equipment

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of $30,700, an increase to accrued expenses of $301, an increase in deferred tax liability of $12,059, and a decrease in goodwill of $18,340.
     The following table reconciles the balance of goodwill recorded as of December 31, 2004 to the balance recorded as of March 31, 2005:
         
Balance, December 31, 2004
  $ 155,196  
Change due to adjustments to the estimated fair market values of property in first quarter 2005
    (18,340 )
Balance, March 31, 2005
  $ 136,856  
     In the first quarter of 2005, we changed our estimate of the useful lives used to depreciate our property and equipment. This change in accounting estimate was adopted to more appropriately match the depreciation lives of our property and equipment to their expected useful lives. During the first quarter of 2005, we commissioned a third-party study, which provided information on our property and equipment’s fair values, and expected useful lives. The effect of the change in estimated fair values and depreciation lives, in the three months ended March 31, 2005, was a decrease in depreciation expense of $296. It is impracticable to estimate the effect on future periods.
     We expect to continue our process of refining and finalizing our purchase accounting estimates and assumptions during the remainder of 2005. As a result, these preliminary estimates and assumptions are subject to possible additional changes as we finalize them in 2005, based on information we are waiting to obtain.
     For the two resort-owning entities with resorts under construction at the time of the Formation Transactions, we recorded the Formation Transactions as a purchase of assets of those two entities. In conjunction with this accounting we:
    Recorded all identifiable tangible and intangible assets at their estimated fair values as of December 20, 2004;
 
    Allocated the excess consideration paid over the estimated fair value of the net assets acquired to all identifiable tangible and intangible assets pro rata based on their estimated fair values;
 
    Recorded a deferred tax liability resulting from the difference between the total estimated fair values (including the excess amount described in the previous item) and the tax bases of the assets acquired from the two resort-owning entities. We recorded this liability at our anticipated effective tax rate of 40%.
4. PROPERTY AND EQUIPMENT
     Property and equipment consist of the following:
                 
    March 31,     December 31,  
    2005     2004  
     
Land
  $ 38,115     $ 12,064  
Building and improvements
    133,212       89,294  
Furniture, fixtures and equipment
    135,986       82,470  
Construction in process
    96,647       164,160  
 
           
 
    403,960       347,988  
Less accumulated depreciation
    (5,462 )     (614 )
 
           
Property and equipment, net
  $ 398,498     $ 347,374  
 
           
Included in property and equipment at March 31, 2005 and December 31, 2004 is $14,090 and $18,578, respectively, of construction in process that is unpaid and is included in accounts payable.
5. LONG-TERM DEBT AND OTHER LONG-TERM LIABILITIES
     Long-term debt and other long-term liabilities consists of the following:
                 
    March 31,     December 31,  
    2005     2004  
Long-Term Debt:
               
Senior credit facility
  $     $  
Traverse City/Kansas City Mortgage Loan
    74,794       75,000  
Sheboygan Mortgage Loan
    29,391       29,475  
Junior Subordinated Debentures
    51,550        
Other mortgage debt
    1,523       1,523  
Williamsburg Construction Loan
          19,011  

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    March 31,     December 31,  
    2005     2004  
Poconos Construction Loan
          5,598  
Other Long-Term Liabilities:
               
City of Sheboygan bonds
    8,098       8,063  
City of Sheboygan loan
    4,079       3,995  
 
           
 
    169,435       142,665  
Less current portion of long-term debt
    (1,834 )     (27,794 )
 
           
 
  $ 167,601     $ 114,871  
 
           
     Senior Credit Facility — Upon closing the IPO, we entered into a $75,000 senior secured revolving credit facility with a syndicate of banks. The loan is secured by our Wisconsin Dells and Sandusky resorts and is not drawn as of March 31, 2005. Future borrowings under this facility will bear interest at LIBOR plus a margin of 2.25% to 3.00% depending upon our leverage ratio from time to time. The maximum amount of indebtedness we may incur under the facility is equal to 3.75 multiplied by the combined EBITDA (adjusted for non-recurring items, unusual items, infrequent items and asset impairment charges) of the two resorts securing the facility plus up to $5,400 relating to enhancements to the waterpark facility for the Wisconsin Dells property. The facility has customary bank covenants including the maximum level of total debt, the minimum level of interest coverage, and the minimum level of fixed charge coverage. The facility also includes an annual unused commitment fee of 0.5%.
     Traverse City/Kansas City Mortgage Loan — Upon closing the IPO, we entered into a $75,000, ten-year loan secured by our Traverse City and Kansas City resorts. The loan bears interest at a fixed rate of 6.96% and is subject to a 25-year principal amortization schedule, with a baloon principal payment due after ten years. The loan has customary financial and operating debt compliance covenants, including a minimum debt service coverage ratio, representing the combined EBITDA (adjusted for non-recurring items, unusual items, infrequent items and asset impairment charges) of the two resorts divided by their combined annual interest expense and principal amortization. The loan also has customary prohibitions on our ability to prepay the loan prior to maturity. We were in compliance with all mortgage loan covenants at March 31, 2005.
     Sheboygan Mortgage Loan — The Sheboygan mortgage loan is secured by our Sheboygan resort. The loan converted from a construction loan into a mortgage loan in January 2005. The loan matures in January 2008 and bears interest at a floating rate of prime plus 200 basis points and is subject to a 20-year principal amortization schedule. The loan has customary covenants associated with a single asset mortgage. There are no prohibitions or fees associated with the repayment of the loan principal. We were in compliance with the mortgage loan covenants at March 31, 2005.
     Junior Subordinated Debentures — In March 2005, we completed a private offering of $50,000 of trust preferred securities through Great Wolf Capital Trust I (the Trust), a Delaware statutory trust which is our subsidiary. The securities pay holders cumulative cash distributions at an annual rate which is fixed at 7.80% through March 2015 and then floats at LIBOR + 310 basis points. The securities mature in March 2035 and are callable at no premium after March 2010. In addition, we invested $1,500 in the Trust’s common securities, representing 3% of the total capitalization of the Trust.
     The Trust used the proceeds of the offering and our investment to purchase from us $51,550 of our junior subordinated debentures with payment terms that mirror the distribution terms of the trust securities. The costs of the trust preferred offering totaled $1,600, including $1,500 of underwriting commissions and expenses and $100 of costs incurred directly by the Trust. The Trust paid these costs utilizing an investment from us. These costs are being amortized over a 30-year period. The proceeds from our debenture sale, net of the costs of the trust preferred offering and our investment in the Trust, were $48,400. We used the net proceeds to retire the Poconos construction loan.
     As a result of the issuance of FIN46R and the accounting profession’s application of the guidance provided by the FASB, issuer trusts, like the Trust, are generally variable interest entities. We have determined that we are not the primary beneficiary under the Trust, and accordingly we do not consolidate the financial statements of the Trust into our consolidated financial statements.
     Based on the foregoing accounting authority, these consolidated financial statements present the debentures issued to the Trust as long-term debt. Our investment in the Trust is accounted as a cost investment and is included in other assets. For financial reporting purposes, we record interest expense on the corresponding debentures in our consolidated statements of operations.
     Williamsburg Construction Loan — The Williamsburg construction loan was incurred to construct the Williamsburg resort property. In February 2005, after drawing an additional $10,242 on this loan, we retired the loan in full using cash on hand.

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     Poconos Construction Loan — The Poconos construction loan was incurred to construct the Poconos resort property. In March 2005, after drawing an additional $13,550 on this loan, we retired the loan in full using cash on hand and the proceeds of junior subordinated debentures we issued in March 2005.
     City of Sheboygan bonds — The City of Sheboygan (the City) bonds amount represents the face amount of bond anticipation notes (BANs) issued by the City in November 2003 in conjunction with the Predecessor’s construction of the Blue Harbor Resort in Sheboygan, Wisconsin. In accordance with the provisions of EITF Issue No. 91-10, we have recognized as a liability the obligations for these BANs. The notes bear interest at 3.95% and mature in 2008. The notes are not a general obligation of the City and are payable from (a) the proceeds of bond anticipation notes or other funds appropriated by the City for the payment of interest on the BANs and (b) the proceeds to be delivered from the issuance and sale of securities by the City. We have an obligation to fund payment of these BANs. Our obligation to fund repayment of the notes will be satisfied by certain minimum guaranteed amounts of room tax payments to be made by the Blue Harbor Resort through 2028.
     City of Sheboygan loan — The City of Sheboygan loan amount represents a loan made by the City in 2004 to the Predecessor in conjunction with the Predecessor’s construction of the Blue Harbor Resort in Sheboygan, Wisconsin. The loan is noninterest-bearing and matures in 2018. Our obligation to repay the loan will be satisfied by certain minimum guaranteed amounts of real and personal property tax payments to be made by the Blue Harbor Resort through 2018.
     Future Maturities — Future principal requirements on long-term debt and other long-term liabilities are as follows:
         
    Through  
    March 31,  
2006
  $ 1,834  
2007
    2,008  
2008
    29,569  
2009
    1,559  
2010
    1,696  
Thereafter
    132,769  
 
     
Total
  $ 169,435  
 
     
6. EARNINGS PER SHARE
     We calculate our basic earnings per common share by dividing net loss available to common shareholders by the weighted average number of shares of common stock outstanding. Our diluted earnings per common share assumes the issuance of common stock for all potentially dilutive stock equivalents outstanding. In periods in which there is a loss, potentially dilutive stock equivalents are excluded from the computation of diluted weighted average shares outstanding as the effect of those potentially dilutive items is anti-dilutive.
     The trust that holds the assets to pay obligations under our deferred compensation plan has 129,412 shares of our common stock. In accordance with the provisions of EITF Issue No. 97-14, “Accounting for Deferred Compensation Arrangements Where Amounts earned Are Held in a Rabbi Trust and Invested,” those shares of common stock are treated as treasury stock for purposes of our earnings per share computations and therefore excluded from the basic and diluted earnings per share calculations. Basic and diluted earnings per common share are as follows:

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    Three months  
    ended  
    March 31,  
    2005  
    (as restated,  
    see Note 9)  
Net loss attributable to common shares
  $ (2,338 )
Weighted average common shares outstanding — basic and diluted
    30,133  
Net loss per share — basic and diluted
  $ (0.08 )
7. DISCONTINUED OPERATIONS
     As of March 31, 2004, the Predecessor had two hotels classified as held for sale. Operating results and the gain on disposition for the hotels classified as held for sale are included in income (loss) from discontinued operations in the combined statements of operations for the quarter ended March 31, 2004.
     On December 20, 2004, in connection with the Formation Transactions, the Predecessor spun-off its non-resort interests to the existing shareholders of GLC. As a result, we have included the operations of the spun-off entities in discontinued operations for the quarter ended March 31, 2004.
     Operating activity of the discontinued operations consisted of the following:
         
    Three months  
    ended  
    March 31,  
    2004  
Revenues
  $ 1,501  
Expenses
    (1,481 )
 
     
Income (loss) from discontinued operations
  $ 20  
 
     
8. SUBSEQUENT EVENTS
     On May 4, 2005, we announced the formation of a joint venture with Paramount Parks, Inc., a unit of Viacom Inc., to develop a 39-acre, $100+ million Great Wolf Lodge resort and conference center at Paramount’s Kings Island in Mason, Ohio. We will operate the resort under our Great Wolf Lodge brand and will maintain a majority of the equity position in the project. Paramount will have a minority equity interest in the development by contributing the land needed for the resort. The resort will be a 404-suite resort with a comprehensive package of first-class destination lodging amenities and activities. Construction on the resort is scheduled to begin in the summer of 2005 with opening slated for late 2006.
9. RESTATEMENT
     Subsequent to the issuance of our consolidated financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2004, we determined that:
    The acquisition of each of our Williamsburg and Pocono Mountains resorts in conjunction with the Formation Transactions in December 2004 did not constitute an acquisition of a “business,” as that term is defined in Emerging Issues Task Force (EITF) Issue No. 98-3, “Determining Whether a Non-Monetary Transaction Involves Receipt of Productive Assets of a Business,” and that we should have recorded each of those acquisitions as a purchase of assets, rather than a purchase of a business. As a result, the amounts previously recorded as goodwill in connection with the Williamsburg and Poconos resorts have now been recorded as increases to identifiable intangible assets, and property and equipment.
 
    The provisions of EITF Issue No. 04-1, “Accounting for Preexisting Relationships between the Parties to a Business Combination,” were applicable to us as of the date of the Formation Transactions in December 2004, and that some portion of the amounts previously recorded as goodwill in connection with the five operating resorts purchased at that time should have been recorded as increases to identifiable intangible assets.
Additionally, we determined that certain amounts and activity related to restricted cash and condominium assets required reclassification in our consolidated balance sheet and consolidated statement of cash flows. As a result of these adjustments, we have restated our financial results for the quarter ended March 31, 2005 to properly reflect these items. We also recorded certain other immaterial reclassifications. A summary of the significant effects of the restatement is as follows:

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    As Previously        
March 31, 2005:   Reported     As Restated  
Cash and cash equivalents
  $ 67,344     $ 65,241  
Condominiums under development
          8,854  
Other current assets
    6,601       8,704  
Property and equipment, net
    333,345       398,498  
Other intangible assets
          19,114  
Goodwill
    200,387       136,856  
Total assets
    621,949       651,539  
Deferred tax liability
    22,531       52,134  
Total liabilities
    235,953       265,556  
Total stockholders’ equity
    385,996       385,983  
Three Months Ended March 31, 2005:
               
Statement of operations:
               
Depreciation and amortization
    7,127       7,148  
Loss from continuing operations
    (2,325 )     (2,338 )
Net loss
    (2,325 )     (2,338 )
Statement of cash flows:
               
Net loss
    (2,325 )     (2,338 )
Depreciation and amortization
    7,127       7,148  
Deferred tax benefit
    (1,534 )     (1,542 )
Change in prepaid expenses and other assets
    (5,738 )     (10,870 )
Change in accounts payable, accrued expenses and other liabilities
    (6,512 )     (2,023 )
Net cash used in operating activities
    (8,644 )     (9,287 )
Capital expenditures for property and equipment
    (32,183 )     (30,229 )
Decrease in equity escrow
    1,558        
Increase in restricted cash
          (96 )
Decrease in escrows
          248  
Net cash used in investing activities
    (30,625 )     (30,077 )
ITEM 2. MANAGEMENT’S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
     As described in Note 9 to the condensed consolidated and combined financial statements, subsequent to the issuance of the consolidated and combined financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2004, we determined that it was necessary to restate our previously issued financial statements for changes in our application of purchase accounting for certain transaction entered into in December 2004. Due to errors in the application of purchase accounting for those transactions, and due to other reclassifications of assets, we have recorded adjustments (the Adjustments) to restate the previously issued financial statements for the quarterly period ended March 31, 2005. The Adjustments result primarily from the application of Emerging Issues Task Force (EITF) Issues No. 98-3 and No. 04-1 with regard to our recording of our formation transactions in December 2004. We recorded the formation transactions by applying the purchase method of accounting in connection with the acquisition of seven resort-owning entities. This accounting was presented in our filings with the SEC for the quarterly period ended March 31, 2005. The Adjustments had the effect of decreasing our cash and cash equivalents by $2.1 million, increasing condominiums under development by $8.9 million, increasing other current assets by $2.1 million, increasing property and equipment by $65.2 million, increasing other intangible assets by $19.1 million, decreasing goodwill by $63.5 million, and increasing deferred tax liability by $29.6 million as of March 31, 2005, increasing our previously reported net loss by $13.0 thousand for the three months ended March 31, 2005, and increasing net cash used in operating activities by $0.6 million and decreasing net cash used in investing activities by $0.5 million for the three month period ended March 31, 2005.
     The following discussion should be read in conjunction with the financial statements and notes thereto appearing elsewhere in this report. We make statements in this section that are forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws. For a complete discussion of forward-looking statements, see the section in Item 1 of our Annual Report on Form 10-K/A entitled, “Forward-Looking Statements.” All dollar amounts in this discussion, except for per share data and operating statistics, are in thousands.
Overview
     Formation. The terms “Great Wolf Resorts,” “us,” “we” and “our” are used in this report refer to Great Wolf Resorts, Inc. Through our controlling interest in Great Wolf Resort Operating Partnership, L.L.L.P., or the “Operating Partnership,” of which we are the sole general partner, and the subsidiaries of the Operating Partnership, we develop, own and operate family entertainment resorts.
     We were formed to succeed to certain businesses of the Great Lakes Predecessor (the Predecessor), which was not a legal entity but rather a combination of numerous entities. The Predecessor consisted of the following, all of which were under common management:
    The Great Lakes Companies, Inc. (GLC) and its consolidated subsidiaries;
 
    Great Wolf Lodge of Traverse City, LLC;
 
    Great Wolf Lodge of Kansas City, LLC;
 
    Blue Harbor Resort Sheboygan, LLC;
 
    Great Wolf Lodge of Williamsburg, LLC; and
 
    Great Wolf Lodge of the Poconos, LLC.
     The Predecessor financial statements did not include entities that owned Great Wolf Lodges in Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin and Sandusky, Ohio. These entities, although they were managed by GLC, were controlled by affiliates of AIG SunAmerica, Inc.
     The Predecessor had developed and operated hotels since 1995. In 1999, the Predecessor began its resort operations by purchasing the Great Wolf Lodge in Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin and developing the Great Wolf Lodge in Sandusky, Ohio, which opened in 2001. In 2003, the Predecessor opened two additional Great Wolf Lodge resorts, one in Traverse City, Michigan and the other in Kansas City, Kansas. In June 2004, the Predecessor opened the Blue Harbor Resort in Sheboygan, Wisconsin. Subsequently, the Predecessor had two additional Great Wolf Lodge resorts under construction, one in Williamsburg, Virginia and the other in the Pocono Mountains region of Pennsylvania, and had licensed a resort owned by a third party that was under construction in Niagara Falls, Ontario (Canada). ). The Great Wolf Lodge in Williamsburg, Virginia, opened in March 2005.

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     We were incorporated in May 2004 as a Delaware corporation in anticipation of our initial public offering of common stock (the IPO). The IPO closed on December 20, 2004, concurrently with the completion of various formation transactions (the Formation Transactions).
     Pursuant to the Formation Transactions:
    The Predecessor contributed its hotel management and multifamily housing management and development assets, which were unrelated to the resort business, to two subsidiaries of the Predecessor and then distributed the interests in those subsidiaries to the former shareholders of the Predecessor.
 
    We effected, through our Operating Partnership, the acquisition of GLC and each resort-owning entity. Pursuant to these acquisitions, investors of GLC and the resort-owning entities received cash, unregistered shares of our common stock or a combination of cash and unregistered shares of our common stock. We issued 13,901,947 shares of our common stock and paid approximately $97,600 in cash in connection with these acquisitions.
 
    We issued an aggregate of 130,949 shares of unregistered common stock to holders of tenant in common interests in two of our resorts.
These transactions consolidated the ownership of our resort properties and property interests into Great Wolf Resorts. During the period from our formation until we commenced operations upon closing of our IPO on December 20, 2004, we did not have any material corporate activity.
     The IPO consisted of the sale of 16,100,000 shares of common stock at a price per share of $17.00, generating gross proceeds of $273,700. The net proceeds to us were approximately $248,700 after deducting an aggregate of $19,200 in underwriting discounts and commissions paid to the underwriters and $5,800 in other expenses incurred in connection with the IPO.
     As of March 31, 2005, we own and operate five Great Wolf Lodge resorts, our signature northwoods-themed resorts, and one Blue Harbor Resort, a nautical-themed property. In addition, we own one Great Wolf Lodge resort in the Pocono Mountains, Pennsylvania, that is under construction and scheduled to open for business in the fall of 2005. We are also the licensor and manager of an additional Great Wolf Lodge resort in Niagara Falls, Ontario that is owned and under development by an affiliate of Ripley Entertainment Inc., or Ripley’s.
     Business. We are a family entertainment resort company that provides our guests with a high-quality vacation at an affordable price. We are the largest owner, operator and developer in the United States of drive-to family resorts featuring indoor waterparks and other family-oriented entertainment activities. We provide a full-service entertainment resort experience to our target customer base: families with children ranging in ages from 2 to 14 years old that live within a convenient driving distance from our resorts. Our resorts are open year-round and provide a consistent and comfortable environment where our guests can enjoy our various amenities and activities.
     We provide our guests with a self-contained vacation experience and focus on capturing a significant portion of their total vacation spending. We earn revenues through the sale of rooms, which includes admission to our indoor waterpark, and other revenue-generating resort amenities. Each of our resorts features a combination of the following revenue-generating amenities: themed restaurants, an ice cream shop and confectionery, full-service spa, game arcade, gift shop and meeting space. We also expect to generate revenues from licensing arrangements, management fees and construction fees with respect to properties owned by third parties, such as the licensing agreement we have entered into and management arrangement we have agreed to enter into with Ripley’s in connection with the Niagara Falls, Ontario resort.
     The following table presents an overview of our portfolio of operating resorts and resorts under construction (including the Niagara resort that will be owned by a third party licensee):

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                    Indoor  
    Opened/Target             Entertainment  
Location   Opening     Rooms     Area(1)  
                    (Approx. ft(2))  
Existing Resorts:
                       
Wisconsin Dells, WI
  May 1997(2)     309 (3)     64,000  
Sandusky, OH(4)
  March 2001     271       41,000  
Traverse City, MI
  March 2003     281       51,000  
Kansas City, KS
  May 2003     281       49,000  
Sheboygan, WI(5)
  June 2004     183 (6)     54,000  
Williamsburg, VA
  March 2005     301       66,000  
Resorts Under Construction:
                       
Pocono Mountains, PA
  Fall 2005     400       91,000  
Niagara Falls, ONT(7)
  Spring 2006     404       94,000  
 
(1)   Our indoor entertainment areas generally include our indoor waterpark, game arcade, children’s activity room and fitness room, as well as our Aveda concept spa, 3D virtual reality theatre, Wiley’s Woods and party room in the resorts that have such amenities.
 
(2)   We purchased this property in November 1999.
 
(3)   Our Wisconsin Dells property also features 77 condominium units currently under construction.
 
(4)   Prior to May 2004, we operated this resort as a Great Bear Lodge.
 
(5)   Our Sheboygan property is branded as a Blue Harbor Resort. This resort is subject to a 98-year and 11-month ground lease with the Redevelopment Authority of the City of Sheboygan.
 
(6)   Our Sheboygan resort includes an additional 64 individually owned two and four bedroom condominium units.
 
(7)   Ripley’s, our licensee, owns this resort. We are assisting Ripley’s with construction management and other pre-opening matters related to the Great Wolf Lodge in Niagara Falls. We have granted Ripley’s a license to use the Great Wolf Lodge name for this resort and other intellectual property for ten years after opening. We have agreed to enter into a management agreement, pursuant to which we expect to operate the resort on behalf of Ripley’s for five years, and a central reservations agreement. In conjunction with this project, we expect to receive a one-time construction fee and ongoing license, central reservation and management fees.
     Subsequent Event. On May 4, 2005, we announced the formation of a joint venture with Paramount Parks, a unit of Viacom Inc., to develop a 39-acre, $100+ million Great Wolf Lodge resort at Paramount’s Kings Island in Mason, Ohio. We will operate the resort under our Great Wolf Lodge brand and will maintain a majority of the equity position in the project. Paramount will have a minority equity interest in the development by contributing the land needed for the resort. The resort will be a 404-suite resort with a comprehensive package of first-class destination lodging amenities and activities. Construction on the resort is scheduled to begin in the summer of 2005 with opening slated for late 2006.
     Industry Trends and Outlook. While no standard industry definition for a family entertainment resort featuring an indoor waterpark has developed, we generally consider resorts with at least 200 rooms featuring indoor waterparks larger than 25,000 square feet, as well as a variety of water slides and other water-based attractions, to be competitive with our resorts. The concept of a family entertainment resort with an indoor waterpark was first introduced in Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin and has evolved there over the past 15 years. We believe those resorts have historically outperformed standard hotels in that market. We believe that the rate premiums and increased market share in Wisconsin Dells have been significant and that no other operator or developer other than Great Wolf Resorts has established a regional portfolio of family entertainment resorts featuring indoor waterparks. We intend to continue to expand our portfolio of owned resorts throughout the United States and to selectively seek licensing and management opportunities domestically and internationally. The resorts we are currently constructing and plan to develop in the future require significant industry knowledge and substantial capital resources. We believe that a number of other resort operators are developing or considering the development of family entertainment resorts that will compete directly with our resorts. In particular, one of our competitors has opened a resort in Sandusky and another has a resort under construction in Sandusky. Another competitor is constructing a resort near Traverse City.
     Our primary business objective is to increase long-term stockholder value. We believe we can increase stockholder value by executing our internal and external growth strategies. Our primary internal growth strategies are to: maximize total resort revenue; minimize costs by leveraging our economies of scale; and build upon our existing brand awareness and loyalty in order to compete more effectively. Our primary external growth strategies are to: capitalize on our first-mover advantage by being the first to develop and operate family entertainment resorts featuring indoor waterparks in our selected target markets; focus on development and strategic growth opportunities by seeking to develop and open at least two new owned resorts in target markets each year for the next

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several years and target selected licensing opportunities; and continue to innovate by leveraging our in-house expertise, in conjunction with the knowledge and experience of our third-party suppliers and designers.
     In attempting to execute our internal and external growth strategies, we are subject to a variety of business challenges and risks. These challenges include: development and licensing of properties; increases in costs of constructing, operating and maintaining our resorts; competition from other entertainment companies, both within and outside our industry segment; and external economic risks, including family vacation patterns and trends. We seek to meet these challenges by providing sufficient management oversight to site selection, development and resort operations, concentrating on growing and strengthening awareness of our brand and demand for our resorts, and maintaining our focus on safety.
     Revenue and Key Performance Indicators. We seek to generate positive cash flows and net income from each of our owned resorts. Our rooms revenue represents sales to guests of room nights at our resorts, and is the largest contributor to our cash flows and profitability. Rooms revenue accounted for approximately 67% of our total resort revenue for the three months ended March 31, 2005. We employ sales and marketing efforts to increase overall demand for rooms at our resorts. We seek to optimize the relationship between room rates and occupancies through the use of yield management techniques that attempt to project demand in order to selectively increase room rates during peak demand. These techniques are designed to assist us in managing our higher occupancy nights to achieve maximum rooms revenue, and include such practices as: monitoring our historical trends for occupancy and estimating our high occupancy nights; offering the highest discounts to previous guests in off-peak periods to build customer loyalty and enhance our ability to charge higher rates in peak periods; structuring rates to allow us to offer our previous guests the best rate while simultaneously working with a promotional partner or offering internet specials; monitoring sales of room types daily to evaluate the effectiveness of offered discounts; and offering specials on standard suites and yielding better rates on larger suites when standard suites sell out. In addition, we seek to maximize the amount of time and money spent on-site by our guests by providing a variety of revenue-generating amenities.
     We have several key indicators that we use to evaluate the performance of our business. These indicators include the following:
    occupancy;
 
    average daily room rate, or ADR;
 
    revenue per available room, or RevPAR;
 
    total revenue per available room, or Total RevPAR;
 
    total revenue per occupied room, or Total RevPOR; and
 
    EBITDA.
     Occupancy, ADR and RevPAR are commonly used measures within the hospitality industry to evaluate hotel operations and are defined as follows:
    Occupancy is calculated by dividing total occupied rooms by total available rooms.
 
    ADR is calculated by dividing total rooms revenue by total occupied rooms.
 
    RevPAR is the product of occupancy and ADR.
     Occupancy allows us to measure the general overall demand for rooms at our resorts and the effectiveness of our sales and marketing strategies. ADR allows us to measure the effectiveness of our yield management strategies. ADR and RevPAR only include rooms revenue. Total RevPOR and Total RevPAR include both rooms revenue and other revenue derived from food and beverage and other amenities at our resorts. We consider Total RevPOR and Total RevPAR to be key performance indicators for our business because we derive a significant portion of our revenue from food and beverage and other amenities. For the three months ended March 31, 2005, approximately 33% of our total resort revenues consisted of non-rooms revenue.
     We use RevPAR and Total RevPAR to evaluate the blended effect that changes in occupancy, ADR and Total RevPOR have on our profitability. We focus on increasing ADR and Total RevPOR because those increases can have the greatest positive impact on

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our profitability. In addition, we seek to maximize occupancy, as increases in occupancy generally lead to greater total revenues at our resorts, and maintaining certain occupancy levels is key to covering our fixed costs. Increases in total revenues as a result of higher occupancy are, however, typically accompanied by additional incremental costs (including housekeeping services, utilities and room amenity costs). In contrast, increases in total revenues from higher ADR and Total RevPOR are typically accompanied by lower incremental costs, and result in a greater increase in profitability.
     We also use EBITDA as a measure of the operating performance of each of our resorts. EBITDA is a supplemental financial measure, and is not defined by accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of America, or GAAP. See “Non-GAAP Financial Measures” for further discussion of our use of EBITDA and a reconciliation to net income.

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Recent Accounting Pronouncements
     In December 2004, the FASB issued Statement No. 123 (revised 2004), “Share-Based Payment” (SFAS 123R), that requires companies to expense the value of employee stock options, discounts on employee stock purchase plans and the similar awards. Under SFAS 123R, share-based payment awards result in compensation expense that will be measured at fair value on the awards’ grant date, based on the estimated number of awards that are expected to vest. SFAS 123R is effective for periods beginning the first fiscal year after June 15, 2005, and applies to all outstanding and unvested share-based payment awards at the adoption date. We have not completed our evaluation of the impact of adopting SFAS 123R.
Non-GAAP Financial Measures
     We use EBITDA as a measure of our operating performance. EBITDA is a supplemental non-GAAP financial measure. EBITDA is commonly defined as net income plus (a) interest expense, net; (b) income taxes and (c) depreciation and amortization.
     EBITDA as calculated by us is not necessarily comparable to similarly titled measures presented by other companies. In addition, EBITDA (a) does not represent net income or cash flows from operations as defined by GAAP; (b) is not necessarily indicative of cash available to fund our cash flow needs; and (c) should not be considered as an alternative to net income, operating income, cash flows from operating activities or our other financial information as determined under GAAP.
     We believe EBITDA is useful to an investor in evaluating our operating performance because:
    a significant portion of our assets consists of property and equipment that are depreciated over their remaining useful lives in accordance with GAAP. Because depreciation and amortization are non-cash items, we believe that presentation of EBITDA is a useful measure of our operating performance;
 
    it is widely used in the hospitality and entertainment industries to measure operating performance without regard to items such as depreciation and amortization; and
 
    we believe it helps investors meaningfully evaluate and compare the results of our operations from period to period by removing the impact of items directly resulting from our asset base, primarily depreciation and amortization, from our operating results.
     Our management uses EBITDA:
    as a measurement of operating performance because it assists us in comparing our operating performance on a consistent basis as it removes the impact of items directly resulting from our asset base, primarily depreciation and amortization, from our operating results;
 
    for planning purposes, including the preparation of our annual operating budget;
 
    as a valuation measure for evaluating our operating performance and our capacity to incur and service debt, fund capital expenditures and expand our business; and
 
    as one measure in determining the value of other acquisitions and dispositions.
     Covenants in our revolving credit facility also require us to meet financial tests based upon EBITDA as adjusted for certain items.
     Using a measure such as EBITDA has material limitations. These limitations include the difficulty associated with comparing results among companies and the inability to analyze certain significant items, including depreciation and interest expense, which directly affect our net income or loss. Management compensates for these limitations by considering the economic effect of the excluded expense items independently, as well as in connection with its analysis of net income.

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     The tables shown below reconcile net loss to EBITDA for the periods presented.
                 
    Great Wolf        
    Resorts     Predecessor  
    Three months ended March 31,  
    2005     2004  
Net loss
  $ (2,338 )   $ (1,918 )
Adjustments:
               
Interest expense, net
    764       1,518  
Income tax benefit
    (1,542 )      
Depreciation and amortization
    7,148       3,043  
 
           
EBITDA
  $ 4,032     $ 2,643  
 
           
Results of Operations
  General
     Our and the Predecessor’s result of operations for the three months ended March 31, 2005 and 2004 are not directly comparable due primarily to the impact of the IPO and the Formation Transactions, our new debt and the repayment of debt upon the consummation of the IPO. In addition, in March 2005 our Great Wolf Lodge in Williamsburg, Virginia opened.
  Great Wolf Resorts Financial Information
     Great Wolf Resorts’ financial information includes:
    our corporate entity that provides resort development and management services;
 
    our Wisconsin Dells, Sandusky, Traverse City, Kansas City, Sheboygan, and Williamsburg operating resorts; and
 
    our Pocono Mountains resort that is under construction.
     Revenues. Our revenues consist of lodging revenue, which includes rooms, food and beverage, and other department revenues from our resorts.
     Operating Expenses. Our departmental operating expenses consist of rooms, food and beverage and other department expenses.
     Our other operating expenses include the following items:
    selling, general and administrative expenses, which are associated with the management of resorts and which consist primarily of expenses such as corporate payroll and related benefits, operations management, sales and marketing, finance, legal, information technology support, human resources and other support services, as well as general corporate expenses;
 
    property operation and maintenance expenses; and
 
    depreciation and amortization.
  Great Lakes Predecessor Financial Information
     The Predecessor combined historical financial information included the following:
    The Great Lakes Companies, Inc. and its consolidated subsidiaries, including development of, ownership interests in, and management contracts with respect to, resorts and certain non-resort hotels and multifamily housing development and management assets;
 
    the entities that owned our Traverse City, Kansas City and Sheboygan operating resorts; and
 
    the entities that owned our Williamsburg and Pocono Mountains resorts that were under construction.

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     The Traverse City, Kansas City and Sheboygan resorts opened in March 2003, May 2003 and June 2004, respectively. Therefore, Predecessor’s historical results of operations only reflected operating results for Traverse City, Kansas City and Sheboygan for those periods after the resort opening dates.
     The Predecessor’s financial information did not include the entities that own the Wisconsin Dells and Sandusky operating resorts as those entities were controlled by affiliates of AIG SunAmerica.
     Revenues. The Predecessor’s revenues consisted of the following:
    lodging revenue, which consists of rooms, food and beverage and other department revenues from its consolidated and combined hotels and resorts;
 
    management fee revenue from both resort activity and non-resort activity, which includes fees received under its management agreements; and
 
    other revenue, which consists of accounting fees, development fees, central reservation fees, construction management fees and other fees.
     The Predecessor employed the staff at its managed properties. Under its management agreements, the hotel and resort owners reimbursed Predecessor for payroll, benefits and certain other costs related to the operations of the managed properties. Emerging Issues Task Force, or EITF, Issue No. 01-14, “Income Statement Characteristics of Reimbursements for Out-of-pocket Expenses, (EITF 01-14)” establishes standards for accounting for reimbursable expenses in Predecessor’s income statement. Under this pronouncement, the reimbursement of payroll, benefits and costs is recorded as revenue on Predecessor’s statements of operations, with a corresponding expense recorded as “other expenses from managed properties.”
     Operating Expenses. The Predecessor’s departmental operating expenses consisted of rooms, food and beverage and other department expenses.
     The Predecessor’s other operating expenses included the following items:
    selling, general and administrative expenses, which were associated with the management of hotels and resorts and which consist primarily of expenses such as corporate payroll and related benefits, operations management, sales and marketing, finance, legal, information technology support, human resources and other support services, as well as general corporate expenses;
 
    property operation and maintenance expenses;
 
    depreciation and amortization; and
 
    other expenses from managed properties, which are recorded as an expense in accordance with EITF 01-14.
Three months ended March 31, 2005 for Great Wolf Resorts, Inc. compared with the three months ended March 31, 2004 for the Predecessor
The following table shows key operating statistics for our resorts for the three months ended March 31, 2005 and 2004:
                                         
    All Properties           Same Store Comparison (a)
    First Quarter   First Quarter   First Quarter   Increase (Decrease)
    2005   2005   2004   $   %
Occupancy
    69.9 %     71.7 %     68.0 %     N/A       5.4 %
ADR
  $ 211.17     $ 216.58     $ 209.67     $ 6.91       3.3 %
RevPAR
  $ 147.55     $ 155.33     $ 142.66     $ 12.67       8.9 %
Total RevPOR
  $ 315.04     $ 311.44     $ 304.44     $ 7.00       2.3 %
Total RevPAR
  $ 220.13     $ 223.36     $ 207.14     $ 16.22       7.8 %

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(a)   Same store comparison includes properties that were open for the full periods in 2004 and 2005 (that is, the Wisconsin Dells, Sandusky, Traverse City and Kansas City resorts).
     The Traverse City, Kansas City, Sheboygan, and Williamsburg resorts opened in March 2003, May 2003, June 2004, and March 2005, respectively. We acquired the Wisconsin Dells and Sandusky resorts as part of the IPO in December 2004. As a result, comparisons of changes in total revenue, rooms revenue and other revenue between the three month periods ended March 31, 2005 (during which five resorts were open for the entire period and one resort opened) and March 31, 2004 (during which two resorts were open) are not meaningful.
     Presented below are selected amounts from the statements of operations for the quarters ended March 31, 2005 and 2004.
                         
    Three months ended    
    March 31,    
    Great Wolf        
    Resorts   Predecessor   Increase
    2005   2004   (Decrease)
Revenues
  $ 26,996     $ 14,752     $ 12,244  
Departmental operating expenses
    9,669       3,787       5,882  
Selling, general and administrative
    7,238       3,206       4,032  
Property operating costs
    6,057       1,787       4,270  
Depreciation and amortization
    7,148       2,716       4,432  
Net operating loss
    (3,116 )     (84 )     (3,032 )
Net interest expense
    764       1,205       (441 )
Gain on sale of investments
          (1,072 )     1,072  
Interest on mandatorily redeemable shares
          1,692       (1,692 )
Income tax benefit
    (1,542 )           (1,542 )
Loss from continuing operations
    (2,338 )     (1,938 )     (400 )
Net loss
  $ (2,338 )   $ (1,918 )   $ (420 )
     Revenues. Total revenues increased primarily due to revenues related to the resorts in Wisconsin Dells and Sandusky, which were purchased as part of the IPO in December 2004, and the opening of the Sheboygan resort in June 2004. Revenues for the resorts in Wisconsin Dells, Sandusky and Sheboygan were $5,066, $5,662 and $3,204, respectively, for the three months ended March 31, 2005. This increase in revenue was offset by $3,340 of revenue recorded in the three months ended March 31, 2004, related to revenue from managed properties. We had no revenue from managed properties in the three months ended March 31, 2005.
     Operating expenses. Total departmental expenses increased primarily due to expenses related to the resorts in Wisconsin Dells and Sandusky, which were purchased as part of the IPO in December 2004, and the opening of the Sheboygan resort in June 2004. Departmental expenses for the resorts in Wisconsin Dells, Sandusky and Sheboygan were $1,879, $1,881 and $1,609, respectively, for the three months ended March 31, 2005.
     Total other operating expenses increased primarily due to expenses related to the resorts in Wisconsin Dells and Sandusky, which were purchased as part of the IPO in December 2004, and the opening of the Sheboygan resort in June 2004.
    Selling, general and administrative expenses for the resorts in Wisconsin Dells, Sandusky and Sheboygan were $1,039, $1,146 and $1,087, respectively, for the three months ended March 31, 2005.
 
    Property operating costs for the resorts in Wisconsin Dells, Sandusky and Sheboygan were $701, $644 and $348, respectively, for the three months ended March 31, 2005. We also incurred $2,600 of pre-opening costs related to our Williamsburg resort.
 
    Depreciation and amortization for the resorts in Wisconsin Dells, Sandusky and Sheboygan were $809, $899 and $1,061, respectively, for the three months ended March 31, 2005. Loan fees of $731 and $1,385 for Williamsburg and Poconos, respectively, were written off to amortization expense at the time the construction loans were paid off during the three months ended March 31, 2005.

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Net loss. Net loss increased due to the following:
    Our increased operating loss in the 2005 period.
 
    A gain on sale of investments in the 2004 period (we did not have any comparable sales in the 2005 period).
     This decrease was partially offset by:
    Interest on mandatorily redeemable shares incurred in the 2004 period was not incurred in the 2005 period due to the conversion of the mandatorily redeemable interests to common stock in conjunction with the Formation Transactions.
 
    Income tax benefit in the 2005 period with no income tax benefit in the 2004 period, reflecting our structure after the IPO as a C Corporation that pays income taxes, as opposed to the Predecessor’s pass-through entities with no income tax obligations in the 2004 period.
Liquidity and Capital Resources
     As of March 31, 2005, we had total indebtedness of $169,435 summarized as follows:
         
    March 31,  
    2005  
Long-Term Debt:
       
Senior credit facility
  $  
Traverse City/Kansas City Mortgage Loan
    74,794  
Sheboygan Mortgage Loan
    29,391  
Junior Subordinated Debentures
    51,550  
Other mortgage debt
    1,523  
Other Long-Term Liabilities:
       
City of Sheboygan bonds
    8,098  
City of Sheboygan loan
    4,079  
 
     
 
    169,435  
Less current portion of long-term debt
    (1,834 )
 
     
 
  $ 167,601  
 
     
     Senior Credit Facility — Upon closing the IPO, we entered into a $75,000 senior secured revolving credit facility with a syndicate of banks. The loan is secured by our Wisconsin Dells and Sandusky resorts and was not drawn as of March 31, 2005. Future borrowings under this facility will bear interest at LIBOR plus a margin of 2.25% to 3.00% depending upon our leverage ratio from time to time. The maximum amount of indebtedness we may incur under the facility is equal to 3.75 multiplied by the combined EBITDA (adjusted for non-recurring items, unusual items, infrequent items and asset impairment charges) of the two resorts securing the facility plus up to $5,400 relating to enhancements to the waterpark facility for the Wisconsin Dells property. The facility has customary bank covenants including the maximum level of total debt, the minimum level of interest coverage, and the minimum level of fixed charge coverage. The facility also includes an annual unused commitment fee of 0.5%.
     Traverse City/Kansas City Mortgage Loan — Upon closing the IPO, we entered into a $75,000, ten-year loan secured by our Traverse City and Kansas City resorts. The loan bears interest at a fixed rate of 6.96% and is subject to a 25-year principal amortization schedule, with a baloon principal payment due after ten years. The loan has customary financial and operating debt compliance covenants, including a minimum debt service coverage ratio, representing the combined EBITDA (adjusted for non-recurring items, unusual items, infrequent items and asset impairment charges) of the two resorts divided by their combined annual interest expense and principal amortization. The loan also has customary prohibitions on our ability to prepay the loan prior to maturity. We were in compliance with all mortgage loan covenants at March 31, 2005.
     Sheboygan Mortgage Loan — The Sheboygan mortgage loan is secured by our Sheboygan resort. The loan converted from a construction loan into a mortgage loan in January 2005. The loan matures in January 2008 and bears interest at a floating rate of prime plus 200 basis points and is subject to a 20-year principal amortization schedule. The loan has customary covenants associated with a single asset mortgage. There are no prohibitions or fees associated with the repayment of the loan principal. We were in compliance with the mortgage loan covenants at March 31, 2005.

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     Junior Subordinated Debentures — In March 2005, we completed a private offering of $50,000 of trust preferred securities through Great Wolf Capital Trust I (the Trust), a Delaware statutory trust which is our subsidiary. The securities pay holders cumulative cash distributions at an annual rate which is fixed at 7.80% through March 2015 and then floats at LIBOR + 310 basis points. The securities mature in March 2035 and are callable at no premium after March 2010. In addition, we invested $1,500 in the Trust’s common securities, representing 3% of the total capitalization of the Trust.
     The Trust used the proceeds of the offering and our investment to purchase from us $51,550 of our junior subordinated debentures with payment terms that mirror the distribution terms of the trust securities. The costs of the trust preferred offering totaled $1,600, including $1,500 of underwriting commissions and expenses and $100 of costs incurred directly by the Trust. The Trust paid these costs utilizing an investment from us. These costs are being amortized over a 30-year period. The proceeds from our debenture sale, net of the costs of the trust preferred offering and our investment in the Trust, were $48,400. We used the net proceeds to retire the Poconos construction loan and for future development.
     As a result of the issuance of FIN46R and the accounting profession’s application of the guidance provided by the FASB, issuer trusts, like Great Wolf Capital Trust I, are generally variable interest entities. We have determined that we are not the primary beneficiary under the Trust, and accordingly we will not consolidate the financial statements of the Trust into its consolidated financial statements.
     Based on the foregoing accounting authority, these consolidated financial statements present the debentures issued to the Trust as long-term debt. Our investment in the Trust is accounted as a cost investment and is included in other assets. For financial reporting purposes, we record interest expense on the corresponding debentures in our consolidated statements of operations.
     City of Sheboygan bonds — The City of Sheboygan (the City) bonds amount represents the face amount of bond anticipation notes (BANs) issued by the City in November 2003 in conjunction with the Predecessor’s construction of the Blue Harbor Resort in Sheboygan, Wisconsin. In accordance with the provisions of EITF Issue No. 91-10, we have recognized as a liability the obligations for these BANs. The notes bear interest at 3.95% and mature in 2008. The notes are not a general obligation of the City and are payable from (a) the proceeds of bond anticipation notes or other funds appropriated by the City for the payment of interest on the BANs and (b) the proceeds to be delivered from the issuance and sale of securities by the City. We have an obligation to fund payment of these BANs. Our obligation to fund repayment of the notes will be satisfied by certain minimum guaranteed amounts of room tax payments to be made by the Blue Harbor Resort through 2028.
     City of Sheboygan loan — The City of Sheboygan loan amount represents a loan made by the City in 2004 to the Predecessor in conjunction with the Predecessor’s construction of the Blue Harbor Resort in Sheboygan, Wisconsin. The loan is noninterest-bearing and matures in 2018. Our obligation to repay the loan will be satisfied by certain minimum guaranteed amounts of real and personal property tax payments to be made by the Blue Harbor Resort through 2018.
  Short-Term Liquidity Requirements
     Our short-term liquidity requirements consist primarily of funds necessary to pay operating expenses, including:
    recurring maintenance, repairs and other operating expenses necessary to properly maintain our resorts;
 
    property taxes and insurance expenses;
 
    interest expense and scheduled principal payments on outstanding indebtedness; and
 
    general and administrative expenses.
     Historically, we have satisfied our short-term liquidity requirements through operating cash flows, proceeds from borrowings and equity contributions from investors. We believe that cash provided by our operations, together with borrowing capacity under our line of credit, will be sufficient to fund our requirements for working capital, capital expenditures and debt service for the next twelve months.
  Long-Term Liquidity Requirements

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     Our long-term liquidity requirements consist primarily of funds necessary to pay for scheduled debt maturities, renovations, expansion and other non-recurring capital expenditures that need to be made periodically to our resorts as well as the costs associated with the development of new resorts. We expect to meet these needs through existing working capital, cash provided by operations and a combination of mortgage financing on properties being developed, additional borrowings under our revolving credit facility, and the issuance of equity instruments, including common stock, or additional or replacement debt, if market conditions permit. We believe these sources of capital will be sufficient to provide for our long-term capital needs.
     Our revolving credit facility and secured mortgage financing are material sources to satisfy our long-term liquidity requirements. As such, compliance with their financial and operating debt compliance covenants is material to our liquidity. Non-compliance with the covenants would have a material adverse effect on our financial condition and liquidity.
     As we develop future resorts, we expect to finance a portion of the total construction cost of each resort through a stand-alone construction loan on the resort. We expect to fund the remainder of the total construction cost through cash provided from a combination of sources, including our revolving credit facility, sale of our condominiums, cash on hand and cash provided by operating activities. We expect to consider converting stand-alone construction loans to longer-term permanent financing after each resort commences operations.
  Contractual Obligations
     The following table summarizes our contractual obligations as of March 31, 2005:
                                         
    Payment Terms  
            Less Than                     More Than  
    Total     1 Year     1-3 Years     3-5 Years     5 Years  
Long-Term Debt Obligations(1)
  $ 169,435     $ 1,834     $ 31,577     $ 3,255     $ 132,769  
Operating Lease Obligations
    1,869       401       820       648        
Construction Contracts
    28,621       28,621                    
 
                             
Total
  $ 199,925       30,856     $ 32,297     $ 3,903     $ 132,769  
 
                             
 
(1)   Includes $8,098 of fixed rate debt recognized as a liability related to certain bonds issued by the City of Sheboygan and $4,079 of fixed rate debt recognized as a liability related to a loan from the City of Sheboygan. These liabilities will be satisfied by certain future minimum guaranteed amounts of real and personal property tax payments and room tax payments to be made by our Sheboygan resort.
  Working Capital
     We had $65,241 of available cash and cash equivalents and $44,304 of working capital (current assets less current liabilities) at March 31, 2005, compared to $79,409 of available cash and cash equivalents and $15,387 of working capital at December 31, 2004. Cash at December 31, 2004, was higher than at March 31, 2005 mainly due to the proceeds of the IPO in December 2004. The increase in working capital is mainly due to the payment of debt that was classified as current at December 31, 2004.
Cash Flows
Three months ended March 31, 2005 for Great Wolf Resorts, Inc. compared with the three months ended March 31, 2004 for the Predecessor
                         
                    Increase
    2005   2004   (Decrease)
Net cash (used in) provided by operating activities
  $ (9,287 )   $ 1,043     $ (10,330 )
Net cash used in investing activities
    (30,077 )     (27,949 )     (2,128 )
Net cash provided by financing activities
    25,196       30,261       (5,065 )
     Operating Activities. The decrease in net cash provided by operating activities for the three months ended March 31, 2005, as compared to the three months ended March 31, 2004, resulted primarily from an increase in net loss, an increase in prepaid expenses and other assets, and a decrease in accounts payable and other liabilities, partially offset by an increase in depreciation and amortization.

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     Investing Activities. The increase in net cash used in investing activities for the three months ended March 31, 2005, as compared to the three months ended March 31, 2004, resulted primarily from an increase in capital expenditures in the 2005 period as compared to the 2004 period and a decrease in the change in equity escrow.
     Financing Activities. Net cash provided by financing activities decreased for the three months ended March 31, 2005, as compared to the three months ended March 31, 2004, primarily due to an increase in loan fees paid and a decrease in net member contributions, partially offset by an increase in net borrowing activity.
Inflation
     Our resort properties are able to change room and amenity rates on a daily basis, so the impact of higher inflation can often be passed along to customers. However, a weak economic environment that decreases overall demand for our products and services could restrict our ability to raise room and amenity rates to offset rising costs.
ITEM 3. QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK
     Our future income, cash flows and fair values relevant to financial instruments are dependent upon prevailing market interest rates. Market risk refers to the risk of loss from adverse changes in market prices and interest rates. In the future, we intend to use derivative financial instruments to manage or hedge interest rate risks related to our borrowings. We do not intend to use derivatives for trading or speculative purposes and anticipate entering into derivative contracts only with major financial institutions with investment grade credit ratings.
     As of March 31, 2005, we had total indebtedness of approximately $169,435. This debt consisted of:
    $74,794 of fixed rate debt secured by two of our resorts. This debt bears interest at 6.96%.
 
    $29,391 of variable rate debt secured by one of our resorts. This debt bears interest at a floating rate equal to prime plus 200 basis points. The total rate was 7.75% at March 31, 2005.
 
    $51,550 of debentures that bear interest at a fixed rate of 7.80% through March 2015 and then at a floating rate of LIBOR + 310 basis points thereafter. The securities mature in March 2035.
 
    $8,098 of fixed rate debt (effective interest rate of 10.67%) recognized as a liability related to certain bonds issued by the City of Sheboygan and $4,079 of noninterest bearing debt recognized as a liability related to a loan from the City of Sheboygan. These liabilities will be satisfied by certain future minimum guaranteed amounts of real and personal property tax payments and room tax payments to be made by the Sheboygan resort; and
 
    $1,523 of other fixed rate debt.
     As of March 31, 2005, the fair values of the indebtedness described above approximate their carrying values as the terms are similar to those currently available to us for indebtedness with similar risks and remaining maturities.
     If the prime rate were to increase by 100 basis points, the increase in interest expense on our variable rate debt would decrease future earnings and cash flows by approximately $294 annually. If the prime rate were to decrease by 1% or 100 basis points, the decrease in interest expense on our variable rate debt would be approximately $294 annually.
ITEM 4. CONTROLS AND PROCEDURES
Evaluation of Disclosure Controls and Procedures
          We maintain disclosure controls and procedures designed to provide reasonable assurance that information in our reports under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”) is recorded, processed, summarized and reported within the time periods specified pursuant to the SEC’s rules and forms. Disclosure controls and procedures, as defined in Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e) under the Exchange Act, include controls and procedures designed to ensure that information required to be disclosed by us in the reports we file or submit under the Exchange Act is accumulated and communicated to our management, including our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, as appropriate, to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure. In

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designing and evaluating the disclosure controls and procedures, management recognizes that any controls and procedures, no matter how well designed and operated, can provide only reasonable, and not absolute, assurance that the objectives of the system are met.
          We carried out an evaluation, under the supervision and with the participation of our management including our Chief Executive Officer and Chief Financial Officer, of the effectiveness of the design and operation of our disclosure controls and procedures as of the end of the period covered by this report. In making this evaluation, we considered matters relating to the restatement of our previously-issued consolidated financial statements, including the related weakness in our internal control over financial reporting. After consideration of the matters discussed above, we have concluded that our disclosure controls and procedures were not effective as of the end of the period covered by this report.
Material Weakness in Internal Control Over Financial Reporting
          On November 10, 2005, we announced that we were delaying the filing of our Form 10-Q for the third quarter ended September 30, 2005 due to an evaluation of the application of purchase accounting for certain transactions entered into in December 2004. We have subsequently filed our third quarter Form 10-Q, which included the restatement of our condensed consolidated financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2004 and our Annual Report on Form 10-K/A for the year ended December 31, 2004, to reflect the restatement of our consolidated financial statements, the notes thereto, and related disclosures for the year ended December 31, 2004. We are now filing our Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q/A for the quarter ended March 31, 2005, to reflect the restatement of our unaudited condensed consolidated financial statements, the notes thereto, and related disclosures for the quarter ended March 31, 2005. We also intend to file a Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q/A for the quarter ended June 30, 2005 to reflect the restatement of our unaudited consolidated financial statements, the notes thereto and related disclosures for that quarter.
          Our management believes that the errors giving rise to the restatement occurred because of a variety of factors, including the complexity of the interpretation of accounting standards related to the application of purchase accounting to our Formation Transactions. In this regard, we concluded there was a material weakness in our internal control over financial reporting related to the implementation of complex accounting standards, including the application of purchase accounting to our Formation Transactions. A material weakness is a control deficiency, or a combination of deficiencies, that results in more than a remote likelihood that a material misstatement of the annual or interim financial statements will not be prevented or detected.
          In order to remediate this weakness in internal control, prior to the quarter ended September 30, 2005, we added staff to assist in addressing the implementation of complex accounting standards, including the application of purchase accounting, and to provide for additional levels of internal review over such complex transactions.
          In connection with the requirements of Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, we are in the process of reviewing, documenting and testing our systems of internal control over financial reporting in order to provide the basis for our evaluation and report on these systems as of the end of our fiscal year. We cannot be certain as to the timing of completion of our testing and our ongoing remediation efforts. Accordingly, remediated controls may not be in place for a sufficient time period over which to assess effectiveness, and our evaluation of internal control may not be completed in time for our external auditors to complete their assessment on a timely basis. If we are not able to comply with the requirements of Section 404 in a timely manner, the reliability of our internal control over financial reporting may be impacted.
Changes In Internal Control
          During the period covered by this Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q/A, there have not been any changes to our internal control over financial reporting that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, our internal control over financial reporting.
Remediation Measures for Identified Material Weakness
Our planned remediation measures in connection with the material weakness described above include the following:
  1.   We will require continuing education over the next 12 months for our accounting and finance staff who are responsible for financial reporting to ensure compliance with current and emerging financial reporting and compliance practices.
 
  2.   We will utilize outside consultants, other than our Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm, to assist us in our evaluation of complex accounting transactions and related reporting, specifically in the area of purchase accounting, in cases where we believe such additional expertise is appropriate.

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  3.   We will assess staff expertise in our accounting and finance areas and take any steps necessary to staff our accounting and finance departments appropriately.
 
  4.   We and our Audit Committee, as necessary, will consider additional items, or will alter the planned steps above, in order to remediate further the material weakness described above.

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PART II. OTHER INFORMATION
ITEM 1. LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
     We are party to various legal actions in the ordinary course of our business. We believe that these actions are routine in nature and incidental to the operation of our business. While the outcome of these actions cannot be predicted with certainty, we believe that the ultimate resolution of these matters will not have a material, adverse impact on our business, financial condition or prospects.
ITEM 2. UNREGISTERED SALES OF EQUITY SECURITIES AND USE OF PROCEEDS
None.
ITEM 3. DEFAULTS UPON SENIOR SECURITIES
None.
ITEM 4. SUBMISSION OF MATTERS TO A VOTE OF SECURITY HOLDERS
None.
ITEM 5. OTHER INFORMATION
None.
ITEM 6. EXHIBITS
The exhibits listed below are incorporated herein by reference to prior SEC filings by the Registrant or are included as exhibits in this Form 10-Q/A.
     
Exhibit    
Number   Description
2.1
  Form of Merger Agreement (Delaware) (incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 2.1 to the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-1 filed August 12, 2004)
 
   
2.2
  Form of Merger Agreement (Wisconsin) (incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 2.2 to the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-1 filed August 12, 2004)
 
   
3.1
  Form of Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation for Great Wolf Resorts, Inc. dated December 9, 2004 (incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-1 filed August 12, 2004)
 
   
3.2
  Form of Amended and Restated Bylaws of Great Wolf Resorts, Inc. effective December 20, 2004 (incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 3.2 to the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-1 filed August 12, 2004)
 
   
4.1
  Form of the Common Stock Certificate of Great Wolf Resorts, Inc. (incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-1 filed October 21, 2004)
 
   
4.2
  Junior Subordinated Indenture, dated as of March 15, 2005, between Great Wolf Resorts, Inc. and JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association, as trustee (incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed March 18, 2005)
 
   
4.3
  Amended and Restated Trust Agreement, dated as of March 15, 2005, by and among Chase Manhattan Bank USA, National Association, as Delaware trustee; JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association, as property trustee; Great Wolf Resorts, Inc., as depositor; and James A. Calder, Alex G. Lombardo and J. Michael Schroeder, as administrative trustees (incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 4.2 to the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed March 18, 2005)

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Exhibit    
Number   Description
10.1
  Revolving Credit Agreement, by and among Great Wolf Resorts, Inc., GWR Operating Partnership, L.L.L.P., the Subsidiary Guarantors named therein, Citicorp North America, Inc., Societe Generale, Citigroup Global Markets, Inc., SG Americas Securities LLC and Calyon New York Branch (incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 10.15 to the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-1 filed January 21, 2005) as amended by First Letter Amendment dated February 10, 2005 (filed herewith) and by Second Letter Amendment dated as of April 25, 2005 (filed herewith).
 
   
10.2
  Purchase Agreement, dated as of March 15, 2005, among Great Wolf Resorts, Inc., Great Wolf Capital Trust I, Taberna Preferred Funding I, Ltd and Merrill Lynch International (incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 1.1 to the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed March 18, 2005)
 
   
31.1*
  Certification of Chief Executive Officer of Periodic Report Pursuant to Rule 13a — 14(a) and Rule 15d — 14(a)
 
   
31.2*
  Certification of Chief Financial Officer of Periodic Report Pursuant to Rule 13a — 14(a) and Rule 15d — 14(a)
 
   
32.1*.
  Certification of Chief Executive Officer Pursuant to 18 U.S.C Section 1350
 
   
32.2*
  Certification of Chief Financial Officer Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350
 
*   Filed herewith.
 
+   Indicated management contract or compensatory plan or arrangement required to be filed as an exhibit pursuant to Item 15(c) of Form 10-K.

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SIGNATURE
     Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned thereunto duly authorized.
         
  GREAT WOLF RESORTS, INC.
 
 
  /s/ James A. Calder    
  James A. Calder   
  Chief Financial Officer
(Duly authorized officer)
(Principal financial and accounting officer) 
 
 
Dated: November 30, 2005

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