I can't complain that I have nothing to do at the moment, I seem to be spending most of my time feeding animals.
We got a call late yesterday to pick up some noisy miner chicks from a local vet. Donna went to pick them up while I was, you guessed it, feeding the animals. She was amazed at how small they were. I'm amazed at how much they can eat and how much they poo. Those white dots on the cloth under them are about half the size of the poos these little guys do each time they get fed.
There's a knack to feeding them too. I get a piece of their food in the tweezers, then I gently tap the side of their basket. The movement makes them think Mum or Dad has just returned with some food and they open their mouths. Then I just shovel it in and repeat until the bowl is empty.
As you can see from the pics, they aren't even old enough to stand up yet.
Then we have the ringtails. That's Pinky on the left and Yoda on the right. Perky is of exploring somewhere, probably on Donna's back.
The ringtails are about the easiest to look after now. All we have to do is put their food in the cage and let them at it. It would be nice if they didn't make so much mess though.
Last but not least, we've got Gollum, the brushtail.
We were bottle feeding him for a while, but it wasn't working out to well as he had to work to hard to get his milk out of the bottle. We've now gone back to using a syringe to feed him which works much better and we also know exactly how much he's having in each feed.
As you can see in this picture he's also having some solids. That's a mix of banana and honey, with a little bit of milk (Divetelact) that Donna's feeding him. He's also starting to lap his milk, which is a relief. The last time I tried him lapping he was so slow it was painful. This morning when I tried him it was much easier.
This is the beginning of the silly season for wildlife carers as we come into spring. Unfortunately, we can't take on too many animals at the moment as I'm off to Armidale for uni next month, for two weeks. With Donna working there won't be anyone able to devote the time to feed baby animals as much as they need, so we need to hold off getting anymore until I get back. The possums will be okay by then and the noisy miners will have been moved to another carer.
Friday, August 22, 2008
Sunday, August 17, 2008
On the phones
I mentioned recently that Donna and I had attended BARN's AGM. One of the things that came up at the meeting was the fact that they're desperately looking for volunteers to man the rescue phone occassionally. At the moment, Natasja our president does it on the weekends, Binnie our secretary does it during the week and two of our support members, Len and Barbara, do one afternoon a week.
Donna suggested we volunteer for one weekend a month. After spending the last twelve years answering telephones at work, I wasn't too keen on doing it at home, even if it was for a good cause.
Well anyway, we're on the rescue phone this weekend.
We've found the easiest part of the job is dealing with the people that call up. A lot of the calls are from the RSPCA, but most are members of the public. Sometimes we give advice on what to do before a carer gets there, but usually it's just a case of getting their details, then getting a carer out to them.
The hard part is getting carers in some areas. Parts of north Brisbane are a bit of a blackspot for us and we don't like to send anyone too far, or too often. On a Saturday morning it's not unusual to get a carer when they're out doing their shopping too. In that case, they have to finish their shopping, go home, then go out to the rescue.
We've had a couple of funny ones too. There was the call passed onto us from the RSPCA about a bird with a broken wing. The contact number they'd been given turned out to be a butcher's shop and they knew nothing about an injured bird. I suspect any birds he may have had were beyond help from us.
Another one was a kookaburra that couldn't fly that was in someone's front yard. The carer that went out called us back to say it was actually a tawny frogmouth. The colouring is very similar in the two birds, but the beak is completely different.
We even had a call last night from the ambos. They'd found an injured ringtail possum in a shopping centre carpark while attending a patient. The ambo was a New Zealander and said the possum didn't look like any of the possums back in NZ. The NZ possums are actually brushtails imported from Australia and are now a pest.
It was actually nice to get a call back from the ambo later to make sure the carer had managed to find the possum. They'd had to take their patient to hospital, so couldn't hang around. She thanked us for what we do, which seemed funny considering all that they do, but it was certainly appreciated.
It's definitely a good learning experience and we'll be doing it again next month. It's coming into the silly season (spring) so it's probably going to be busier too.
Now if only we could get more carers that are available for rescues and some more telephone operators for the other weekends.
If you live in Brisbane and are interested in becomming a wildlife carer, or would just like to help out as a support member, check out the website here, or give us a call on the rescue number 0405056066.
Donna suggested we volunteer for one weekend a month. After spending the last twelve years answering telephones at work, I wasn't too keen on doing it at home, even if it was for a good cause.
Well anyway, we're on the rescue phone this weekend.
We've found the easiest part of the job is dealing with the people that call up. A lot of the calls are from the RSPCA, but most are members of the public. Sometimes we give advice on what to do before a carer gets there, but usually it's just a case of getting their details, then getting a carer out to them.
The hard part is getting carers in some areas. Parts of north Brisbane are a bit of a blackspot for us and we don't like to send anyone too far, or too often. On a Saturday morning it's not unusual to get a carer when they're out doing their shopping too. In that case, they have to finish their shopping, go home, then go out to the rescue.
We've had a couple of funny ones too. There was the call passed onto us from the RSPCA about a bird with a broken wing. The contact number they'd been given turned out to be a butcher's shop and they knew nothing about an injured bird. I suspect any birds he may have had were beyond help from us.
Another one was a kookaburra that couldn't fly that was in someone's front yard. The carer that went out called us back to say it was actually a tawny frogmouth. The colouring is very similar in the two birds, but the beak is completely different.
We even had a call last night from the ambos. They'd found an injured ringtail possum in a shopping centre carpark while attending a patient. The ambo was a New Zealander and said the possum didn't look like any of the possums back in NZ. The NZ possums are actually brushtails imported from Australia and are now a pest.
It was actually nice to get a call back from the ambo later to make sure the carer had managed to find the possum. They'd had to take their patient to hospital, so couldn't hang around. She thanked us for what we do, which seemed funny considering all that they do, but it was certainly appreciated.
It's definitely a good learning experience and we'll be doing it again next month. It's coming into the silly season (spring) so it's probably going to be busier too.
Now if only we could get more carers that are available for rescues and some more telephone operators for the other weekends.
If you live in Brisbane and are interested in becomming a wildlife carer, or would just like to help out as a support member, check out the website here, or give us a call on the rescue number 0405056066.
Monday, August 11, 2008
Balls
Just a small piece of advice if you ever see a dead kangaroo by the side of the road.
Okay, this won't apply to a lot of our readers, since you don't have roos in your country, but it may have some relevance to other animals too.
How can I put this in a nice way that won't offend our more masculine readers? Some animals are proportioned differently to humans in the bollocks department. The reason I'm making this statement is because of the rescue we got called out to tonight. It's okay, David Attenborough's Life of Mammals finished last Monday, so we weren't bothered about having our TV viewing interrupted.
It was a report of a kangaroo that had been hit by a car. The person reporting it was worried it may have a joey* in the pouch.
The three of us, Donna, our friend Lesleigh, and I drove about five minutes away with our rescue kit ready, including my university disection kit in case we had to cut a joey out of the pouch. We drove around looking for a dead roo and finally found one underneath the Armco, pulled over, and jumped out to check it over.
I grabbed it by the tail and pulled it further from the road. Rigor mortis had already set in, something we have a bit of experience in with rescues this weekend. While Donna and Lesleigh were walking down with the rescue kit from where they'd parked the car out of the way, I pulled the poor creatures legs apart for a better look.
Standing up, the animal probably wouldn't have come up to my waste, but between its legs were a pair of male parts of the anatomy the size of my fist**. There wasn't going to be a joey here.
We couldn't find any other kangaroos in the area, so we assumed this was the one that had been reported.
So next time you find a dead roo and you think that big lump is a joey in the pouch because you think they're too big to be balls, doesn't mean they aren't balls.
It doesn't make you any less of a man. Honest. They're built different.
-----
* Joey refers to the baby of any marsupial, not just kangaroos. They do tend to look very similar when they're really young though. We often get asked if we look after joeys. Well, yes we do, just not the kind of joeys you're thinking of.
** Okay, maybe not the size of my fist, but definitely a big handful. Check out page ten of the last BARN newsletter to see what sort of proportion I'm talking about. That's a ringtail that Mandy's holding.
Okay, this won't apply to a lot of our readers, since you don't have roos in your country, but it may have some relevance to other animals too.
How can I put this in a nice way that won't offend our more masculine readers? Some animals are proportioned differently to humans in the bollocks department. The reason I'm making this statement is because of the rescue we got called out to tonight. It's okay, David Attenborough's Life of Mammals finished last Monday, so we weren't bothered about having our TV viewing interrupted.
It was a report of a kangaroo that had been hit by a car. The person reporting it was worried it may have a joey* in the pouch.
The three of us, Donna, our friend Lesleigh, and I drove about five minutes away with our rescue kit ready, including my university disection kit in case we had to cut a joey out of the pouch. We drove around looking for a dead roo and finally found one underneath the Armco, pulled over, and jumped out to check it over.
I grabbed it by the tail and pulled it further from the road. Rigor mortis had already set in, something we have a bit of experience in with rescues this weekend. While Donna and Lesleigh were walking down with the rescue kit from where they'd parked the car out of the way, I pulled the poor creatures legs apart for a better look.
Standing up, the animal probably wouldn't have come up to my waste, but between its legs were a pair of male parts of the anatomy the size of my fist**. There wasn't going to be a joey here.
We couldn't find any other kangaroos in the area, so we assumed this was the one that had been reported.
So next time you find a dead roo and you think that big lump is a joey in the pouch because you think they're too big to be balls, doesn't mean they aren't balls.
It doesn't make you any less of a man. Honest. They're built different.
-----
* Joey refers to the baby of any marsupial, not just kangaroos. They do tend to look very similar when they're really young though. We often get asked if we look after joeys. Well, yes we do, just not the kind of joeys you're thinking of.
** Okay, maybe not the size of my fist, but definitely a big handful. Check out page ten of the last BARN newsletter to see what sort of proportion I'm talking about. That's a ringtail that Mandy's holding.
Friday, August 8, 2008
The Musketeers
I promised the other day I'd post some pictures of the lorikeets, so here they are.
I could watch these little fellars all day, the way they climb around the cage, preen each other and chatter to you if you say something to them.
They're really messy birds though. Unlike most birds that lift up a bit, relax and poo straight down, the loris prefer to lift their tail, squeeze and shoot it out to the side. That red sheet in the background is covered in lorkeet poo and so is the ground outside the cage. We had a Japanese exchange student visited the other day with my in-laws to see the animals, he very nearly got pooed on.
We actually have four birds, but the other one was on a lower perch at the time and it was too hard to get a decent picture with all four of them in it.
As you can see in these pictures, they're all juveniles. You can tell that by the fact their beaks are still a bit black. The adults have completely red beaks. Once they're a bit older and all healthy they'll be released together so they can look after each other.
I could watch these little fellars all day, the way they climb around the cage, preen each other and chatter to you if you say something to them.
They're really messy birds though. Unlike most birds that lift up a bit, relax and poo straight down, the loris prefer to lift their tail, squeeze and shoot it out to the side. That red sheet in the background is covered in lorkeet poo and so is the ground outside the cage. We had a Japanese exchange student visited the other day with my in-laws to see the animals, he very nearly got pooed on.
We actually have four birds, but the other one was on a lower perch at the time and it was too hard to get a decent picture with all four of them in it.
As you can see in these pictures, they're all juveniles. You can tell that by the fact their beaks are still a bit black. The adults have completely red beaks. Once they're a bit older and all healthy they'll be released together so they can look after each other.
Monday, August 4, 2008
New animals
We've got some new members of the Porter family at the moment.
On Saturday I did a rescue at Redland Bay for a concussed lorikeet, nothing unusual there. Because it's a juvenile lori we'll be keeping him for a while, so we've got some company for him, another three lorikeets. We call them the three musketeers, yes there's four of them, there were four in the book/movie too. Pics to come.
While we were at Natasja's picking up Athos, Aramis and d'Artagnan we mentioned possums and Natasja said she had a little 100 gram brushy that was looking for a carer. He'd only been in care for two days after his mum had been attacked and killed by a dog. So now he lives with us.
Our first thought on seeing him was that he looked more like a kangaroo joey than a possum. We've called him Gollum, for obvious reasons, even though he won't always look like that. He's one of the easiest possums we've had as far as feeding is concerned. As soon as he see's the syringe full of Divetelact he's wide awake and we usually have to refill it.
Cute or what? Hard to imagine he'll be 4.5 kg when he's fully grown.
We always have tissues handy when we feed him, he gets milk all over him.
On Saturday I did a rescue at Redland Bay for a concussed lorikeet, nothing unusual there. Because it's a juvenile lori we'll be keeping him for a while, so we've got some company for him, another three lorikeets. We call them the three musketeers, yes there's four of them, there were four in the book/movie too. Pics to come.
While we were at Natasja's picking up Athos, Aramis and d'Artagnan we mentioned possums and Natasja said she had a little 100 gram brushy that was looking for a carer. He'd only been in care for two days after his mum had been attacked and killed by a dog. So now he lives with us.
Our first thought on seeing him was that he looked more like a kangaroo joey than a possum. We've called him Gollum, for obvious reasons, even though he won't always look like that. He's one of the easiest possums we've had as far as feeding is concerned. As soon as he see's the syringe full of Divetelact he's wide awake and we usually have to refill it.
Cute or what? Hard to imagine he'll be 4.5 kg when he's fully grown.
We always have tissues handy when we feed him, he gets milk all over him.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)