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A Rescue Center for Small Wild Animals Looks to Place a Blind Moose Calf
A Rescue Center for Small Wild Animals Looks to Place a Blind Moose Calf

New York Times

time4 days ago

  • General
  • New York Times

A Rescue Center for Small Wild Animals Looks to Place a Blind Moose Calf

On Friday at Holly's Haven, a wildlife rescue and rehabilitation center in a rural section of Ottawa, there was one coyote, two porcupines and more young raccoons and skunks than I could easily count. And in a makeshift habitat at the very back, there was a much larger animal: a blind moose with an injured leg that is about a month and a half old. The arrival of Cedar, as the moose is known, has meant that Lynne Rowe, the center's founder and director of operations, has had to learn a lot about the needs of young moose very quickly. But it has also created a particular challenge. Like all rescue centers, Holly's Haven normally returns animals to the wild when they are old enough to cope or when they have recovered from their injuries. The best prognosis for Cedar is that he will recover very limited vision in his right eye, making a return to the wild a death sentence. But Cedar cannot follow the path set by Holly, a raccoon for whom the center is named and who lived there for years because brain damage made her release impossible. While Cedar weighs about 30 kilograms, or more than 65 pounds, he could reach 700 kilograms, or 1,500 pounds, as an adult. 'All the experts I've consulted, veterinarians and moose rehabilitators, confirmed that he is not releasable,' Rowe told me as Cedar contentedly munched on dangling willow branches. 'Young moose are heavily predated in the wild by coyotes, wolves. So he'd be extremely vulnerable.' Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Injured moose calf saved by animal rescue facility in Ottawa
Injured moose calf saved by animal rescue facility in Ottawa

CTV News

time10-07-2025

  • General
  • CTV News

Injured moose calf saved by animal rescue facility in Ottawa

Cedar the Moose appears to be blind and has an injured leg. He is being cared for at the Holly's Haven Wildlife Rescue in Dunrobin. (Natalie van Rooy/CTV News Ottawa) A young, injured moose that appears to be blind has been rescued by a local organization after it was found wandering alone near a busy road in Saint Isidore, Ont., on the outskirts of Ottawa, earlier this week. The calf also has a leg injury and is being cared for at Holly's Haven Wildlife Rescue in Dunrobin, a facility run by nearly all volunteers. The director of operations at Holly's Haven is hoping to nurse the animal back to health and says they believe the calf was part of a set of twins and was likely abandoned by the mother because he is blind and couldn't keep up. Cedar the moose Cedar the moose in the back of a vehicle after being found on the side of the road near St. Isidore, Ont. (Photo courtesy: Robert Boisvert) 'He's doing okay. He's definitely stressed, and he does call out, I think hoping to find his mom,' said Lynne Rowe, director of operations at Holly's Haven Wildlife Rescue. 'But he has been good for the staff to work with and he's reasonably quiet … so we can interact with him and try to keep him calm. He is eating very well.' The calf has been named Cedar. 'He was wandering around looking for mom, but unfortunately mom was probably long gone by that point because they usually have twins and when an animal gets to the point where the mom can't look after both because one keeps falling behind, well nature has a way of dealing with that unfortunately,' said Robert Boisvert, founder of 269 Animal Rescue. The next steps are getting a farm veterinarian on site this week to do an eye exam and a mobile x-ray on the animal's leg. 'We're just playing it minute by minute and seeing what we can learn about the situation before we make any decisions,' said Rowe. 'Ideally, we would be able to heal him here, get him in good health and then transfer him to Aspen Valley Wildlife Sanctuary, which has amazing huge moose enclosures.' For now, they're keeping Cedar comfortable in his new enclosure, which was possible because of generous donations from the public. 'The public has already pitched in the branches and the items we need for his care,' said Rowe. 'What we're really trying to do now is expand and have proper enclosures ready for these types of circumstances.' Cedar the moose Cedar the moose in the back of a vehicle after being found on the side of the road near St. Isidore, Ont. (Photo courtesy: Robert Boisvert) While volunteers keep a close eye on the young calf, there's hope that Cedar has a long and healthy life ahead of him. The best possible outcome, according to the volunteers, is a transfer to the Aspen Valley Wildlife Sanctuary near Parry Sound, if he is in good enough health after the vet visit. There is also the possibility that he could go to an educational facility if he isn't too stressed out. Cedar could also be put down if his health is poor and there's no viable options for his continued care, but the volunteers say that is the worst possible outcome and would be entirely out of their control if it happens.

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