Inspirational



Published on JeffCorwinconnect.com

David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust, Nairobi National Park, Kenya

“The animal kingdom is in critical condition. The affliction isn’t a disease, but rather a crisis of endangerment that threatens to wipe out many of the world’s animal species forever. Ironically, the only species capable of saving these animals is the same one that’s responsible for putting them in danger.”
~ Jeff Corwin 100 Heartbeats: The Race to Save Earth’s Most Endangered Species

It may be hard to admit, but every one of us has played a part in putting the precious animals we share this planet with in peril. The paper we write on, the furniture we use, the homes we live in comes from wood from clear-cut forests, leaving countless animals homeless. The cruises we take leave the oceans polluted and hurt marine life. Circuses perpetuate animal abuse. Tourism industries in many countries rely on the exploitation of wildlife from tigers to baby elephants. Smuggling of exotic animals, and poaching for ivory and rhino horns for supposed “medicinal” purposes are driving the animals to the brink of extinction.

It’s still not too late for us to turn things around. While there are several ways to help wildlife, the easiest is to support organizations that are making a difference to endangered species. For the animal lover in your life, make a donation on their behalf to any of the following organizations around the world.

1. David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust in Kenya – It was wonderful interacting with adorable baby elephants and rhinos during my visit to the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust in Nairobi National Park a few years ago. The reality is that these were orphans and victims of poaching that continues to threaten black rhinoceros and elephant populations in Africa. At the Trust, the keepers raise the orphaned elephants and rhino calves by bottle feeding them and sleeping in their stalls. Once they are rehabilitated, they are re-entered into their communities in Tsavo National park. www.sheldrickwildlifetrust.org/

2. Sloth Sanctuary in Costa Rica – Sloths are simply adorable with their ‘smiley’ little faces and furry bodies. They may be slow, but are quick to draw attention. The sloth sanctuary in Limon, Costa Rica began twenty years ago with a sick and starving baby sloth. Owner Judy Arroyo cared for this baby, named Buttercup, and raised her to adulthood. Today, the sanctuary cares for more than 150 sloths that have been orphaned, harmed by electrical wires or hurt by humans. The sanctuary is also in the process of reseeding critical areas to combat habitat loss. www.slothsanctuary.com/

3. Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee – A documentary by Emmy Winner Allison Argo, The Urban Elephant, opened my eyes to the plight of elephants that were brought as babies to work in circuses. One of the segments of the film tells the story of Shirley, a crippled elephant that suffered at the hands of humans throughout her life. After living a solitary life for several years, she was brought to the Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee where she was reunited with an old friend Jenny that she knew from her life in the circus 20 years prior. Jenny too was a victim of abuse. The sanctuary is the nation’s largest natural habitat refuge developed specifically for endangered African and Asian elephants. It operates on 2,700 acres and cares for fourteen elephants. To watch the heartwarming tale of Shirley and Jenny, click here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lF8em4uPdCg. http://www.elephants.com/

4. Animal Works in India– Due to habitat loss, animals are increasingly coming into conflict with humans in villages in India. Animals Works is dedicated to educating the public and helping orphaned elephants in the Assam region of India. It collaborates with two on-ground organizations to reduce the human-elephant conflict problem– the Wildlife Trust of India and the Assam Haathi Project (“Haathi” means elephant in Assamese). At the Wildlife Trust of India’s Centre for Wildlife Rehabilitation and Conservation, elephants, one-horned rhinos and tigers are rehabilitated before they are returned to the wild. The Assam Haathi Project has developed chilli (hot pepper) projects across the state, to keep elephants away from people’s crops and also give them a high value cash crop that elephants don’t eat. http://animalworks.com.au/

5. Lola ya Bonobo Sanctuary in Congo – Bonobos are great apes, along with chimpanzees, orangutans, and gorillas. They are most closely related to us, sharing 98.7 percent of our DNA. They are faced with destruction and degradation of their habitats, and are commercially hunted for bushmeat. Lola ya Bonobo, which means ‘paradise for bonobos’ in Lingala language is situated just outside of Kinshasa in Congo. It is home to 52 bonobos that live in 75 acres of primary forest. Claudine Andre founded the sanctuary as part of the NGO, Les Amis des Bonobos du Congo (ABC) in 1994. Claudine’s reach extends to the rest of Congo, as she works to educate the Congolese of the endangered bonobo, and the danger and cruelty of eating bushmeat. www.friendsofbonobos.org/sanctuary.htm

6. Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest – A little closer to home, the Chimpanzee Sanctuary Northwest, located on a 26 acre farm in the Cascade mountains east of Seattle houses seven chimpanzees released from biomedical research. We are not the only ones who suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder. After having endured years of abuse for scientific purposes, Chimpanzees show similar symptoms as soldiers and torture victim. The sanctuary is only one of nine in the country that cares for chimps. Alas, the our cousins can now enjoy peace and spend time outdoors. www.chimpsanctuarynw.org

7. Save the Manatee Club in Florida Manatees are endangered largely due to human activity, specifically watercraft collisions, ingestion of fish hooks, and entanglement in crab trap lines. Save the Manatee Club is dedicated to protecting manatees and their aquatic habitat. Raising awareness, advocating for protection measures along with rehabilitation and release are top priorities for the Club founded by renowned singer/songwriter, Jimmy Buffett, and former U.S. Senator, Bob Graham, when he was governor of Florida. www.savethemanatee.org

8. Cheetah Conservation Fund (CCF) in Namibia – The cheetah is the fastest land animal and is also the most endangered cat in Africa. There was a time when cheetahs lived in almost all African countries and in large parts of Asia, but today they are almost extinct in Asia. Main causes include poaching, high infant mortality and loss of habitat. Namibia is the only country with the largest and healthiest population of cheetahs. The CCF is dedicated to understanding the animal’s biology and ecology so as to better able to manage its sustainability for the future. www.cheetah.org

Let us hope all these animals can win the race for survival with our help.

Jeff Corwin with CCF founder Dr. Laurie Marker and Chewbaaka, ambassador for CCF


Melanie Sue Bowles

“A horse doesn’t have to be used to have value,” wrote Melanie in Hoof Prints, a sequel to her book The Horses of Proud Spirit about starting a sanctuary for neglected and abused horses 20 years ago. Melanie and her husband Jim founded Proud Spirit while still working as professional firefighters in Florida. Today, located in Mena, Arkansas, Proud Spirit is one of the most successful and longest running sanctuaries for horses in the United States.

Melanie never backs away from helping an animal in need- whether it’s an elderly unwanted retired horse, a miniature horse with an abusive past or an abandoned emaciated dog- she comes to their rescue. With Jim and Melanie’s diligent care and the comfort of the herd, the dogs, donkeys and horses that find their way to Proud Spirit recover their health, and become a part of their family. The 58 current resident horses of Proud Spirit get to run freely on 320 acres of rolling hills near the Ouachita Mountains, playing in the sparkling lake and living their lives in peace.

During my visit to this amazing place where I spent time in the company of so many happy and much loved animals, I had a conversation with Melanie about the sanctuary, rescue work and what we can all do to help animals.

Lavanya Sunkara: Proud Spirit is celebrating its 20th year this year, and no doubt you have saved hundreds of horses. How did it all begin?

Melanie Sue Bowles: I have to be honest and tell you that I avoid using the word  ‘celebrate’. The fact that animals even need to be rescued can’t be celebrated and I actually wish that Proud Spirit was out of business. But we started the sanctuary because we saw a need; abused, elderly and neglected horses needed a place to go where they could heal. We began with just one horse on five acres of land. Over the years we’ve evolved into an award-winning facility and we’ve intervened on behalf of nearly 400 horses.

LS: What motivates you every morning to do the work you do?

MSB: The short answer is, the horses. The longer answer is that I believe we are most happy in our life when we take the focus off of ourselves- what we have, what we don’t have, what we wish we had- and instead find ways to give back without expecting anything in return. In that regard, I get much more from our rescued horses than they get from me.

Mustang named Journey with the rest of the herd

LS: You treat all animals that come into your life as family, you nurture them, communicate with them and they seem to bond with you right away. What is it about horses that you think most people misunderstand?

MSB: One of the biggest things that most people, even seasoned equestrians, misunderstand or disregard about horses is their emotional well-being. Horses form very strong ties, they become family to one another, but we sell them and trade them and shuffle them around from owner to  owner, breaking up bonded mates and taking babies from their mothers way too young. It’s heartbreaking. Even sadder is all the horses that are forced  to come and go through show barns and industries like Thoroughbred racing. Horses are herd animals, they desperately need each other to thrive, but those horses never even have a chance for that essential bonding.

LS: How do you stay positive with all of the animal abuse and neglect you witness in your rescue work?

MSB: I’m not always positive! Anyone who does rescue work sees the worst of mankind. It can be exhausting. But I think I’ve survived for 20 years in the trenches because I accept that evil has existed since the beginning of time and there will always be wrongdoing. For me, it’s a waste of time and energy to lament this fact, or to constantly question how or why abuse and cruelty happens. I’d rather put my energy into making things right for the lives I’m able to touch and rejoice the successes. When we bring a new horse into our fold we don’t dwell on his or her past or rail on about the abusive former owner. We focus on “right now”… this horse is here, right now, and he is safe and his future is secure.

Lavanya with Jackson and Jim Bowles

LS: I read your book, The Horses of Proud Spirit, and I am touched by the stories. Each time you brought an emaciated horse back to life, tears welled up in my eyes. You are truly a blessing for these animals. What else would you like to see happen?

MSB: We aren’t taking care of the animals already here, and everyone who brings another colt into the world or another litter of puppies or kittens is guilty of adding to the burden. No man is an island and irresponsibility affects us all. Before you breed, or buy from a breeder, consider rescuing an animal instead. Imagine a day when we aren’t sending millions of animals to their death. I would like to see stricter laws regarding animal abuse, but these laws must be enforced. The laws serve no purpose when authorities turn a blind eye to the suffering of powerless animals.

LS: I bet your house is never dull with all the rescued dogs and horses. Any memorable or humorous moments in all these years?

MSB: Oh, there’s lots of funny stories, and I recount many of them in all three of my books. But one incident comes to mind that’s not in the books: One afternoon we had let several horses into the yard around our house so they could munch on the grass. It was a lovely fall day and we had all the windows and doors open. Jim and I were in the den doing something on the computer. Suddenly, we heard, CLOMP, CLOMP, CLOMP… one of the horses had walked into the carport which connected our house with the barn. We weren’t concerned as there was really nothing they could get into, and we just continued on with what we were doing. Then that distinctive sound of a horse’s hoof on concrete changed. It sounded more like a horse walking on tile. Jim jokingly said, “It sounds like someone is in the house.” We both laughed, not really believing that one of them would walk through the (for a horse) narrow back door. But then we looked at each other and hurried into the kitchen. Sure enough, there was Dancer, a beautiful elderly Appaloosa we had recently rescued, standing at the center island of the kitchen, just as calm as could be, as though he was ready to help us prepare dinner. My first thought was, “Please don’t potty!” My second thought was, “How in the world are we going to get him turned around?” But there were no mishaps and he walked around the entire island for us, and right back out the door.

LS: Any advice for people who want to do rescue work?

MSB: Your vision regarding why you’re doing this should be very clear. Rescue work takes an extraordinary amount of commitment and sacrifice. It goes back to my statement about finding ways to give back to the world around you without expecting anything in return.

To support Proud Spirit Horse Sanctuary, purchase Melanie’s books The Horses of Proud Spirit, Hoof Prints: More Stories from Proud Spirit and The Dogs of Proud Spirit or make a donation at www.horsesofproudspirit.com

 For my article on Petside.com and slideshow, please click on the links below:

Proud Spirit Horse Sanctuary: Animal Rescue for Unwanted Animals

Proud Spirit Slideshow

 

 


I’ve been thinking about this inspirational passage by Oriah Mountain Dreamer, and thought I’d share with you all. I first heard it after an amazing yoga class at the Yoga To the People on St. Marks in New York a few years ago. The pictures are from my trip to Costa Rica in 2010 where one of my dreams came true- hiking in a pristine rainforest, getting soaked to the skin and coming alive amidst the lush landscape and the music from the critters that call one of the last wild places home.

“It doesn’t interest me
what you do for a living.
I want to know
what you ache for
and if you dare to dream of meeting your heart’s longing.

It doesn’t interest me
how old you are.
I want to know
if you will risk
looking like a fool
for love
for your dream
for the adventure of being alive.

It doesn’t interest me what planets are squaring your moon…
I want to know if you have touched the centre of your own sorrow if you have been opened by life’s betrayals or have become shrivelled and closed from fear of further pain.

I want to know
if you can sit with pain
mine or your own
without moving to hide it
or fade it
or fix it.

I want to know if you can be with joy
mine or your own

 if you can dance with wildness and let the ecstasy fill you to the tips of your fingers and toes without cautioning us to be careful
to be realistic
to remember the limitations
of being human.

It doesn’t interest me if the story you are telling me is true.
I want to know if you can disappoint another to be true to yourself.
If you can bear the accusation of betrayal
and not betray your own soul.
If you can be faithless and therefore trustworthy.

I want to know if you can see Beauty
even when it is not pretty
every day.
And if you can source your own life
from its presence.

I want to know
if you can live with failure
yours and mine
and still stand at the edge of the lake
and shout to the silver of the full moon,
“Yes.”

It doesn’t interest me
to know where you live
or how much money you have.
I want to know if you can get up
after the night of grief and despair
weary and bruised to the bone
and do what needs to be done
to feed the children.

It doesn’t interest me
who you know
or how you came to be here.
I want to know if you will stand
in the centre of the fire
with me
and not shrink back.

It doesn’t interest me
where or what or with whom
you have studied.
I want to know
what sustains you
from the inside
when all else falls away.

I want to know
if you can be alone
with yourself
and if you truly like
the company you keep
in the empty moments.”

By Oriah © Mountain Dreaming, from the book The Invitation published by HarperONE, San Francisco, 1999 All rights reserved

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