Greetings, lovely viewers,
and welcome to another
fascinating episode of
Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants.
Today we’ll travel to
Somerset in breathtaking
South West England,
one of the UK’s
most beautiful areas,
to pay another visit
to the Secret World
Wildlife Rescue,
a magical haven for
Britain’s wild animals.
Founded in 1992 by
Pauline and Derek Kidner,
Secret World
rescues, rehabilitates and
re-homes sick, injured
and orphaned animals.
With a team of more than
600 dedicated volunteers
and trained animal experts,
the group’s facility
has grown into
the only 24-hour-a-day,
seven-day-a-week
wildlife rescue center
in the region.
Each year,
the marvelous group
helps over 4,000
of our precious
wild animal friends
in England alone,
including: badgers,
otters, foxes, owls,
hedgehogs and deer.
One of Secret World’s
most memorable rescues
was at the end
of December 2010 when
severe freezing conditions
caused a group of swans
in Central Somerset
to starve, with some
becoming stuck in ice.
Secret World volunteers
saved 21 swans from
the extreme conditions
and rehabilitated them
back to health.
Following
the successful operation,
in addition to
a prior donation
of £10,000 given
when she honored
the organization
with the Shining World
Compassion Award,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
provided
an additional US$10,000
to Secret World
in support of its mission.
Secret World has gained
national recognition
for its work, winning
the British Broadcasting
Corporation’s (BBC’s)
Animal Country Award
in 1995, and has also
been featured on
numerous TV programs
in the UK.
In 2001 Ms. Kidner
was nominated for
the BBC Animal Award
because of her great
contributions to the cause
of animal welfare.
Now let us meet
some of the fine residents
of this refuge!
Badgers are elusive,
nocturnal animals and
the world’s fastest diggers.
We’ve got three little cubs
that are with us
at the moment.
And they were
the smallest cubs
we’d ever actually had.
The smallest one
was 55 grams
when it arrived.
One was 72 (grams),
and the other one was
76 grams, and that was
just under two weeks ago.
And they’ve actually
quadrupled their weights,
which is really fantastic.
These fascinating,
furry beings are
incredibly strong
for their size.
An average adult badger
weighs around 10 kilograms
and has a body length
of about 750 millimeters,
with males slightly larger
than females.
Scientists have identified
eight species of badgers
and placed them
into three subfamilies.
Badgers have
extraordinary senses
of hearing and smell
and are highly sociable,
living with their families
in large, underground setts
or interlocking tunnels,
many of which
are centuries old
and are passed down
from generation.
In the wild, badgers can
live for up to 14 years,
and interestingly,
a badger’s age can be
roughly determined
by examining the wear
on his or her teeth.
Friendly badgers
have been known
to share their dens
with other animals
such as coyotes and foxes,
and in one case,
even a human boy.
In 1871
a badger family adopted
a lost Canadian boy.
He stayed in their den and
they kindly fed the child
and kept him safe
until he was found.
Each year,
Secret World may care for
up to 50 baby badgers.
They were found in Wales,
and some people went to
have a look at their land
after some floods
and realized
that three of the setts
had been flooded.
And they heard
these little cubs
crying in a metal barrel.
And obviously
as tiny as they were,
they weren’t going to
keep warm for very long.
So they decided
to take them home
and got in touch with us;
they were
about six hours away but
we were able to arrange
a relay of drivers.
And they were with us
by 1:30 in the morning
on Sunday.
And they’re at the moment
needing to be fed
every three hours, although
when they first came in,
it was just between
one and two hours, so,
quite a lot of effort when
it comes to feeding them.
I know, you’re starving,
aren’t you?
Another animal that
frequently receives care
at the Secret World
Wildlife Rescue
is the magnificent otter.
Otters are
semi-aquatic mammals
that belong to
the Mustelid family.
Although
they have an almost
worldwide distribution,
they’re not easily spotted
in the wild and
are mainly found in areas
close to undisturbed rivers,
streams and estuaries.
Otters can swim faster
than any other
four-legged animal
at speeds of up to
one meter per second.
Interestingly, while
otters are swimming,
they’re able to
control their heartbeat
to reduce the amount
of oxygen they need, and
thus can stay underwater
for up to four minutes.
In muddy riverbeds
where visibility is low,
otters are able to
use their stiff whiskers
to feel their way around,
and can also
focus their eyes
in a way that allows them
to see clearly underwater.
This little cub’s been
with us about a week.
She came in where
she was found in a garden
just underneath
some decking.
Her eyes have only
just opened because she’s
only about five weeks old,
so still far too young
to have to come out
of the sett on her own.
She would need to be
about 12 weeks
before she would start
moving above ground.
And then this little boy
only just came in
about half an hour ago.
He was found curled up
on the side of the road.
And he’s
about seven weeks old,
six-seven weeks old.
And we obviously think
that he's lost mum
somehow or other.
Or sometimes
when you get heavy rain,
the rivers swell up.
They will
actually sometimes
get washed out of holes.
Because at the moment
they’re far too young
to go swimming in water,
they would float on the top,
just bob up and down,
and then the river would
carry them further down.
So it’s very difficult
to find mum.
And there may well be
more of these.
We've sent volunteers out
to have a look and see if
they can find some more.
During our time
with Pauline Kidner
she gave us a tour
of the Millie Building
where young animals
come for their last stage
of rehabilitation before
being released back into
their natural habitats.
This is what we call
the Millie Building.
It was actually
named after a little girl
called Millie Havercroft,
who sadly died
in the year 2000.
So when we eventually
got this pen done,
because Secret World
was her favorite place,
we named the building
after Millie.
It’s a special building
where all our
orphaned animals
once they’re weaned,
they come down here
because there's
grassed enclosures
attached to the pens.
And it’s a time for them
to revert to being wild,
really.
This building it's got
a very long corridor and
there’s about 14 pens in all;
small pens up this end,
which allows us
to put single animals in.
But you’ll find that
each of the pens actually
can take heat lamps,
and they’re all tiled
so that if we put
wet animals in there
that need a lot of water,
it’s easy to keep it clean.
And the pens actually
have enclosures
attached to them, so that
when animals are small
they go to a pen.
And then as they get older,
we open a gate and
they can come through
into glass enclosures.
The building was designed
with a long corridor
so that when we got
badgers or foxes
or even swans as well,
we can walk them
up and down here
and make sure that
their movement is okay
prior to being released.
So that was the reason
for the long corridor.
And you’re seeing this
obviously in the winter,
so a number of the pens
aren’t in use.
At the moment this is
being used for hedgehogs
because we've got
absolutely hundreds
of hedgehogs here
over the winter.
So this is a pen
that's got hedgehogs in it,
but it can be used
for squirrels
or it can be used
for small birds as well.
Hedgehogs are
adorable animals
with prickly spines
covering their bodies
except for their face,
belly and legs.
Per hedgehog, there are
up to 7,000 brown
or grey spines on the tops
of their bodies, and
soft, grey fur underneath.
They have five toes
front and back
just like humans and
a great sense of hearing.
And this weather,
they’re probably
hibernating, actually.
Let's just
have a look and see.
Oh, dear, prickly hedgehog,
there we go.
And we keep track of all
where the different
hedgehogs have come from,
because as much
as possible we always
put them back to where
they come from because
it will be an area
that they’ll know
and they’ll know where
to find food and water
and where to actually live.
We have got a resident
badger on the other side,
and she’s been with us
for several weeks now.
And if we go in,
we'll probably be able to
see she literally drags
all the straw around.
But you can see
she’s got nice tunnels
just to go in.
Her food's there.
She’s got a sack bag
that she can play with
if she wants to.
And the woodchips
in the corner
is so they can use it
as a dirt corner, really.
And this one down here
actually is a special pen
that we've got, and
this is purely for deer.
And we use it because
it’s been clad out
with rubber matting, so
that if we do have a deer
that runs into the walls,
they’re not going
to hurt themselves.
We can also adjust
the amount of light that
we want to put into the pen.
If they’re very short,
obviously we try and
shut out as much light
as we can.
And we can also
alternate between
red and white light,
which is obviously
a lot more comforting
for the deer
while they’re here.
We get approximately
about 50 deer a year
coming in.
Most of those would be
road-traffic accidents.
Bravo, compassionate
Pauline Kidner
and all the other staff
and volunteers
of the Secret World
Wildlife Rescue
for your praiseworthy work
helping and safeguarding
the lives of Britain’s
wild animals.
For more details on
Secret World
Wildlife Rescue,
please visit
Caring viewers,
thank you for your
wonderful company
today on Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants.
Coming up next is
Enlightening Entertainment,
after Noteworthy News.
May our hearts always be
blessed with Divine love
and noble thoughts.