Tails from the Exotic Feline Rescue Center , livre ebook

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Meet Sahib, Sampson, Zulu, Rouge, Blaze—just a few of the 200 big cats that await visitors at the Exotic Feline Rescue Center. The EFRC, in Center Point, Indiana, is a nationally recognized leader in big cat rescue, conservation, and care. Almost all of these cats—tigers, bobcats, lions, pumas, and servals—are survivors of abuse and neglect. In this follow-up to Saving the Big Cats and Real Stories of Big Cat Rescues, photographer Stephen D. McCloud showcases the newest residents of this lush 108-acre sanctuary, now celebrating its 25th anniversary. Readers will be fascinated by the stories of these incredible feline predators in this anniversary edition, which includes a foreword by Tigers of America founder Bill Nimmo.


Foreword by William Nimmo
Acknowledgments
1. The Origins of EFRC
2. Green Bay Four
3. Pennsylvania Friend
4. Boi Pello
5. Oklahoma Traveling Animal Show
6. Angola Cats 2
7. Charlie
8. Great Cats 2
9. Cleo
10. Dakota
11 Angola Cats 4
12. JNK Tigers
13. Roy Boy
14. Idaho Woman
15. Angola Cats
16. Miami County Circus
17. North Carolina Tigers
18. Pennsylvania Friend #2
19. Idaville Seven
20. Tell City
21. Texas Sanctuary
22. Sampson
23. Sampson III and Conan
24. KY Lions
25. Simba
26. Swizzle
27. Tinker
28. VinnieBob
29. Michigan Show Cats
30. Zoey
31. Jenny's Amazing Recovery
32. Texas 4
33. Frequently Asked Questions
34. Visiting EFRC

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Date de parution

26 septembre 2016

Nombre de lectures

0

EAN13

9780253022110

Langue

English

Poids de l'ouvrage

1 Mo

Cleo, 2011

TAILS from the EXOTIC FELINE Rescue Center
Kya, 2013
Zeus, 2014

25th Anniversary Edition

TAILS from the EXOTIC FELINE Rescue Center
Stephen D. McCloud and Joe Taft
Foreword by Bill Nimmo

an imprint of INDIANA UNIVERSITY PRESS BLOOMINGTON INDIANAPOLIS
This book is a publication of Quarry Books an imprint of Indiana University Press Office of Scholarly Publishing Herman B Wells Library 350 1320 East 10th Street Bloomington, Indiana 47405 USA
iupress.indiana.edu
2016 by Joe Taft and Stephen D. McCloud All rights reserved
No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. The Association of American University Presses Resolution on Permissions constitutes the only exception to this prohibition.
The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the American National Standard for Information Sciences-Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1992.
Manufactured in China
Cataloging information is available from the Library of Congress .
ISBN 978-0-253-02201-1 (paperback) ISBN 978-0-253-02411-4 (cloth) ISBN 978-0-253-02211-0 (ebook)
1 2 3 4 5 21 20 19 18 17 16
Thor and Zeus, October 30, 2011
May the time come when all men will recognize the fact that the laws of God and humanity require us to be merciful to the dumb animals, and to grant the same justice and mercy to them we would ask for ourselves .
INDIANA AUTHOR Gene Stratton-Porter, The Strike at Shane s
Contents
Foreword by Bill Nimmo
Acknowledgments
The Origins of EFRC
1 Athena, Barbie, Chloe, and Nemo
2 Blackie, Munchie, and Rajah
3 Boi Pello
4 Bonnie, Charm, Copper, Jade Jr., Kennedy, Killer, Lincoln, Mickey, Neko, and Temple
5 Buddy, Cash, and Tango
6 Charlie
7 Cesar, Cheyenne, and Sasha
8 Cleo
9 Dakota
10 Dusty, Magic, and Mya
11 Sebastian, Apollo, Shantel, Magic, and Mystic
12 Kali, Kya, Pearl, and Storm
13 Desi, Luci, and Tawny
14 Christopher, Mariah, and Savannah
15 Princess II, RA, Samo, Tony IV, Zoe, Simba, Thor, and Zeus
16 Elizabeth and McDuff
17 Annie, Brooke, Cera, Ezmeralda, Mr. Bigglesworth, Scooby, Shasta, and Tasha
18 Kendra, Kiera, Missy, Porky, Raja Boy, Tigger, and Vaughn
19 Jasmine, Lindsey, Romulus, Shahzara, Sheikhan, and Tecumseh
20 Blaze, Callisto, Gabriel, Ozzy, Raj, Rogue, Sahib, Sampson II, Scarlett, Star, Storm II, Sultan, and Tajie
21 Sampson
22 Sampson III and Conan
23 Serabi and Singa
24 Simba
25 Swizzle
26 Tinker
27 VinnieBob
28 Zulu and Princess
29 Zoey
30 Jenny
31 Lola, Lily, Kitty, and d Artagnan
Frequently Asked Questions
Visiting EFRC

Killer, December 23, 2014
Foreword
THE SEARCH AND RESCUE
In the summer of 1996 my wife and I traveled to southern New Jersey to visit our friends Joan and Jan, who kept a number of tigers on their property: Jaipur, the largest, at seven hundred pounds; Maya, the kindest; and two of the most striking tigers we have ever seen, young brothers Sahib and Sultan. The occasion was the recent birth of three cubs. We spent a memorable day feeding and playing with them and over the next two years made return trips to help out and watch the cubs grow. But as work pressed our time we made fewer and fewer trips and eventually lost touch.
Fifteen years later in June 2011 we received a call saying the tigers were gone, confiscated by the state in 2003 and shipped to an animal sanctuary in Texas. Their removal was brought about by the shooting of a tiger that wandered into the nearby town. Since Great Adventure, an amusement park with tigers, was in the same area, the incident led to an investigation. It was unclear from which facility the tiger escaped, but after six years of legal wrangling and deteriorating conditions at Joan s facility the state decided that the tigers must be removed.

All Those TIGERS Are Probably Dead
That phone call prompted our concern about the fate of the tigers we knew as cubs, so we contacted a number of animal welfare organizations. They identified the sanctuary as the Wild Animal Orphanage ( WAO ) in San Antonio, which had gone bankrupt in 2010, leaving three hundred animals homeless. The information we received was not encouraging. The New Jersey tigers might have been there but identifying a specific tiger would be almost impossible. There are thousands of tigers in this country and their life span is twenty years in the best of conditions; without a proper diet and vet care the probability that they were still alive was remote. The welfare organizations advice was to not bother trying to find them: All those tigers, they told us, are probably dead.
It didn t sound right, or maybe we didn t want to believe it, so I continued to inquire. Then I spoke to Patty Finch, the executive director of the Global Federation of Animal Sanctuaries. She said that Carole Baskin at Big Cat Rescue in Tampa, Florida, might be able to help.
Armed with a list of the New Jersey tiger names, I went to Florida to meet Carole. She said WAO still had some tigers alive but couldn t be sure about their identities. The only sure way to know was to match the stripe patterns. Every tiger has a unique pattern, so if we had any old pictures they might be able to do something. Fortunately my wife kept pictures of the cubs, so the challenge was to get pictures of the adult tigers at WAO .
Jamie, Carole s daughter, happened to be on her way back to Florida from a rescue out west. Carole rerouted her to San Antonio and made arrangements to get her into WAO . Twenty-four tigers had been transferred there from New Jersey in 2003 and since their arrival many had died and some had gone missing, but seven remained alive. Jamie, along with Mary and Michelle, the only remaining keepers, were able to get pictures of the tigers. Jamie continued on home to Tampa and began the process of stripe matching. One by one the photographs revealed that six of the tigers were an exact match to two litters in the old cub photos. The seventh cat appeared to be younger and probably a cousin.
Getting them released from WAO was complicated by the bankruptcy, but luckily the International Fund for Animal Welfare ( IFAW ) was coordinating the placement of the animals as well as providing food to keep them alive during the process. Gail A Brunzo from IFAW received approval from the judge to release the tigers and I asked Carole if she could take them.
When a sanctuary agrees to take a tiger they are agreeing to provide lifetime care for a cat that eats fifteen pounds of meat a day and requires specialized vet care and its own steel enclosure. Sanctuaries receive no government assistance and rely on donations to survive, so it is an enormous financial commitment for them to take one tiger. Carole agreed to take three. I now had to find a home for the remaining four.
Finding a home for a tiger is not an easy proposition to begin with, and I was warned that the New Jersey tigers would be difficult to place. They were old, very aggressive, and kept in the back of WAO with no exposure to anyone other than their keepers. Private owners or exhibitors would have no interest in these tigers. Zoos would not take them because they were generic (crossbred), and since they were bred in captivity and had no hunting skills they could not be reintroduced into the wild. They were just old tigers that nobody wanted to feed and that had no place to go.
The light in this dark story is that some people do care and have created sanctuaries for big cats-all I had to do was find another good one. A report on sanctuaries in the United States lists 130 with tigers. Unfortunately most of them are breeders, dealers, or unaccredited (roadside) zoos advertising themselves as sanctuaries but having no interest in providing lifetime care. To them the tiger is a commodity to be sold or displayed and then dumped when no longer of any commercial value. Only 20 of the 130 could be considered true sanctuaries. The closest one to New York was Carolina Tiger Rescue.
Asking an already full sanctuary to take in four tigers with no notice is best done in person. We went to North Carolina to meet Pam Fulk, who runs Carolina Tiger Rescue. Pam didn t have room but said that if we could get the tigers out of WAO she would keep them in her quarantine space until new enclosures could be built. She would take all four. An unexpected response to the impossible question, Can you take more tigers?
Transporting tigers, as I was about to find out, is anything but routine. The Hill Country outside San Antonio is dry to begin with, and a drought made it worse. Driving down the road to WAO we had to keep our car windows closed to avoid breathing the dust that seemed to be everywhere. The tiger enclosures were a combination of hard pan and broken rock, not a fit place for any animal.
The cats were apprehensive and could not be coached into the rolling cages so they had to be tranquilized (darted). By the time the last one (Marcus) was darted, the temperature was 95 degrees in the sun and there was no shade. Stress elevates the body temperature of a tiger. Their normal body temperature is 99.5; after darting Marcus s temperature got to 108. At that level he would be dead in half an hour. Cold towels were put on his face and head, and cold water poured on his body, and his temperature began to drop. He was put inside the transporter and given the recovery shot. After what felt like an eternity he moved his head and started to regain consciousness. A remarkable effort by Wild Animal Sanctuary founder Pat Craig and his son that saved Marcus s life. By 11:00 AM the rear doors of Pat s transporter closed and Marcus and company began their thirty-hour trip to North Carolina, stopping only for fuel and water for the cats.
Two weeks later I

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