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Wildlife Rangers WA

Kangaroo hi five

     If You Find Wildlife needing urgent Attention 

    Call:  Wildlife Help Line Phone: (08) 9249 3434 First


  If you have any issues call or text Jacqui and I will try to get help for you 0433 606 536 (For Wanneroo Local Emergencies Only)

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joey in good hands




What is Paws for Wildlife going to Do?





Want To Help? Here's How!

I am looking to buy land for urbanised displaced wildlife to be relocated too.

Florence jumping on grass land

You can Help me find and purchase Land by making a small donation.

l have chatted with Local State and Federal Governments, Dept of Biodiversity Conservation and Attractions (DBAC) in Western Australia and discussed how l can help wildlife due to urbanisation and Inner City landlocking.


I looked at involving youth. But there are clubs and organisations getting established in the local community and schools already.

l think environmental cadets is a great concept and needs to have an opportunity to be introduced in to all urbanised towns and schools.

If you want to find out more Click Here

 

These projects run right, provide the future vets, carers, zoo keepers, rangers, nurses, educators and researchers in the new generations growing up who will create many more profession's around environmental responsibility, climate change and animal care.

 

Caring for the land and wildlife allows a sense of responsibility and accountability to the animals and environment they live in. Cadets gives a person a sense of achievement and pride, it assists in better mental health, decision making, growth in education ability and research knowledge.

 The next generation of global carers starts with school aged kids becoming aware of environmental responsibility and cadet organisations is a great way to get involved. For more information click here

 

But there are two few dedicated facilities in Australia which allows for schools to promote animal care and allow any experience in looking after wildlife.

 

 Therefore, is very much needed within local shires and cities.

 

I have had many thoughts of how Wildlife Rangers WA would fit in to animal care. After discussions with councils, developer's other carers and my own family l feel the overarching goal will be to advocate and assist in locating and setting up managed conservation areas or nature reserves for inner City areas undergoing urbanisation and to ensure forever homes for displaced wildlife who can't return fully to the wild but would thrive on a managed site.

 

Allowing for dedicated areas, with bush forever, nature reserve style regulations or conservation style protection, but, with two main differences, a dedicated onsite homeowner, who is licenced to care for wildlife and has ownership of the land or part share in land. Who will provide a relocation and place to re-house displaced wildlife? Instead of the ad hoc poor quality unmanaged, sites or developer off set which is provided at present.

 

The second difference is, allowing some onsite permanent public educational and research facilities. Which will provide some funding to support the ongoing costs and up keep as well as a wage for the onsite owners.

 

I am Just about to start seeing how this could be introduced or even better embraced and adopted in to district level planning, Dbca and wildlife carer networks seem very supportive.

 

I hope l can demonstrate the importance and value of this project.

Especially for wildlife organisations to release their orphans with certainty that there dedication to getting their animals to adolescents ready for release in to the wild will pay off ensuring a future and allow follow up with their animals in a safe local reserve for life.

 

I am sure this will enhance the carer networks and certainly make not for profit wildlife carers jobs much easier by providing that forever home which we all desperately look for when having to soft release or relocate displaced wildlife.

It would also allow carers and researchers to come together and constantly develop better care.

Allow some form of interaction between the public, wildlife and land conservation.

Will it work in the long term?

We will have to wait and see l feel there has to be a start in the right direction for dedicated managed relocation sites for all wildlife and provide forever homes.

 

Love,

Jacqui This is Florence she is the reason I am so passionate about our wildlife you can follow her story on this site. 

 

Baby Roo - Joey
frog mouth owl

Donate To The Cause

When it comes to nature, few countries have as much at stake as Australia.


We are a global deforestation hotspot, many of our most important ecosystems in western Australia and over East including the most iconic Great Barrier Reef and the Murray Darling River Basin are collapsing.


Australia has one of the worst extinction records on Earth.


It's time to change.' Prime Minister-elect Anthony Albanese: Saturday 21 May 2022 said; “Together we can end the climate wars.


Together we can take advantage of the opportunity for Australia to be a renewable energy superpower.”


There is plenty of work to do to get our new government to follow through with their commitments and raise their ambition to help solve the climate and extinction crisis. So to start things off, its time to act and look at what we can do in the meantime



Give our Environment a Chance.

I have discussed issues which affect volunteer rescue groups. This is a video by wildlife care WA Lyn Manuel who appears in this video has devoted her whole life to animal welfare and is already looking after this years orphans.


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Do you have or know someone who would have a relocation site in Wanneroo?

Contact me click for email Wildlife Rangers WA can't wait to hear from you?

These blue tongue lizards die in the thousands every week on our roads! 


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Florence and Ed 2022

Florence with her buddy Ed


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Rear Birds in WA


Carnaby cockatoos are threatened in WA and protected but the forest where they live is not! 

Bin Stickers can help us stay alive!

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Make Peace, Not War


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