Middleburg Life | August 2018

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BORN TO BE WILDLIFE GALA Story and photos by Joanne Maisano

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ou are driving down a beautiful country lane when you see a hawk injured on the side of the road. You want to help but aren’t sure how to handle this raptor. Thankfully, there is a place you can contact. Nestled in the woods, down Island Farm Lane in Boyce, Virginia, sits the Blue Ridge Wildlife Center, a place that makes you feel like you are stepping into a fairytale. At my first visit, I was eye to eye with an incredible bald eagle named Jefferson in his large enclosure. Jefferson arrived badly injured but had the great good fortune to be treated and rehabilitated by the outstanding veterinary staff at BRWC. Though he healed, his injuries prevent him from returning to the wild. He started to squawk as I walked by as if to greet me. Next to him is a red-tailed hawk that was hit by a car. His wing recovered successfully, but he lost the vision in his right eye. Raptors need 100 percent of their vision

to survive in the wild, so like Jefferson, he was unable to be released. As I continued my tour there were cages for Beaker the skunk, Blossom the opossum and Snow the artic fox. Fortunately, these animals have a place to live out their lives, but there are more injured every day. Where will the new animals go? BRWC takes in all wildlife except bear and deer, so that leaves a lot of species of animals that could get hurt and in need of their help. Ronald Bradley and his wife Danielle are hosting this year’s fundraising Gala at their beautiful estate Locksley Manor in Millwood on September 29. Their wish is for guests of this gala to purchase more of these cages for the animals that get rescued and treated but are unable to return to their native habitat. In return, the donors will get their name put on a plaque outside the cage they have purchased and the satisfaction of knowing they have provided a safe haven for these wonderful creatures.

The new facility has a treatment room, a surgical suite, radiology room, species-specific rooms, and a kitchen to prepare the meals for the animals—I am grateful the dead mice were not on the menu the day I visited. There are rooms for mammals, reptiles and raptors. I was lucky to get a glimpse of Dopey the elusive screech owl. There were many snapping turtles in recovery after surgery. It was impressive to see how they can attach a broken shell together using eyehooks until it mends back together. Hillary Russell Davidson, executive director of BRWC told me, “We have a 400 percent increase of snapping turtles since last year, so we are looking for donations to help us add more rooms.” Last year they took in 1,827 injured animals, of which 124 were unique species native to this area. “So far, we have had more than 1,300 patients and are forecasting over Wildlife | Page 54

AUGUST 2018

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