ROCKFISH WILDLIFE SANCTUARY INC

Programs
Wildlife Rehabilitation and Education
The Rockfish Wildlife Sanctuary has had another busy year, continuing to care for thousands of injured and orphaned wild animals until they can be released back into their natural habitat. In 2024, RWS cared for a record 1,012 patients and gained 4 new non-releasable education ambassador animals, bringing our total to 13 ambassadors. RWS was staffed by 1 executive director, 4 wildlife rehabilitators, 3 interns, and 13 volunteers during the busy season of April through September. All personnel working on-site with wildlife are permitted at the state and federal levels. We were staffed from 7am to 7pm each day during our busy season, 7 days per week, and volunteers put in more than 4,100 hours of time. We received about 1,650 wildlife hotline calls as well throughout 2024. People contact our hotline with questions about wildlife or needing advice on how to help a wild animal in crisis. Our staff provides help connecting with volunteer transporters if the rescuer needs help getting an animal in need into our professional care. Our volunteer transporters drove over 5,000 miles cumulatively to help pick up new patients, transfer patients between other permitted wildlife care facilities, and bring them to release sites when ready. We release wildlife on private rural lands with permission from the property owner, occasionally opting for a "soft-release" where we provide additional food and monitoring until we are confident in the animal's ability to care for itself in the wild. In addition to the continued success of our rehabilitation program, education continued to be a major program during 2024 and crucial to our mission. We completely redesigned our website, www.rockfishwildlifesanctuary.org, to have more wildlife information, animal crisis advice, easier navigation, and quicker ways to contact us. We presented 49 educational programs as well, including both on- and off-site outreach programs featuring our education ambassador animal team. We continued bi-monthly educational emails as well, engaging our community and supporters with wildlife information and updates about current patients at RWS. Our paid summer internship program was another success, representing our commitment to training the next generation of wildlife rehabilitators and conservationists. Our confluence of wildlife rehabilitation and public education constitute our continued progress towards forging a brighter future for wild animals and humans alike.GeographiesNot indicatedDatesJan 1, 2024 – Dec 31, 2024Source990No causes providedNo populations provided–$324.9K
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