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By EARL
MCRAE Her name is Linda
Laurus and you can call this crisis: The call of
the wild.
A call so important, so necessary,
and if you care about helping others in genuine
need of help, if you have a heart of compassion
for small, wild animals that are orphaned, sick,
injured; animals that have a right to live,
animals that are integral to our ecology, you can
rise to the cause, you can save the Rideau Valley
Wildlife Sanctuary from the threatening death
that would be so wrong.
You who might be a carpenter. A
plumber. A drywaller. A floorer. A septic system
expert. A supplier of lumber and building
materials. You who might be willing and able to
volunteer your services to the Rideau Valley
Wildlife Sanctuary for free, or at discount, so
as to save from abandonment the small, wild
animals in the loving custody of Linda Laurus.
You who might simply want to do
whatever you can to help. Because it's the right
thing to do. Because, at such moments in life,
it's what we, as members of the human family,
should do.
---
It's noon when I drive up to
the Rideau Valley Wildlife Sanctuary near North
Gower. The sanctuary is the 135-year-old
farmhouse of Linda Laurus, 44, single, with a
life-time love of animals and, since 2005, those
that are small, of the wild, afflicted, and in
need of rehabilitation.
VOLUNTEER HELPERS
The RVWS is a volunteer-based,
non-profit, registered charity, the only one of
its mandate in the Ottawa area, and founder Linda
Laurus is a licensed, authorized, small animals
custodian. She has a small group of unpaid
volunteers -- caring citizens who share her
caring and concern for the animals -- along with
some veterinary students delighted to help and
learn.
Since the RVWS opened, it has
taken in hundreds of small, wild animals.
Skunks. Rabbits, Chipmunks.
Squirrels. Raccoons. Weasels. Foxes.
Groundhogs.Fishers. And others, mostly babies,
that without Linda Laurus and her sanctuary where
they are rehabilitated and then released back
into the wild, would face almost certain death.
When not caring around the
clock for the little animals, Linda Laurus tries
to find time to work from her farmhouse as an
environmental consultant for the government. Her
income is not large. If money was her heart for
the animals, she'd be a millionaire.
The animals are her priority.
And, ironically, the very success of the RVWS is
why she is in debt, needing to borrow from the
bank, and why the RVWS finds itself clinging to
survive, desperate for help from those of you can
help, want to help, who care.
The animals, in their cages,
are all throughout her house in a noisy organized
clutter, taking up almost all the space, with the
scurrying Linda and volunteers preparing
medications, formulas to be given to small mouths
by syringe, food to be gobbled up.
In a cage near the door is a
baby groundhog. Next to a cage with two tiny
squirrels that could fit in your hand. Down from
a cage with five, little, squawking, clambering
squirrels from one litter beside several cages
with baby raccoons. "At morning feeding
time," says Laurus, "you need ear
plugs. There's 'I'm hungry' and 'I'm really
hungry.' "
The distressed animals are
usually found by ordinary citizens who wrap them
in towels or blankets, and, often not knowing of
the RVWS, phone the Ottawa Humane Society or
veterinarians, who then refer them to the
sanctuary.
"The animals can be found
anywhere. We've had baby squirrels and raccoons
found nesting under the hoods of old cars
destined for the wreckers. One little squirrel
brought in, all his front paws were burned from
the hot engine of a car."
She nods towards a raccoon in a
cage. "That's Miss Muffet. She was found in
a garbage bag in a garbage can. She was about six
weeks old and in bad shape. She's now 11 months
old and healthy. We'll be releasing her into a
rural drop-off spot this week." Laurus' eyes
sadden: "Yesterday, a baby squirrel came in
close to death, and there was nothing I could do
to help it. It succumbed."
VISIBILITY PROBLEM
The RVWS, as vital as it is,
suffers from a lack of public awareness
proportionate to the big registered charities
with their professionals, their abilities to suck
in the huge charity bucks. Smaller charities,
such as the RVWS, get trampled in the stampede of
the behemoths. And, as is the case with the RVWS,
their government/foundations donor streams are
debilitatingly limited, or non-existent. They
rely on word-of-mouth and benevolent individuals.
---
It breaks Linda Laurus' heart
that, increasingly, she is having to say no to
taking in animals for lack of space. But there is
an answer. The old, abandoned stable back of the
farmhouse that can be converted into a shelter.
But the RVWS needs the money it
doesn't have. The estimated renovation cost:
$35,000. A start has been made through a few
beneficent volunteers, but much more is needed,
more expertise.
Are you such a person? Can you
offer your skills? Will you step up for the
special Linda Laurus, the non-profit charity
Rideau Valley Wildlife Sanctuary, the small
animals, to not let this service of tender mercy
die?
Linda, and the RVWS, can be
reached by phoning 613-258-9480. You can leave a
message, Linda will return your call. You can
e-mail: rideauwildlife@ripnet.com. If you wish to
donate, you can do so online:
www.canadahelps.org. You can write: Linda Laurus,
Rideau Valley Wildlife Sanctuary, P.O. Box 266,
North Gower, Ont. KOA 2TO.
The call of the wild. The
orphaned, the sick, the injured. A mercy call for
you.
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