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By EARL
MCRAE "It is just so
incredible, a dream come true." -- Linda
Laurus
If this was an animated Disney movie, the
little animals would be up and dancing all around
her farmhouse. The chipmunks holding hands with
the squirrels holding hands with the skunks
holding hands with the racoons holding hands with
the groundhogs holding hands with the foxes
holding hands with the weasels, and they'd be
hugging, kissing, skipping along the table tops,
window ledges, and singing:
"Just when we were thinking / Hope
was all gone
You opened your hearts / You got it on.
For us, for mom Linda / For all our tomorrows
No more tears / No more sorrows."
Linda Laurus, trying hard not to cry, is
overwhelmed at the goodness and generosity of all
those who, answering the call of the wild, rose
to the fore to help save her volunteer-based,
non-profit, registered charity Rideau Valley
Wildlife Sanctuary near North Gower from imminent
death. "It has all been so amazing. I don't
know how to thank them."
The only such operation in the area with a
mandate to take in, rehabilitate, and release
back into nature little animals, many of them
babies, that have been abandoned or orphaned or
injured or gone astray, the RVWS under the
licenced expert Linda Laurus, who founded it, has
been the saviour to hundreds of tiny critters
since 2005, the need so successful that Linda,
who has been harbouring them in the living
quarters of her old farmhouse, has virtually run
out of space, but her love for God's small
creatures will not let her deny them.
Heartbreakingly for her, it had reached the
point where the unpaid Linda Laurus and her small
group of dedicated volunteers would soon have to
say no to sheltering the animals, which has
always been nutritionally and medically costly
for a small charity -- one of such noble cause,
but, alas, little public awareness that severely
crimped its efforts to raise funds. The sanctuary
was only weeks away from having to go under.
There was, however, an answer. The old,
rundown, unused stable at the back of Laurus'
house. But to convert it into a spacious home for
the animals would be expensive, about $35,000,
money the RVWS simply didn't have.
Two weeks ago, I wrote a piece about the
sanctuary's plight -- accompanied by photographer
Tony Caldwell's wonderful photos of Linda and her
animals -- appealing for donations as well as
volunteer carpenters, plumbers, electricians,
handypersons of any kind, along with donated
building supplies to renovate the stable.
The response? More than $20,000 from caring
citizens and businesses, donations still coming
in. On top of that, volunteer carpenters,
plumbers, electricians, and other trades people.
The project under the expert work, and guidance,
of two beautiful people in particular who were
the first to offer their services: Michael Kruse,
a construction manager with Aecon Buildings of
Ottawa, and his sister Carol. Working his
professional contacts, Kruse has come up with
volunteers and donated building materials.
His children, Hailey and Natasha, have gone
door-to-door with their red wagon, soliciting
funds and needed small items, such as towels.
"Businesses," says Linda, "have
been donating interior doors and frames, new
exterior windows, new interior viewing windows,
paint, counters. The volunteers are working on
sinks, roof insulation, roof repairs, flooring,
ceiling tiles, plumbing. Mike and Carol are
organizing all of the labour. The support has
been incredible."
So much so that the new home for the little
animals, says Linda Laurus, is expected to be
ready by the first week of July. The sundry RVWS
operational expenses, though, are an ongoing
thing, the need for compassionate funding.
If you wish to support the sanctuary of the
amazing Linda Laurus, you can do so through its
website at www.rideauwildlife.org and by
e-mailing her at rideauwildlife@ripnet.com or by
calling 613-258-9480.
Her mailing address is:
Linda Laurus, Rideau Valley Wildlife
Sanctuary, PO Box 266, North Gower, Ont. KOA 2TO.
Donations can also be made through
www.canadahelps.org and tax receipts will be
given.
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