



| 1989 Update |
This was a busy year for Wildlife Fawn Rescue. A total of 48 fawns, 24 Western Gray Squirrels and various other species of wildlife came to us for care this past season. Since we are the only facility in Sonoma County licensed to accept fawns, and word spreads that we are here, this number will continue to increase.
As civilization moves into the habitat of wild creatures it becomes more difficult for them to survive. Without the interest and support of our friends it would be impossible for us to be here for wildlife when the need arises.
Thanks for caring. Have a wonderful year.
| 1990 Update |
Another busy season has come to an end at Fawn Rescue. A total of 62 fawns were cared for at our facility in 1990. Other species were also helped along their way to an eventful life in the wild.
Studies have shown that due to the continuing drought and the increasing loss of habitat, a larger percentage of wildlife appear to be experiencing a great deal of stress. It becomes more difficult for these creatures to find water and nourishment. Their health and their very lives are at risk.
Your continued support toward our effort is much appreciated. We are all responsible for preserving Earth's wonders. Thank you for being there for wildlife.
| 1991 Update |
It has been a desperate year for wildlife. As our concerns increase so do Fawn Rescue's efforts in bringing care to the wild creatures in need. A total of 61 fawns, adult deer and other wild species kept us busy this season. The construction of an additional large enclosure was necessary to house the overabundance of spring arrivals.
Due to the combination of drought, loss of habitat, and the severe winter temperatures the mortality rate is high, the body weights are low, and the natural immunities are not being passed from the mother to her young.
Without our help wildlife will surely disappear. A real tragedy for us all. Together we must make a difference. Thank you for being one who cares.
May 1992 bring you JOY.
| Marjorie has written a wonderful book about Gabriel, called Leap To Freedom. |
Marjorie Davis and Gabriel![]() Photo by Janet Prince |
| 1992 Update |
It's fall once again and most young wildlife has come and gone for another year. Arrivals of juveniles and adult deer that need our help continue, so the work doesn't stop with the change of season.
This is time of year for gathering acorns, walnuts and pine cones, and drying and storing them for next spring's newborns. They must be taught to recognize their natural foods and where is an acorn to be found in the spring? Only in our storage bins, "squirreled" away in the cool, dry cellar. Much work goes on behind the scenes, besides the obvious rescue, care and release of our friends of forest and field.
There is no place to stop. The need grows larger each year. Fawn Rescue received the unreal total of 89 fawns this past season. Many other species find their way to us as well. Two fawns, only three weeks old, came to us in September. They are still here, as yet too young to release. Nature seems off schedule, perhaps for many reasons.
Your concern for wildlife is vital to us all. Thank you for continuing to care.
| 1993 Update |
Our "Fawnmobile" travels many thousands of miles throughout the year in the rescue of some very special wildlife. This season 81 fawns, so far, have been brought to our doorstep, plus other species of wildlife in need. Fawns have been transported by Fawn Rescue from many other counties, such as: Los Angeles, Contra Costa, Yolo, Colusa, Solano, Santa Cruz, Mendicino, San Mateo, Sacramento, Lake, Marin, Toulumne, Napa and Stanislas, in addition to every corner of Sonoma County.
![]() Photograph by Kathryn Aanestad |
An overnight trip, or a six-hour drive in heavy rain or fog is not considered unreasonable. These small creatures do not understand boundaries, seasons, or time of day, nor are they of any importance to Fawn Rescue. Two "Care-In Captivity" manuals, one on Black-tailed fawns and the other on Western Gray squirrels, have been written and published by Marjorie Davis, founder and director of Fawn Rescue. These manuals are used as guides by other wildlife specialists and are distributed throughout the United States, Canada, and Europe. We are proud to be making this much needed contribution to wildlife care. Thank you for your continued interest. By being a part of Fawn Rescue you are a participant in a very special and unique wildlife project. We wish you a year filled with harmony and joy. |
| 1994 Update |
A wildlife center in British Columbia admitted their first newborn Moose. They frantically called Fawn Rescue for advice and after following instructions from our fawn care manual (with some SLIGHT adjustments) as advised, the moose thrived and was eventually released. We were pleased to have served an important function in an exciting project. We receive many interesting queries from distant parts of the United States and Canada. It was for this reason our two wildlife care manuals were written.
At year's end Fawn Rescue had received 98 fawns (no moose). Due to the many emergency calls we respond to, our work has become a year-round service. Never again will it be seasonal. As another of our specialties we still delight in the care of Western Gray squirrels.
This spring we finished the construction of a new holding pen. It provides a protected area in which to keep injured fawns separate from the more rowdy, healthy ones and yet it allows them contact with their own species until they are able to join them. This new pen serves a double purpose. It is also used for sorting fawns at release time. We now have several releases each fall and separating them into groups became more difficult each year. As we build and grow we discover new ways to deal with these problems.
Fawn Rescue is honored to be one of only eleven wildlife facilities throughout the state to have earned a Certificate of Accreditation from International Wildlife Rehabilitation Council. This certificate acknowledges that Wildlife Fawn Rescue meets, or exceeds, all wildlife rehabilitation standards.
As director of Fawn Rescue, I have been awarded a California Department of Fish and Game Director's Achievement Award for outstanding support of wildlife protection and conservation. I also received a Statement of Appreciation from Wildlife Investigations Laboratory of the Department of Fish and Game for pioneering techniques in caring for and rehabilitation of fawns.
Fawn Rescue has come a long way since the first fawn arrived in 1986. The recognition and support from our many friends is heart-warming and encouraging. It's what makes possible our dedication to provide the very best care for wildlife.
May the coming year be filled with the warmth of friendship.
| 1995 Update |
Surely last winter's rains may be credited with the good news. Healthier does passed on stronger immunities and provided quality nourishment for their offspring this season, which resulted in far fewer ill fawns.
Sadly, the number of human related injuries to wildlife hasn't declined. Young ones soon become old enough to leave beds, nests, and dens and are exposed to many hazards. Then the heart-rending time for rescue work begins.
Besides rescues, other opportunities to serve Sonoma County continue to present themselves. I am involved, on a small scale, in the Sonoma Creek Adopt-A-Watershed Restoration Project. I also offer wildlife talks to both public and private schools, adult groups, and at public functions.
It is against the policy of Fawn Rescue to use living wildlife for education. Therefore, my talks center around a collection of mounted animals. This exhibit provides the public with the rare opportunity to examine, at close range, hoofs, claws, hair textures, and other features without stress to the animal. The response has been great. Children are fascinated, and full of amazing questions. Their letters and drawings reflect their enthusiasm. To date, this collection consists of a newborn fawn, an adult and infant hare, an adult and juvenile squirrel and one enormous raccoon that dwarfs them all. At the taxidermist's and soon ready to be added to this collection, are a bob-cat, a gray fox and two brush rabbits, which are now on the threatened list and seldom seen in the wild. All of these wild creatures died of human related causes, a fact which makes its own strong impact on any audience. |
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As director of Fawn Rescue, I am honored to have received Sonoma Ecology Center's first award in the new wildlife category, "in recognition of stewardship, generosity, and outstanding contribution for our environment and our community".
Fawn Rescue succeeds because you care. Thank you for your continued interest.
Have a year of happy days.
| 1996 Update |
The attached letter is one of many of the astounding notes I look forward to receiving after giving wildlife talks at Sonoma County schools. Don't you just know the world has not heard the last of Sophia? These wildlife talks, offered without charge during the winter months when the need for animal care is not so demanding, are becoming more popular each year. A total of eight mounted species provides a well-rounded representation of Sonoma County native wildlife. I would enjoy training someone to give these presentations on behalf of Fawn Rescue. A special person, one who delights in communicating with children and who would be dedicated to a long-term commitment. I could then carry on my work in the rescue and care of animals while the talks continued year-round. So often I must refuse to participate at worthwhile public functions because I am knee deep in small wild creatures. Perhaps you know of the perfect person. Let me know.
This spring a newborn fawn was picked up at a local park by a family who passed the terrified baby from person to person as they posed for photos, then allowed the children to carry and play with it on the grass. A park ranger rescued the distressed fawn and notified Fawn Rescue immediately. I arrived within a half-hour only to find the fawn had died of stress. As a result of this tragic incident I made signs to warn the public not to touch fawns. These signs are now posted in entry stations, and on rest-room doors, in most of the public parks throughout Sonoma County. The solution to these wildlife disasters, and our most powerful weapon against them, is education.
![]() Photograph by Kathryn Aanestad |
In the meantime Fawn Rescue functions at a hectic pace. The herds of deer are healthy this year. Two great winters of rain have been a boon to us all. By the end of June I had already received 53 fawns which is nearly double the usual amount for so early in the season. I was able to reunite many of the very young ones with their anxious and searching mothers. Fawns are often picked up by people who mistakenly think they are abandoned. Does do not abandon their fawns, and yes, all wildlife moms DO gladly accept their babies back even though they have been touched by humans. One doe remained close by as I pulled a struggling fawn free from a barbed wire fence, I strapped the badly wounded little deer to my wheeled stretcher and as I pulled him toward the truck the doe walked up close, glanced at her fawn, then looked directly at me as if to ask where her fawn would go. How I wished to somehow be able to communicate with the troubled mother, to assure her that I'd make her baby well and return him to her. Two weeks later I drove the fully recovered fawn to the trail where the doe had last been seen. He leaped, without hesitation, from the truck and back into his familiar wild world. Thank you for your continued participation in the welfare of wildlife. Caring for these creatures of the wild is not so much our obligation as it is our privilege. |
Have a new year bright with love.
| 1997 Update |
This past season has been a record-breaking nightmare. The problems confronting wildlife are increasing yearly. Most of these are a direct result of man-made hazards - not the natural course of nature. Otherwise, these shy creatures would still be following their moms down a well-traveled trail of their ancestors. Therefore, I do feel an obligation to help in their recovery. The first day of spring I received my first fawn and, since she recovered quickly from her rescue from a pool of icy water, she was also the first to be released back into her wild world. From that day the pace never slackened and by the end of May I had picked up a staggering total of 48 fawns. This is far above the usual amount so early in the year. Now, in November, the count continues and has spilled over the 100 mark. Indeed, Fawns-R-Us, as a friend scribbled on the dusty Fawnmobile one busy day.
Gradually, over the years, Fawn Rescue has established satellites throughout Sonoma County. Homeowners, serving as volunteer managers, have set up wooded enclosures on their large remote parcels of land on which they raise three to four fawns a year. Fawns are stabilized at the Fawn Rescue facility then transported to the satellite where they are raised for four months. Once they are weaned, recognize their natural foods and are well prepared to live in a wild environment, they are released directly from the satellite to live in familiar territory. This is a gentle, non-stressful release. They are free to return until they no longer need the security of the enclosure. Some fawns linger close to the satellite for a few days, but most of them dash joyfully away to freedom with never a backward glance.
Because we are careful not to overpopulate any area, by varying the number of releases in each section of the county, I am still in need of additional satellites. These satellites are approved, and monitored, by the Department of Fish and Game and operate under a permit issued to Wildlife Fawn Rescue.
As our work-load increases this arrangement has proven to be ideal. I am forever indebted to the friends who are participating in this program so perfectly.
Our education program continues to move forward. We finally got back, from the taxidermist, the exceptionally beautiful bob-cat to add to our collection of native Sonoma County mammals. She has proven to be a real attraction and study of nature.
My thanks, as always, for your continued interest in my work. It means more than you know. No man is an island.
| 1998 Update |
The Fawn Who fell From the Sky![]() |
Our first patient for 1998 was not a fawn, nor a squirrel, but a juvenile skunk. These lovely creatures, that are of so much benefit to the world, deserve every bit as much help when they are in need as do those animals who may not spray when threatened,
but will bite, kick or stab. I captured this injured skunk with a net, placed him in a cage and transported him to our Kenwood vet, Dr. Jon Steel. Back at Fawn Rescue the skunk was comfortably settled in one of the vacant fawn pens and provided with food and water. Not once did this intelligent youngster spray. Gentleman Skunk? Indeed. As a result of the continuous rain, a massive fir tree fell directly onto one of our fawn enclosures, totally demolishing the entire pen - fences, shelter, gates, the works. Just two weeks before, long-term fawns that were finally ready to be free had been moved out. No animal would have survived in that pen. Surely the woodland gods were in charge of this affair. Needless to say, the tree needed to be removed, the area restored, and the enclosure quickly replaced. By the time the work was done our now bigger and better pen began to fill with fawns again. We value these trees for providing shade and isolation for our wild ones and hope that in the future they will remain in an upright position. Is there anyone in the North Bay area who didn't read Gaye LeBaron's touching story of Tom, the Eagle and the Fawn That Fell From The Sky? Tom watched in awe as a golden eagle flying overhead dropped a struggling, seven pound fawn from a height of thirty feet. That's how it works in our predator/prey world. Some win, some lose. This time the fawn was given a second chance at life. Tom hurried home with the badly injured fawn and called Fawn Rescue. I rushed her directly to Dr. Grant Patrick who treated her for severe head trauma. She gasped for breath. She was totally blind. Determined to live, each day this tiny doe fought to overcome the neurological damage. As I massaged her legs she struggled to stand. As I fed her with a small syringe she learned to control her tongue and nurse. Finally, on the seventh day her eyesight returned and she was ready to join her own species. She thrived. She raced and flipped in the air with the joy of just being alive. I am grateful to the ever-compassionate vets who play such a vital role in this wildlife rescue work. Our organization could not survive without them. Thanks to all of you who care. Celebrate nature's magic throughout the coming year. |
| 1999 Update |
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A wish of many years has been granted. A generous friend of both wild and domestic animals has donated a World Wide Web Page to Wildlife Fawn Rescue. This is something I had always hoped for, but never expected to have. We are so proud of our beautiful professional page and very grateful to our benefactor for this long-lasting gift. Check it out at http://www.sonic.net/dana/fawns. Calls for help and advice are coming in from all over the United States. What a great extension of information. Internet is an amazing networking vehicle that constantly proves its worth. |
There is never an end to new experiences at Fawn Rescue. This spring a bumper crop of unusually small fawns, many under four pounds, began to arrive. In May we received an awesome miniature fawn of only 2 ¾ pounds. I never dreamed they could be born so small. Those that lived quickly grew to normal-sized, thriving fawns eager for freedom.
My wildlife book, Leap to Freedom, has been donated to many county school libraries and is proving to be another avenue for teaching. Some school districts are considering its use for extra-credit or as part of their reading curriculum. The book is being used by a specialized learning center to give their students a better understanding of wildlife while improving their learning skills.
Many public functions invite our participation in their outreach programs and county schools continue to request our free wildlife talks. The mounted animals we have accumulated over the years were on display from July through September at Finley Recreation Center’s environmental exhibit, and at Lake Sonoma’s Visitors Center.
When I first began caring for fawns in 1986 a good percentage of those I received had been picked up by people who thought any fawn that was seen alone was in immediate need of help. Those fawns were separated from their moms unnecessarily. Through many years of school talks, presentations, our collection of mounted native wildlife, my book, and now the Web Page, the message is getting out about leaving those fawns alone. Each year we receive a greater percentage of fawns that are ill, or injured, and are in real need of help (which is our purpose), and we receive fewer of the healthy fawns that don’t need to be rescued. The public is getting the message - DON’T TOUCH THE FAWNS.
| 2000 Update |
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If the driver of the car had only cared enough to stop, the four-pound twin fawns found lying beside their mother could have had the immediate attention they so desperately needed. By the time they were noticed, and driven from Annapolis to Fawn Rescue, the smallest fawn was lying on her side gasping for breath and struggling to live. These nearly starved babies, too weak to nurse, were fed with a syringe, one ounce of nourishment every hour. They finally opened their eyes, then held up their heads, to assure me they intended to live. And live they did - flipping and leaping as their strength returned. It helped that they could quickly be transferred to one of our out-shelters to be with other fawns. At night they curled together in one mass of spotted hair - with a few long ears jutting out at odd angles. |
The generic fawn formula we have used since Fawn Rescue was founded was discontinued. After much research we located an animal nutrition manufacturer that, at our request, has produced a formula specifically blended to satisfy the nutritional needs of Black-tailed fawns. This will be the first formula of its kind and of great benefit not only to our fawns, but to all Coastal Black-tailed deer. We are pleased that this company is so willing to work with us for the well-being of the animals in our care.
Due to more wildlife hazards in Sonoma County the number of trips to our local vets has increased. We are grateful to have these skilled and caring people so willing to help. Fawn spirit is not broken even when bones are. We watch in amazement as they hobble purposefully toward the feeders in their cumbersome braces.
Even though we are clearly FAWN Rescue, we continue to be called to rescue adult deer. We help when we can. One yearling doe had been kept tied in a harness in a very small enclosed backyard since the spring of 1999. We brought this emaciated, tame, very lonesome doe back with us to teach her to be a wild deer. Because of our intervention, today she roams free with her own species in a protected, privately owned, wildlife refuge.
Our free wildlife school talks continue to be received with enthusiasm. During the months when school is not in session our mounted education animals are on display to the public at Spring Lake Visitor's Center.
As founder and director of Fawn Rescue, I received an award from Earth Elders of Sonoma County in recognition of our devotion to the work necessary to sustain life on this planet for future generations. It's an honor to be included in this dedicated group of older adults who have accomplished so much during their lifetime. Those of us who have lived long enough to be called 'elders' owe a great deal to this earth that we have used for so many years.
Wishing you a bright and beautiful year.
![]() | 2001 Update |
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This year Fawn Rescue has been involved in a number of opportunities for getting the word out to the public about our important public service work with wildlife. Channel 50, Santa Rosa, filmed a short news segment on driving with caution, which included our many rescues due to highway hazards. We also participated in filming for a new program "Everybody's Angels" shown on Cable Channel 23, San Francisco. Another film, made for Channel 4's popular "Bay Area Backroads" included a Fawn Rescue release, an injury rescue and treatment, and a wildlife education talk given at Sonoma Charter School. These important parts of our work don't usually get the attention they deserve. Recently, we have been written up in articles from the San Francisco Chronicle, Press Democrat, Sonoma Index-Tribune, Kenwood Press, The Independent Coast Observer, and the Upbeat Times. |
Over the years Fawn Rescue has developed an ideal method for raising and releasing fawns. We now have six skilled, committed volunteers who work individually with these delicate, wild creatures. Each of us are homeowners living in remote areas throughout the county. The fawn is taken to a vet when necessary, then stabilized at the Fawn Rescue facility in Kenwood before being transferred to one of these out-shelters. Each out-shelter manager takes responsibility for usually no more than four fawns. The fawns are raised in safe, secluded enclosures where they relate to their own species and are exposed to only one human during their four-month stay in captivity. Once they are weaned, recognize their natural foods, and are prepared to survive in the wild, the gate is opened and they are free to adjust, as a small family, in the surrounding, familiar territory. Our unique, and proven, method prevents unnecessary stress to the fawns, and to us. The alternate, and most widely used method is to raise an entire year's fawns together in one enclosure. Once they are raised, they are captured and transported to unfamiliar territory where they are released as one large group. This procedure can quickly overpopulate an area and is a highly traumatic experience for the animals. We are pleased that we finally have the experienced volunteers it takes to make Fawn Rescue's ideal method work.
After many years of wishing and telling of our need, we now have an accomplished and environmentally aware Education Director. Ask the children how great she is! They are all fascinated and full of amazing questions. It is against our polity to use live animals in classrooms. We believe their use for public education causes stress to the animal and conveys the wrong message to the children -that it is okay to keep these wild animals in captivity, or possibly as pets. Therefore, our talks are centered around a collection of native, mounted wildlife. These animals died from accidents or illness and are now being used to teach our children. Our latest addition is a magnificent vulture. A special permit from U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service allows us to have this migratory bird as a valuable part of our education exhibit.
As founder and director of Fawn Rescue, I was honored at the 'Points of Lights Celebration' in San Francisco, with a U.S. Congressional award as one of the twenty-five top volunteers in the Bay Area. I am extremely grateful to our dedicated staff of volunteers for making Fawn Rescue worthy of such recognition. No man is an island.
Fawn Rescue continues to improve and grow, and with each step we benefit both the animals entrusted to our care, and the concerned citizens who live within our borders. We sincerely acknowledge that we could not carry on this specialized work without you, our friends.
We humans see the world out of the windows of our own small room and think we've seen it all, but each species has its own window and its own view. - Lorraine Anderson
Marjorie Davis - Director
| 2002 Update |
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One cold, soggy afternoon in May a gigantic oak tree cracked off at its base and crashed into our smallest fawn enclosure. The entire 45' pen was covered with branches, leaves, enormous trunk and limbs. Smaller brush, trees, fences, and posts were demolished under its power and mammoth size. After the deafening crash, all was quiet: I saw no movement from my four tiny fawns. As I desperately forced open the gate and tried to peer through the tangle of leaves, the two biggest fawns, less than ten pounds each, slowly pushed their way toward me through the heavy fallen brush, gingerly stepping over low limbs and crawling under larger ones. I marveled that they still lived. Then quickly behind them stumbled the two tiny ones no more than a few days old. They were extremely frightened and hungry, but uninjured. Where had they fled, to avoid the crashing debris that covered them? After giving each one its bottle I clipped and sawed until dark, cutting a small path for the fawns to move through. As I worked, they stayed close, nibbling on the freshly fallen leaves. By May we had rescued thirty-six fawns and our large enclosure was filled, Jan's shelter for infant fawns was filled, so we had no place to transfer these four little ones. The next day was spent clearing out as much as possible without using power saws. Fences were extended, to prevent predators from walking up the tree base and into the pen. Permanent repair of fences and the removal of the huge limbs and branches, still resting on fences and on the floor of the enclosure, must wait until these four were old enough to be transferred. A lovely apple tree the fawns enjoyed lying under, while sampling its leaves, was totally destroyed. The pen looked bare without it. But the fawns soon settled down in their vastly altered home, while we moved on with the demands of the season. |
![]() Dr. Grant Patrick and Friend Photo by Marj Davis |
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Problems confronting wildlife increase yearly and, at times, seem insurmountable. Last year was a record season. we totaled out at 101 fawns!! This season will surely be a repeat. Nevertheless, our dedication to helping wildlife survive continues undaunted. Sonoma County's wildlife is being gradually pushed back into pockets of land where there are still a few corridors for them to travel through, where there is still water and natural food. Therefore, more wild creatures are being seen and picked up by humans, more illness and injuries are taking their toll. If you do see a wild baby alone, remember it has not been abandoned. It is waiting where it was left by its mother, who must travel in search of nourishment. She will return to care for it much better than we can. Pass on the word to leave them alone. In our free wildlife talks to school children we repeat this message over and over again. Our magnificent vulture, with outstretched wings, is back from the taxidermist's. Julie is now using it in her excellent lectures, along with our nine other mounted native wildlife exhibits. Children are fascinated. This season the big push has been to recruit drivers to help with the transportation of our fawns. These emergency calls must be responded to at once. The public cannot safely bring fawns to us in their vehicles as they can do with birds or small mammals. We are grateful to Sonoma County Animal Regulation for working closely with us by bringing fawns in, or calling Fawn Rescue to meet their driver, when they perceive that a fawn may-be saved. Specialized animal protocols are a new addition to the permit issued to wildlife facilities by the CA Department of Fish and Game. Fawn Rescue's fawn protocol has been accepted as a part of this permit. These protocols are a positive step toward assuring proper care of the animals with which we are entrusted. Marjorie Davis -Director Everything tells the story of the universe - the wind, trees, birds, stones. Today it is harder to hear them. Thomas Berry
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| 2003 Update |
![]() In the Fawnmobile - heading out Photo by Jan Kennedy |
Fawn Rescue is licensed to care for all wildlife, except birds. In addition, a special permit authorizes us to provide long-term care for deer, both fawns and adult. Fawns are our specialty, our focus, and our dedication. However, there are times when a caller asks for help with an injured adult deer. A young woman found a doe lying beside the highway in a dazed condition. When I arrived at the scene the doe was gone. I began a wide, slow search, knowing she could not have traveled far. Roadside fences allowed no corridor through which she could escape from further danger, so it was important to find her. I soon saw the doe swaying weakly against a gate, trying to reach the open space beyond. I tranquilized her as she stood in the tiny alcove. She quickly folded her body down onto the driveway. I drove back to the woman's home, calling out for help. Three of us struggled to lift this large deer into the truck. She offered no resistance. We drove back to the rear of the woman's property and carefully lowered the doe near the bank of a natural stream. She was treated for head trauma, propped up on her sternum and left to recover. Luckily, she had no broken bones, no serious abrasions or bleeding. That evening the doe stood unsteadily, but surely, on her feet in her safe haven. By morning she was gone, her hoof prints showing clearly along the stream bank. |
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Each year we learn. New experiences continue to remind us that we will never truly understand all the ways of the wild. Some of you may remember our experience a few years ago with "the fawn that fell from the sky". A golden eagle had lost its grip and dropped this newborn fawn from a height of 30 feet. After many weeks of convalescence the fawn recovered. And again this summer, as our fawns slept in their fenced, highly protected outshelter, a small, six-week old doe was killed by a golden eagle. Who would expect such danger to come from the sky? This healthy, rapidly growing fawn could not be lifted through the oak foliage by this powerful predator, so it flew off without its prey, dropping a feather as it fled. Later, in another wild and natural outshelter, surrounded by 8 foot double-fencing, a mountain lion killed one of our older fawns. We raise these fawns in wild habitats, far away from humans and domestic animals. This is essential for them to maintain their wildness. We do understand, and accept, that predators are a natural part of these remote habitats, and that these acts are a part of nature. We are finding that as our natural habitat disappears, and predator and prey are crowded together in their search for food and space, these incidents are becoming more difficult to prevent. Nevertheless, it was a devastating experience for Jan, who willing gives so much of herself to raising and releasing these fawns, and for Hal, who is dedicated to preserving the habitat and the future of all wildlife. Each year it becomes more difficult for us to repair the severe injuries that fawns receive as a direct result of human interference. Cars, fences, dogs off-leash, etc. This season many more fawns were hit on roads and highways. These accidents are unavoidable, but if the driver would simply stop to see if the helpless creature was still alive and notify us, more of them could be saved. Time is crucial to its survival. And when that call does come, we must go. At the sound of the ringing phone everything is put on hold: previous appointments, guests, and partially cooked meals. These calls are always emergencies. An injured fawn can't wait for us to finish dinner. A newly orphaned fawn can't schedule a convenient time for us to rescue it from a roadside. Any time a fawn can be walked up to, and picked up, it is in deep trouble. We need drivers to help us in this traumatic and demanding volunteer work. Julie continues to respond to all requests for our free wildlife talks. Educating Sonoma County children about wildlife is an important priority for Fawn Rescue. We feel that if we charge for this program many schools would be unable to provide their students with this essential contact with nature. Call Julie at (707) 935-1837 to schedule an appointment.
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