Save The Wildlife's Mission Statement Reads:
"To nurture the appreciation for wildlife, encourage responsible stewardship of the Earth, provide the means and demonstrate how everyone can be part of the solution in the crusade to save our natural planetary habitat."
How do we accomplish this? Through wildlife education, research, participation, facilitation and sponsorship. Save The Wildlife was founded in 1984 to meet the needs of growing injured and orphaned wildlife in Central Florida. Now our non-profit organization is dedicated to wildlife preservation through environmental education and research.
Our Vision: Every person needs the opportunity to appreciate the place where wilderness lives within our spirit, to touch it, honor it and preserve it.
Our Mission: Diversity in Unity. Nurture appreciation of wildlife, encourage responsible stewardship of the earth and to demonstrate how everyone can be a part of the solution.
Our Purpose: Provide programs relating our human connection to the environment, in the chain of life, and on Earth in both the Physical and Spiritual form.
Our Goal: Making a difference here on Earth for future generations.
Our Mission: Diversity in Unity. Nurture appreciation of wildlife, encourage responsible stewardship of the earth and to demonstrate how everyone can be a part of the solution.
Our Purpose: Provide programs relating our human connection to the environment, in the chain of life, and on Earth in both the Physical and Spiritual form.
Our Goal: Making a difference here on Earth for future generations.
After spending years caring for injured and orphaned wildlife, I realized that rehabilitation efforts were just a "band-aid" solution in the realm of actually saving wildlife and environment. In fact many would be shocked by my recommendation now of "Euthanizing" every wild life that comes in either poisoned or infected. I know that no matter what you do, what treatment you give, despite some improvement they will never have a quality of life again.
Most after being re released back to nature will die a slow agonizing death because the initial poisoning/infection causes serious damage with long term effects. This is not some thing that is taken into account in wildlife rehab, we intake, treat, release, all with good intentions. There is no research or data available studying this very issue that I am aware of, all I have to go by is my own experience suffering from Lyme & co Infections. The only way you know their fate is if you live it like I have, after time, their remission is gone, quality of life is gone, not able to hunt followed by a cruel death from starvation.
Our Planet's environment and wildlife habitat is like a finely spun spider web. If you break or tear away one strand then another, it weakens the whole structure. We must safe guard those golden strands that keeps life flowing or we create a domino effect that continues to degrade our planet.
Most after being re released back to nature will die a slow agonizing death because the initial poisoning/infection causes serious damage with long term effects. This is not some thing that is taken into account in wildlife rehab, we intake, treat, release, all with good intentions. There is no research or data available studying this very issue that I am aware of, all I have to go by is my own experience suffering from Lyme & co Infections. The only way you know their fate is if you live it like I have, after time, their remission is gone, quality of life is gone, not able to hunt followed by a cruel death from starvation.
Our Planet's environment and wildlife habitat is like a finely spun spider web. If you break or tear away one strand then another, it weakens the whole structure. We must safe guard those golden strands that keeps life flowing or we create a domino effect that continues to degrade our planet.