The NWRA symposium, the class, and new intakes

What a very active February and just 2 weeks into March it's stayed busy. I attended the National Wildlife Rehabilitators Association symposium in Baton Rouge and learned so much, met new friends, and reconnected with old ones.

It was an honor to attend, especially as a scholarship recipient, and to spend time steeped in the world of wildlife rehabilitation. Being surrounded by you "own People" and feeling valued and recognized is a system-and morale strengthening experience.
There were so many classes and lectures happening all day and simultaneously it became a challenge to pick what to attend!
Our hotel was very old and right in downtown Baton Rouge. It's so old it had a tunnel down to a speakeasy, even.

Some of the classes I took: Principles of Wildlife Rehabilitation Basics and Advanced labs, Bitty Babies: a Primer on Rehabilitating Tiny Infant Mammals, Head First- a Multi-species look at Traumatic Brain Injury, In-house Laboratory Techniques, Evaluating Inflammation and Meloxicam Use in Virginia Opossums, Creative Problem Solving, Natural History and Captive Rearing of Virginia Opossums (you can never learn too much about even your favorite subject!), Nights of Nibbles and Noshes (Getting Opossums to Forage), Why Your Dog (or Boss) Responds to Snacks, The Golden Years: Geriatric Ambassador Animal Care, Fur-st Responders: Rehabilitators and Vets Working as Pawtners in Care, Wildlife Release: The Final Step Back into the Wild, and Using Natural History to Inform Rehabilitation Care and Decisions.  I also popped into some other sessions, networked with other opossum specialists, and asked a LOT of questions.

Gail Buhl is a fantastic teacher and also does a podcast on wildlife rehabilitation. It was thrilling to tell her in person how much I enjoy it.
Visiting Skye Arcenaux's enclosure gave me so many ideas for mine and I definitely had enclosure-envy. She has also figured out a way to configure the standard Critter Nations cages we used into giant banks for larger animals. I was so impressed!
I enjoyed watching the barges and tugboats, and the sunsets were stunning.

I had an amazing roomate at the very nice Hilton Capitol Center hotel, Peggy Popp.  Peggy is a Wisconsin rehabilitator with decades of experience in all small mammals, but she is also a mustelid master, as I called her.  Mustelids include mink, otters and weasels.  She introduced me to some of the speakers (some pretty famous too!), gave me great advice and insight, and because she brought her car, we went on our own field trip to visit our mutual friend and fantastic rehabber, Skye Arcenaux.

Our hotel room was very comfortable and we could see the sun set over the Mighty Mississippi River every night.  She even brought her coffeemaker and a vase of flowers to make the room feel like home.

It was a real honor to learn directly from some of the wildlife rehabilitation greats like Sherri Cox, Nicki Rosenhagen, Lisa Fosco, Erica Miller and Rebecca Duerr.  These women have put their heart and soul into rehab and gained so much insight and experience that listening to their lectures and taking their classes made a huge impact on my own knowledge base.  All the other speakers were talented, experienced and created thoughtful and educational programs.  I wish I could have attended them all.  But by Saturday morning my brain was full and any information that tried to go in dribbled back out.

I met up with two Georgia rehabbers, Chelsea Easler of Easler Acres in middle Georgia and Sherry Horton of Horton Wildlife Rescue in Newnan. We all made friends with Kristen Werling of Werling Wildlife Rescue. Two other Georgia rehabbers were there but we kept missing each other. I hope to spend more time with Barbara Slatcher and Mary-Grace Trogdon in the future.
Peggy, Skye and I were very happy to meet in person!
Peggy was the best roommate ever and we had a lot of fun together. We are pictured at the Mardi Gras-themed banquet and you can tell what our favorite animals are by our outfits!
Paige Pederson, a bat specialist, Peggy, the mustelid master, and Lisa Fosco, Animal Care Director at the Wildlife In Need Center in Wisconsin and I had fun locating the speakeasy and exploring the tunnel.
My friend and fellow opossum rehabilitator, Tina Bambauer, met up and had dinner. Tina moved to Baton Rouge several years back and has been refurbishing her very own "Shotgun Shack".
Juniper Russo is the director of For Fox Sake in Tennessee and creates the most engaging and educational posts I've seen on Facebook. I was absolutely fangirling getting to meet Juniper, as you can see in the photo!

But, back home and back to reality and the start of baby season.  So far the only babies I’ve taken in came in the pouches of their injured Mamas.  I hope the Mamas get healthy enough to be released while their babies are still small, but in the meantime I get to watch the miracle of marsupials in person.

Mama one was hit by a car.
Mama two was found lethargic and subdued in a yard.
Such sweet little pouchlings, about 2 to 2 and a half weeks old.
Josalyn Snyder, Maggie Haden, and Krista de Vries are all newly licensed rehabbers who took a class I created based on the Basics of Wildlife Rehabilitation course I took through the NWRA, as well as information I learned at the symposium and my own knowledge base. What was planned to be 3 hours turned into 5 but everyone enjoyed meeting, learning, and practicing hands on skills with cadavers.
I wrote out a detailed outline based on the classes I took and my own notes, adding in sheets of important data like assessing dehydration and determining the age of opossums. I also created a chart with the most frequently used medications and how to dose them.

In my application for the scholarship to the symposium I indicated that whatever I learned would be shared with as many new rehabbers as possible.  I was so grateful to receive the scholarship and owe a debt of gratitude not only to the scholarship committee, but to my vet Dr. Allene Phillips, and friend and colleague Kathryn Dudek of the Chattahoochee Nature Center for their compelling letters of support.  The scholarship paid for everything- airfare, hotel, add-on intensive, pet sitting, and meals.  I was so fortunate!

Meanwhile, Littler, pictured here, and Biggler, continue to be growing, happy guys with lots of fun things to do and eat.
Doesn't Biggler have the nicest smile!
Last night's meal and enrichment was a "veggie pizza". The boys are very good vegetable eaters so their "pizza" was chockful of broccoli, butternut squash and Brussels sprouts, along with a few leftover crusts from the pizza lunch the class had.
Did you know opossums love those bagged chopped salads? I didn't! I make them with all the add ons and a small amount of the included dressing. The spicy dressings seem to be their favorites.

Daisy the armadillo finally healed enough to be released but it turned out her site of origin would not be accessible, although it was the preferred choice. I set her up in my unfinished shed with a pre-dug den and her blankets, along with pine straw and leaves.  She went to town redecorating the very next day!  The floor of the shed is dirt and when she is ready to leave, she can easily dig out.  I have her water dish and worm bin in there and keep both filled.  I set a camera up on her last night and was able to capture a clear enough image of her back to know the deep wound she sustained is now 100% healed.  I hope she starts digging and eating wild foods soon, the cost of feeding her live foods became astronomical!  I appreciate all the people that donated to her Feeding Fundraiser.

Some serious work went down overnight- there's an entire bale of pine straw in there now.
Nat the Bat with a torn wing membrane is healing and enjoys spending time with a little bat finger puppet. Big Brown bats are very social and he seems to get comfort from his quiet friend.
Nat looks quite dapper in his Photoshopped St. Patrick's Day hat.

What a post!  I’m sure I forgot something since it’s been so long since I posted.  As always I am filled with gratitude for all the people that make this work possible- my monthly Patreon donors, people who so generously donate to the fundraisers, my fellow rehabbers, and the finders who care enough to rescue and transport injured and orphaned animals to me.  I am also grateful for the work that Georgia Wildlife Network does to educate, support and provide transport for rehabbers.  So many great humans in my life along with all the animals.  I’ll be posting again soon!

The NWRA symposium, the class, and new intakes

What a very active February and just 2 weeks into March it’s stayed busy. I attended the National Wildlife Rehabilitators Association symposium in Baton Rouge and learned so much, met new friends, and reconnected with old ones. It was an honor to attend, especially as a scholarship recipient, and to spend time steeped in the

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