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Australian Bushfires: What You Can Do to Help

1/12/2020

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Picture
Photo by bertknot from Flickr
In my last post, I wrote about the effect of the fires on Australia’s wildlife. Since then, the scope of the disaster has continued to grow. An ecologist from the University of Sydney now estimates more than 800 million animals have been affected in New South Wales alone, and more than 1 billion animals across Australia since September.

After reading my last post, a college friend from the United States asked about the wildlife carers. Beyond monetary donations, he wondered if any practical supplies could be sent to them. Another friend asked what the firefighters needed. One thing I can do in this situation is research, so I reached out to my Australian friends that are involved in different charities, and here’s what I discovered.
 
Wildlife carers are in desperate need of vet supplies like bandages, wraps, medicines, and ointments. They also need hanging pouches to be sewn for all the orphaned marsupials. The fabric used to make the pouches should be 100 percent cotton or cotton flannel. Here are patterns for:
  • Day bag for kangaroo joey
  • Night bag for kangaroo joey
  • Day bag for wallaby joey
  • Night bag for wallaby joey
​Little care packages are being put together for the firefighters through the #SLABSFORHEROES effort. Needed items include:
  • Lip balm
  • Phone battery chargers
  • Electrolytes (liquid, powder, satchels)
  • Hand sanitizer 
  • Wet wipes (large boxes with packets in them as they are being split)
  • Little tissue packets (handbag size)
  • Paw paw cream
  • Saline/eye drops (individual vials)
  • P2 masks
  • Pens and little notebooks
  • Women personal hygiene products
  • Deodorant (non aerosol)
  • Small shampoos and conditioners 
  • Sunscreen (non aerosol)
For both the wildlife carers and firefighters, supplies can be mailed to:

Parcel Locker 1004339105
99 Mawson Place
Mawson ACT 2607
Australia
ATTN: Angel Ben
 
In another effort, The Rescue Collective, which distributes supplies to ​wildlife carers, needs the following:
  • Wombaroo Formulas (All Species)
  • Good quality Bird Food
  • Di-Vetalact
  • Macropod Pellets
  • Wombaroo Impact
  • Vetafarm Spark Liquid & Critta Care
  • Lectade Oral Hydration
  • Syringes & Saline
  • Feeding Bottles & Teats
  • General Medical Supplies
  • Baby Wipes (great for baby wildlife!)
  • Paw Paw Ointment
  • Sorbolene & Pure Vitamin E Cream
  • Bat Wraps & Pouches
For some of the more obscure items on the list, you can try online Australian vet suppliers like vetnpetdirect.com.au or vetproductsdirect.com.au. Or you could order online through a U.S. pet supplies company like www.petcarerx.com.

For The Rescue Collective, please mail supplies to:

Nicole Blums 
C/O The Rescue Collective
4/55 Tenby Street
Mount Gravatt 4122
Australia
 
Monetary donations are always welcome. For disaster recovery, try the Australian Red Cross. To help the firefighters, donate to either the New South Wales Rural Fire Service  or the Victorian bushfire relief effort. Donations to care for native animals can go to The Rescue Collective and NSW Wildlife Information, Rescue, and Education Service, Inc. (WIRES).
 
I am humbled by and thankful for the care and support shown to Australia from people all over the world. 
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Saving Australia's Wildlife

1/6/2020

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Picture
Kookaburra overlooking land ravaged by fire. Photo courtesy of WIRES (NSW Wildlife Information, Rescue and Education Service Inc.)
The images on the news and social media have been relentless: kangaroos fleeing the bush fires, badly burned koalas, cockatoos falling from the skies, and countless orphaned joeys.

In a bush fire season that started unimaginably early, the devastation has been tremendous. BBC News provides a good summary of how these fires have unfolded so far. The losses are staggering.

Scientists from the University of Sydney estimated that 480 million animals have been killed in New South Wales alone since September. These animals were killed directly by the fire or later due to loss of food and habitat. Thirty percent of koala habitat is gone. And the fires are likely to keep burning for months more.

Many people know about koalas and kangaroos, but countless other species are suffering, including lesser-known animals like the dunnart, long-nosed potoroo, and the antechinus.

Even before these fires, Australia’s track record for preserving animal species was grim. Australian Geographic’s comprehensive study found that 100 species of animals and plants have become extinct in Australia since European settlers arrived in 1788, the worst record on any continent over the same time period.

Wrapping my mind around all this loss can be depressing, immobilizing. But I am inspired by the Australians around me. They aren’t giving up on their wildlife. What they do best as individuals is band together for the sake of the greater good and the community. And, like the volunteer firefighters here, they never ever stop.

Many, many efforts to help animals have been launched across the country. Below are just a few in my local area that I’ve been aware of or involved in.

Most inspiring and rewarding to me has been Water Our Wildlife Canberra, a local effort encouraging people to just start putting out water for the wildlife around us—whether it’s a small backyard basin of water for the birds and bees or a wading pool for kangaroos in the neighborhood nature reserve—every little bit makes a difference. Interest and participation are both growing by leaps and bounds daily. There is even talk of turning it into a national program.
Picture
Kangaroos having a drink of water. Photo courtesy of Water Our Wildlife Canberra.
A group called Sydney Dingo Rescue was caring for 40 dingoes when it was forced to evacuate to a temporary location north of Canberra two weeks ago. They were running low on supplies, so local charities (including the ACT Pet Crisis Fund, which I work with) have pitched in to provide newspapers for bedding, materials for temporary enclosures, squeaky dog toys, dog food, and chews.
​
The Animal Rescue Craft Guild has put the call out for sewers, knitters, and crocheters to make wraps, nests, joey pouches. and blankets for injured bats, birds, orphaned marsupials, and other wildlife. 
Picture
Pouch made for orphaned joey. Photo courtesy of the Animal Rescue Craft Guild.
The Rescue Collective collects supplies for animal carers, and people have donated everything from formula for marsupial babies to animal first aid materials to jerrycans of water and plastic basins.
Picture
Photo courtesy of the Rescue Collective.
​If you’re wondering how you can help Australia, here are some opportunities to make a difference. 
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    Rose Ciccarelli is an American writer and editor living in Canberra, Australia.

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