Last weeks wild last days of winter has left the Prince Rupert Wildlife Rehab shelter damaged and in need of some 25,000 dollars in repairs.
It makes for a major economic burden for the retired couple that runs the local sanctuary for wildlife and who rely on donations to help keep the shelter a going concern.
The unusual nature of last weeks storm and the subsequent damage make for a call to action that local residents may wish to answer.
Thursday's Daily News provides a look at just how severe the damage was last week and how local residents can lend a hand in getting the shelter back on track.
WILDLIFE SHELTER BATTERED, BRUISED BY SNOWSTORM
By Leanne Ritchie
The Daily News
Thursday, April 05, 2007
Page one
Usually, the kind volunteers at the Prince Rupert Wildlife Rehab Shelter get to heal the wings of bald eagles and feed abandoned baby porcupines found in Northwestern B.C.
But after last week’s snow storm, it was the shelter itself that ended up injured and in dire need of help.
The unusual storm last Wednesday dropped a foot and a half of snow on top of the shelter’s rehabilitation pens and then it froze. The weight of the ice twisted steel beams and bend down the wire mesh of several shelter pens, collapsing others, said Tobbi Gjelsvik of the Prince Rupert Wildlife Rehab Shelter.
Repairing the damage will cost in the neighbourhood of $25,000 and is putting an added strain on Gunther and Nancy Golinia, the retired couple who for the past 17 years have dedicated all their time and money to saving injured animals in their remote corner of B.C.’s wilderness.
“We are really in a bind as far as covering the cost to rebuild these pens,” said Gjelsvik. “This affects the shelter’s ability to take in animals and when you have pens out of commission, it puts a strain on the animals that you can take.”
The Golinias are best known for their work with eagles, however they take in all kinds of wildlife such as injured owls, deer and mink. They’ve even helped rehabilitate such exotics as a frigate bird, native to Mexico, that got lost in a storm and crash-landed onto a B.C. Ferry two years ago.
The Prince Rupert Wildlife Rehab Shelter takes in 700 animals per year and the success rate of animals released back in to the wild is 80 per cent.
Gunther, who is in his 70s, is known to run out at any time day or night to pick up an injured animal while Nancy stays at the shelter to carefully monitor the intravenous drips, medicine and food intake of their patients.
They take in animals from the Queen Charlotte Islands east to Smithers and from the B.C. border to the Central Coast.
Their property, located on the eastern edge of Prince Rupert, is a collection of eagle pens, heated aviaries and covered barns that house their patients. Deers often graze in the grassy area in between the pens while the high pitched cry of eagles stretching their wings fill the air.
Working in gum boots and flannel shirts, the couple use their decades of knowledge to look after creatures that most people only get to see on postcards.
No one who has visited the property can deny there is something special about the Golinias and the work that they do, Gjelsvik said.
“And it helps our area for the Golinias to provide that service,” he said.
“But this last week has been very stressful. We are looking for any help we can get.”
The storm brought added tragedy, collapsing some of the pens and killing several birds, while a few others managed to get free before they were fully healed, putting their chance of survival at risk, noted Gjelsvik.
Since the storm, the couple have been working tirelessly to repair the damage, so busy that haven’t even been able to notify the community about what has taken place, he said.
“They are out there lugging big pieces of timber around. I keep telling them, don’t do that,” he said. “And it’s been really stressful for the animals.”
Gjelsvik said there’s only so many times the shelter can ask the community for help but they are really in a bind.
Anyone who can help the shelter is asked to contact Gjelsvik at tobbi@citytel.net or call him at (250) 624-1120.
Donations to the shelter’s suppliers would be gratefully accepted (for charities bound by gaming fund regulations) in the form of labour or in cash.
***Correction: The Daily news corrected the phone number for donations which should have read 627-1120***
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment