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07-04-2005, 09:48 AM
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#1 (permalink)
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Join Date: Apr 2005
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Wildlife
Hi all Hope everyone has a great 4th of July!!!!
Recently I had the displeasure of finding someone who found a baby Raccoon and decided to try to make a pet out of it unfortunatly a few weeks later they released it because it tried to attack them but now this baby is used to human contact and may or maynot survive on it's own. After finding out that they had the critter i contacted the locale DNR office and due to thier lack of wardens nothing got done about this problem.
As a reminder to all yes baby wildlife is very cute and can be fun to watch but by no means are they meant to be pets!!!!!
Racoons are one of the few wildlife that if a baby is left behind another mother will adopt it or it's own mother will come back if she is able if you find one just stay back and watch to see if the mother comes back (usually a few hours) if not please do not try to catch it yourself call your locale wildlife rescue and they will come and get it for free and take it to Wildlife in Need where they will feed and care for the animal until it can be released.
racoons can carry many infections that not only will harm humans but will also harm your pets.
also remember unless you have special permits to own these critters it is illegal.
Again i'm just posting this as a reminder
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Lori J Miller
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07-04-2005, 12:27 PM
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#2 (permalink)
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:wink: Lori, I agree 100%. Please NEVER PICK UP A STRAY OR ILL CRITTER without using the proper safety techniques. If your unsure about what to do, please get in touch with someone with authority. Never be the good Samaritan.
By picking up the animal you may never know the danger your going to come into contact with. Look at Jeane Giese of Fond du Lac, she only wanted to help out the poor bat and ended up almost DEAD from Rabies.
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If you talk to the animals they will talk to you, If you do not talk to them you will not know them. And what you do not know you will fear. What one fears,one destroys. ~Chief Dan George. (1899 - 1981)
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05-18-2006, 09:48 PM
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#3 (permalink)
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Is it better to help injured animals or let nature take its
Is it better to help injured animals or let nature take its course? This is a question everyone whom is an outdoor enthusiast must confront sooner or later. And it's a question that’s asked quite a lot.
You're hiking not far from home. The weather is ideal sunny, warm and cloudless. But now it's time to return home. You pause for a brief moment to catch your breath when you notice, lo and behold, a small animal beside the path. Perhaps it's a chipmunk or a cottontail or a possum. Whatever the species, it doesn't flee when you approach. Even a child's attention won't be able to scare it off. Is the animal hurt? Abandoned? On one hand, you know better than to disturb it. But on the other hand, a rescue seems in order.
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This is what happened to me this last summer when my parents and I were taking a mountain scenic drive in Colorado. We rounded a bend and there in the middle of the road were Bluebird chicks. I bet you can guess what I choose; yep I stopped the car and jumped out. This probably wasn’t the smartest choice but my instincts told me I needed to relocate the 3 fledglings to safer ground. In the background I heard the parents acknowledging our presence. Today, I smile knowing I probably saved the little ones at least from a car. Only a photograph of one of the chicks remains in the safety of my vacations scrapbook.
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So is it better to help injured animals or let nature take its course? A common dilemma, but also one that needn't causes us distress. The fact is that in almost all cases wild animals should remain wild. With baby cottontails, for example -- which make most children weak in the knees -- no amount of human attention can substitute for the care that a mother rabbit provides her young. All the comforts in the world will never match which is provided by. But if for some reason, despite the odds, the lost soul found its way into your home. With time it often loses those qualities that first made it an attractive pet. Instead of being cute and cuddly now it's clawed, temperamental and still wild.
Another reason to leave animals where you find them relates to territorial issues. Turtles and other reptiles taken from the wild for pets are almost always released at some point in the future when their owners tire of caring for them. The problem then is that unless these creatures are deposited in the same spot where they were originally found, they will likely suffer. And since people move or simply forget where their pets were first picked up, the animals often find themselves in unfamiliar surroundings, sometimes with insufficient food, inadequate shelter, even new predators.
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One example for me is yearly my family goes to Florida to visit relatives, well one of the things we love to do is catch the Anoles (lizard). One year during Christmas break we caught 11 Anoles both Floridian & Cuban Species and yes they did come home with the snowbirds back to Wisconsin. Well, I tried my best to take care of them all but at some point some got out and were never found until it was too late. As devastated as I was as a child it was a hard lesson to learn, that wild animals should stay wild.
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No doubt the most commonly rescued animal is the infant bird, fallen from a nest or in the course of an early flight. Surely a cat will find the bird sooner or later. Yet it's also true that the bird will have a better chance of reaching adulthood if left alone. I can’t begin to tell you just how many robin chicks I have places back into the nest after being spooked out but never once did I bring in a fledgling. Besides, DNR laws prohibit anyone but licensed officials from being in possession of nongame birds; a detail worth mentioning the next time the some kid wants to save a helpless chick.
The best choice is to leave the injured or solitude animal alone and to contact a local nature center say for example the DNR or your Local Audubon Society chapter. Also if there's a licensed wildlife rehabilitator in the area, any of these organizations will be able to reroute you in the proper direction.
http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/environment/wildlifecrossings/
http://www.defenders.org/
http://www.nwf.org
http://www.nwhc.usgs.gov/
http://www.natureserve.org/
http://www.wi.nrcs.usda.gov/
http://www.thefeather.org/
http://www.kaytee.com/home/
http://www.nature.org/wherewework/no...tes/wisconsin/
http://www.dnr.state.wi.us/org/land/wildlife/
http://www.wisconsinbirds.org/
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If you talk to the animals they will talk to you, If you do not talk to them you will not know them. And what you do not know you will fear. What one fears,one destroys. ~Chief Dan George. (1899 - 1981)
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06-06-2006, 03:05 PM
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#4 (permalink)
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Moderator
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This is just plain FUNNY!!!
:arrow: Deer crashes through window into Racine apartment
June 06, 2006
St. Paul Journal
RACINE, Wis. (AP) - Jerry Falkner and his family have been temporarily displaced from their apartment after a deer rampaged through it, but he's just glad the incident did not result in any problems worse than it did.
RACINE, Wis. (AP) - Jerry Falkner and his family have been temporarily displaced from their apartment after a deer rampaged through it, but he's just glad the incident did not result in any problems worse than it did.
"I heard glass breaking and I thought someone was breaking in,'' he of the incident Monday morning which awakened him as the deer broke through a window. "The next thing I know, a deer is running toward my room.''
The animal ran into the bathroom, and the family locked it inside. But the Falkners did not immediately know that their pit bull, Shadow, was in inside that room with the deer.
The deer kicked on the water, flooding the apartment, and briefly knocked the dog unconscious.
Police were able with the family's help to get the dog out of the bathroom, while leaving the deer confined, and Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources officials then tranquilized the doe and took it away.
Police Officer Victor Cera said the deer was apparently behind the apartment building when it was spooked by dogs let out of a kennel. Falkner said he believed the doe came through the window to elude children who cornered it near two 7-foot-high fences behind the apartment.
"In the 16 years that I've been doing this, I've seen all kinds of stuff,'' Cera said. "But this is probably the most bizarre.''
Falkner said it could have been a lot worse.
"Imagine if it would have been this window,'' he said as he pointed to the window of a nearby room where his children, ages 5 and 6, had been sleeping when the deer arrived. "After this incident, it makes me think it's safer to stay on the second floor than the first floor.''
__________________
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If you talk to the animals they will talk to you, If you do not talk to them you will not know them. And what you do not know you will fear. What one fears,one destroys. ~Chief Dan George. (1899 - 1981)
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