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A Splendid Haven: Best Friends Animal Sanctuary - P1/2
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Welcome beloved viewers
to Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants.
On today’s program
we visit the Best Friends
Animal Sanctuary
at Angel Canyon
in southern Utah, USA.
It is the nation’s
largest sanctuary
for homeless animals
and was established
by the non-profit
organization Best Friends
Animal Society which
strives to bring about
a better world through
kindness to animals.
At any given time
the Sanctuary is home
to up to 2,000 dogs, cats,
birds and other animals
who have unique
physical, emotional,
and behavioral needs.
They are brought to Utah
from shelters
from around the country
for specialized care and
attention with a focus
on rehabilitation
in order to re-home them.
For those unable to find
a new home, Best Friends
allows them to stay at
this perfect haven for life.
Faith Maloney,
an Animal Care Consultant
at the sanctuary and
one of the co-founders
of the Best Friends
Animal Society,
now shares a brief history
of the site with us.
I’m originally from
England so I came over
here to the United States
in 1971.
And with a group
of friends, some of us
who actually started
“Best Friends,”
and knew each other
back then. So we met
each other through
the years,
raising families,
doing our work,
that kind of thing.
And then in the late 1970’s
we decided
this is something
we wanted to do.
And we started it in a
place in Arizona (USA),
not too far from here,
but we knew we needed
a bigger facility.
And we found this piece
of property and
purchased it in 1984.
So we’ve been here
for 26 years.
The sanctuary is
1,500 hectares in size
and is surrounded by
gorgeous national parks.
The refuge is divided into
several aptly named areas
for the different animals
that reside there like
“Dogtown,”
“Cat World,”
“Bunny House,”
“Horse Haven,”
“Parrot Garden,”
and “Piggy Paradise”
to name but a few.
Let’s now find out
about the friends
living in Parrot Garden
from Amy Meade.
Welcome to the Parrot
Garden at “Best Friends
Animal Society.”
Here we have just over
80 parrots. Cody is who
you're filming now
and he is
a Congo African Gray.
He's only 21.
He could easily live
to be 60. Parrots are
kind of in a unique
situation in our homes.
Since they are wild animals,
some of the unique
problems that
they present us with
aren't problems to them;
they’re problems with us
adjusting to living with them.
They are very loud
in the wild, they don't
have cell phones.
If they want lunch
and want to know
if you've got something
better over there or if
you've found something,
they're going to
have to call.
And they use their voices
to do that, so their voice
has to carry.
It takes a lot of
responsibility and
patience on our part.
Providing lots of toys,
lots of enriching
experiences, foraging
opportunities.
In the wild, they spend
most of the time
looking for their food.
When we put their food
in a bowl and they don't
have to do anything
to eat, they get bored,
they can develop
plucking behaviors,
excessive screaming
and they get bored.
They are very intelligent
so they do get bored.
Horse Haven is ready
and waiting for you!
Let’s trot on
over to the site.
One kind of little
interesting thing about
horses, is they are very,
very sensitive creatures.
They’ve really been
incredibly abused in all
through the centuries
really as a work animal.
People forced them into
doing what they wanted.
Our work with horses
it’s much more
relationship-based.
That’s what we believe
we should be doing
with the horses,
just having a good
companionship,
relationship with a horse.
We do have a kind of
training here called Parelli.
And it was founded
by a gentleman
Pat Parelli and his wife.
And it is based
on building that
relationship, reinforcing
that relationship.
And when you have that
relationship with the horse,
the horse will do
whatever you ask her,
because she wants to,
the horse wants to.
Right, a friendship.
He or she,
it’s a friendship.
And that’s a wonderful
training method and
we’ve been doing that
here for a number of
years now.
It’s based around games.
They love to play,
and this whole training
course is based
on games with balls;
they kick balls
around the field and
they do all kinds of things
and this develops the
friendship and the trust
between the trainer
and the horse.
Who’s up for a visit
to Piggy Paradise?!
Ms. Maloney will now
tell us about the
wondrous Vietnamese
pot-bellied pigs.
Well they’re generally
called Vietnamese
pot-bellied pigs or from
that region of the world
because where
they’re native.
And they are meant
to have a belly.
They are meant to have
a little pendulous belly,
that’s the way they look.
They were brought
over here as a fad
many years ago,
over 20 years ago
because the lie is that
they’re going to be
really small.
They take four years
to grow, four years
to get their full height
and weight.
So often what people
are doing is because
they breed very young,
so they breed
very young parents, who
then have little piglets.
And everyone says,
“Look how small (they are),”
but that pig is under a year,
so it’s going to take
another three years
to get to their full weight
and height.
Pigs are intelligent
and make wonderful
companions.
They are loyal and
show great love
to those around them.
Pigs are smarter than dogs,
I was told.
They can be
house-trained,
they will sit on command,
and they can be
clicker trained.
When we return, we will
meet other residents
of the Best Friends
Animal Sanctuary.
Please stay tuned to
Supreme Master
Television.
Welcome back to
Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants,
featuring a visit
to the Best Friends
Animal Sanctuary
in Utah, USA,
a “no-kill” refuge for
special needs animals.
“No-kill” means only
if an animal has a
terminal or painful illness
will euthanasia be used,
and only if it is the most
compassionate option.
The residents,
who typically come from
shelters or are brought
in by rescue groups
from across the country,
often need only
a few weeks of
loving care before they
are ready to be re-homed
with a warm family.
There are also
wild animals staying
at the haven.
It looks like it’s time
to visit the Wild Friends
area with our guide
Haven Diaz and make
some new acquaintances!
Welcome to
“Wild Friends” here at
“Best Friends
Animal Society.”
At “Wild Friends,”
we take care of all of
the educational wildlife
that’s here because of
physical and
mental disability, and
they’re non-releasable
back into the wild
because of those injuries
and conditions.
We also do a wildlife
rehab program where
we’re getting injured and
orphaned wildlife back
out into the wild
that’s come in,
from various injuries
and things like that.
So we do handle
the rehab portion
of it as well.
We also
do the domestic species;
it could be reptiles,
avian,
all the domestic species.
Ok, what you’re seeing
is a Barn Owl.
Her name is Suvali.
She has a shoulder injury
that was non-repairable.
So she’ll spend the rest
of her life here with us.
And they’re here strictly
for the purpose
of education:
educating the public,
conservation,
things like that.
And these guys are
strictly nocturnal,
so she is kind of
peeking at you slightly,
it’s hard to tell.
It’s okay buddy.
This is Poet,
he’s a Prairie Flacon. …
The portion of
his left wing…
It’s okay, Poet.
You’re okay, buddy.
He’s also non-releasable
in our education program
due to a physical disability.
He’s beautiful.
How do you care
for these (birds)?
It’s basic cleaning and
the feeding, clean water,
and clean habitats
or enclosures.
And we’re also careful to
make sure that they have
a good quality of life.
We provide enrichment
for them as well,
given the fact that
they have to spend
the rest of their life
in captivity.
We pretty much provide
everything we can and to
give them the best quality
of life given
the circumstances.
How does
the Best Friends Animal
Sanctuary ensure
wild birds feel at home?
Well, with falcons
they’re solitary,
so they don’t really want
a lot of company.
These guys all came in
as mature, wild animals.
So for them,
it’s just providing them
with safety, security,
not only the food
and water, but also
making sure that
they’re happy and
they’re not going to be
with another bird,
because they’re solitary.
So we have contact
with them twice a day
for feeding and cleaning,
and we just pretty much
give them their space
and let them,
have their own area
and feel safe and secure.
So that’s pretty much
what we do aside
from the cleaning.
We let them have
their free space and
feel comfortable
in their habitat.
What should we do
if we find an animal
in the wild requiring
medical attention?
Here is some wise advice.
These two are Alfred
and Annabel, they’re
two American crows.
They came into
our program because
they were actually raised
by people.
So when I was saying
earlier about physical
and mental disability,
these guys have
the mental disability.
They don’t know
how to be social
with other crows,
or survive in the wild.
Annabel actually
crippled her feet in a fall
from a nest,
and some people actually
took her in.
But she should have been
taken to a rehab facility
with some of the
Good Samaritan laws
that have been passed,
you are actually legally
covered to transport
an injured wild animal
from where you found
them to a wildlife facility.
You want to get
in contact with your
local department of
wildlife services to do
that, and if you ever
find injured wildlife,
it’s best to have a trained
professional relate
to them, but in the event
you’re not able to get
someone to a location,
you may be their
only chance, especially
when you’re out
in the wilderness
and we find animals,
you are covered legally
to transport them
to a wildlife
rehabilitation center.
The best thing to do
is to secure them safely,
don’t handle anything
that you don’t feel
comfortable handling,
because you’ll
probably just make
the situation worse.
And then quietly and
safely transport them
to your nearest
wildlife facility. And also,
veterinary facilities
are legally covered to do
immediate emergency
medical care and
they usually do have
contacts for wildlife
rehabilitators, so it’s
a good resource to use.
Our gratitude
Faith Maloney,
Amy Meade, Haven Diaz
and the rest of
the dedicated staff of
the Best Friends Animal
Sanctuary for providing
such a safe home and
a magnificent
rehabilitation place
for all animals.
Please join us on
Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants
tomorrow for part two
of our feature on this
remarkable refuge.
For more details
on the Best Friends
Animal Sanctuary,
please visit
Thank you for your
company today
on our program.
Coming up next is
Enlightening Entertainment,
following
Noteworthy News
here on
Supreme Master Television.
May all beings be blessed
with everlasting joy
in their lives.
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