Big Cat Rescue (formerly
Wildlife On Easy
Street) in
Tampa, Florida,
United States, is a
non-profit corporation that
provides a permanent home to more than 100 big cats. This facility
meets the sanctuary standards as set out at
SanctuaryStandards.com.<ref>
Sanctuary Standards</ref> It
houses more than 100 big cats, such as
tigers,
lions,
leopards,
cougars,
bobcats,
lynx,
ocelots,
servals, and
caracals. The sanctuary, located at 12802 Easy
St, near the Citrus Park Mall on the Northwest side of Tampa,
offers public tours several times a week and offers special events
from time to time.
Big Cat Rescue's Vision
StatementA world where the animals we share it with
are treated with respect and caring and where habitat is preserved
to insure the indefinite future survival of these wonderful gifts
of nature. In creating such a world, we hope the same principles of
respect and caring will carry over to the way humans treat each
other. <ref>Big Cat Rescue</ref>
Big Cat
Rescue's Mission StatementTo provide the best home we
can for the animals in our care and to reduce the number of cats
that suffer the fate of abuse, abandonment or extinction by
teaching people about the plight of the cats, both in the wild and
in captivity, and how they can help through their behavior and
support of better laws to protect the cats. <ref>Big Cat
Rescue</ref>
The History of Big Cat
Rescueas told by the Founder, Carole
Baskin<ref>Published by Encylopedia
Britannica</ref>
I never set out to start a sanctuary.
It happened partly by accident, then largely through a process of
evolution.
In 1992 my late husband and I were at an exotic
animal auction buying llamas when a man walked in with a terrified
six month old bobcat on a leash. He said she had been his wife's
pet and that she didn't want her any more. We brought her home and
called her Windsong. I adored her and she generally responded in
the ways we expect a pet to do. But one of the traits that makes
exotic cats bad pets is the tendency to bond to one person and be
jealous of and/or aggressive toward others. She wouldn't tolerate
my husband, so he decided to buy and hand raise one or more bobcat
kittens of his own.
In 1993 he located a place in Minnesota that
sold bobcat and lynx kittens and we drove there with my 12 year old
daughter and her little friend to look at them. What we found was a
“fur farm”. While they sold a few cubs each year as pets, their
main business was raising them for a year and then slaughtering
them to make coats.
The cats were in cages that were several
inches deep with layers of fur and feces. The flies were so thick
in the metal shed that we had to put hankies over our faces just to
breathe without inhaling them. On the floor was a stack of
partially skinned bobcats, Canada lynx and Siberian lynx. Their
bellies had been cut off as this soft, spotted fur is the only
portion used in making fur coats. I was so stunned by the sight,
that I was numbed and in denial of what I had just seen. There were
56 kittens and we asked if there was that big of a market for them
as pets. We were told that whatever did not sell for pets would be
slaughtered the following year for fur.
In horror and disbelief
I looked at my husband. I couldn't speak. I had never heard
anything so heartless and now the pile of dead cats in the corner
hit me with the reality of a freight train.
This was at a time
when protesters were spray painting people wearing fur coats,
wearing fur was becoming “politically incorrect,” business was not
good and probably looked to the breeder like it might stay that
way. I believe this is why, after we first offered to buy all 56
kittens and later agreed to buy all of his cats if the breeder
would agree to discontinue making cats into coats (he still had
mink, fox and others,) he agreed.
We bought every carrier,
basket, tool box or bucket that you could put a cat in and bales of
hay for nesting for the ride from Minnesota to Florida. As my
husband drove, the rest of us tended to babies that had to be fed
every two hours for the next two months. It was many months later
before any of us slept through the night because we didn't know
what we were doing and there was no one to turn to for advice. We
dealt with every imaginable sickness and the increasing demands on
our time from these carnivores that rely so heavily on their
mothers for the first one to three years of life.
Initially we
brought the cats to our home. Then we started building cages on the
current site of the sanctuary, a 45 acre site nearby which we had
obtained some years before in a foreclosure. That began years of
long hours, hard work, learning, heartbreak over what we found many
animals enduring, and evolving, often by trial and error, to the
sanctuary as it exists today and continues to evolve.
People
often ask if it is hard to start a sanctuary and it is not. What is
hard is doing it in a way that doesn’t add to the problem. If you
build it, they will come so the biggest problem is saying “no.” I
was fortunate in that my real estate business was capable of
funding the sanctuary deficits during the first 11 years. There is
a huge misconception by animal lovers that if they build it,
someone else will finance it and that isn’t how it works.
After
15 years of being involved in exotic cat rescue I have seen the
fall out from much of this hopeful thinking. When people found out
we had rescued the cats from the fur farm they started calling and
asking us to take their lions, tigers and leopards that they had
foolishly bought as pets, when they were cute little cubs, but now
did not want. By 2003 we had to turn away 312 big cats that we did
not have the finances to rescue for their 20 year lives and every
other year that number was doubling. We knew that if we couldn’t
take them in they would almost always end up in miserable
conditions or thrust back into the breeders’ hands to create more
animals that would be discarded the following year as they matured.
It was heartbreaking to have to be turning away a big cat
almost every day. It made all of the hard work we were doing to
care for 100 big cats seem pointless when the bad guys were
increasing the number of suffering cats faster than we could raise
money to save them. A bill had stagnated for six years in Congress
that would have stopped a lot of the problem, but it is hard to get
lawmakers to hear a bill about protecting big cats when there are
so many other issues vying for their time. We used every
opportunity to inform our volunteers and visitors about the
importance of the bill and in Dec. 2003 the Captive Wild Animal
Safety Act passed.
The Captive Wild Animal Safety Act made it
illegal to sell a big cat, across state lines, as a pet. There were
a lot of parameters and the actual rules to enforce the law were
not written by the US Fish and Wildlife Service until Sept. 2007,
but the breeders saw the hand writing on the wall, and many stopped
breeding. (Coincidentally there have been record numbers of
reported cougar sightings in areas where cougars have been extinct
for 100 years since the ban passed in 2003) The following year,
instead of turning away what we expected to be 500-600 big cats, we
“only” had to turn away 110. By 2007 that number dropped to 72 and
it continues to decline as 7 more states have banned the private
possession of big cats and many more are cracking down on an
industry that has been largely left to run wild.
Now the number
one reason for unwanted big cats is that they are used as props for
edu-tainment, photo opportunities and as a way to attract the
public to zoos, pseudo sanctuaries and con artists who assure the
public that the cats have been bred to save the species from
extinction. None of these back yard breeders are involved in any
real conservation efforts and there are no release programs for big
cats because there is no appropriate habitat reserved for them.
Cubs are bred, used and then discarded as yearlings to well meaning
rescuers who love being able to help a big cat and who often post
pictures of themselves petting the big cats silently saying to the
world, “Do as I say, and not as I do,” while saying out loud,
“These animals don’t make good pets.”
A couple years, and a
hundred big cats later, they realize that they can’t rescue their
way out. A rescue brings in money up until the day the cat gets to
the sanctuary. After that donors and volunteers are usually looking
for the next “feel good” event where they can rescue a cat. This
lack of planning for the long term quickly reaches a tipping point.
The animals already rescued begin to go without vet care, regular
meals, and their cage space is filled with more and more big cats,
often causing injuries and death. Before long the pseudo sanctuary
is calling around the country looking for someone to take all of
their “rescues” off their hands. But there is no place for them to
go.
The state and federal government don’t intercede until the
situation is so dire that public outcry won’t let them ignore it
any longer because they know there is no where for the cats to go
and they don’t want to be perceived as bad guys stepping in and
euthanizing a bunch of charismatic tigers. I have seen abuse and
neglect that turns my stomach in facilities that are currently “in
compliance” with all state and federal agencies.
There is a
solution and we are making that legislative agenda our highest
priority. The ultimate answer is to end the practice of keeping big
cats captive and the bill currently before Congress that will be
the next step is Haley’s Act. The bill is named after the teenager
who was mauled to death by a tiger while posing with the cat for a
photo. It bans public contact with big cats and that would end more
than 90% of big cats being discarded after they cannot be used for
these close encounters. The bill is HR 1947 and you can help make
it the law at www.CatLaws.com
References
Encyclopedia BritannicaExternal
links
Big Cat
Rescue