The massive movement of volunteers from all over the country to assist with animal
rescues in the hurricane stricken region was remarkable. No one balked at wading in toxic gunk
or working from before dawn to way past dusk to save lives. Some members from our own PAWS
family dropped everything and headed south to help.
“I witnessed, first hand, not only
how strong we can be, but also how
fragile we are when faced with more
tragedy than we are meant to comprehend...
Everyday the animals that arrived were sicker,
weaker and more defensive than the
day before. They were in survival
mode, scared, confused and fighting
for their lives.”
–Zoe Clelland, PAWS volunteer, who assisted the Humane Society of
the United States at the Lamar-Dixon shelter—Gonzalez, LA
“We had to work fast because all dogs had to be
walked and fed and cages cleaned by midday. No dogs
were walked between noon and 6:00 pm because of the
extreme heat. The temperatures ranged in the mid to
upper ninety’s with very high humidity—a bit rough
on two volunteers from the Northwest.”
–Jill Blakeway and Darcia Hurst, PAWS volunteers
at Lamar-Dixon shelter— Gonzalez, LA
“The last day of my stay I broke
down emotionally because I didn’t
want to leave…My only solace
came from bringing a dog back
with me… Puck, a Louisiana
Catahoula Leopard dog.... Every
time I look at Puck my mind
wanders back to Tylertown,
Mississippi. He is my comfort. He
is my connection back to every
person and animal I had the
pleasure of meeting at
the Best Friends camp.”
–Dr. Jennifer Barich,
PAWS veterinarian,
with the Best Friends
Hurricane Relief Camp—
Tylertown, MS
In the days and weeks following Katrina, the media brought us countless tales of
displaced families and pets. But another, largely untold story was also unfolding—that of
the region’s devastated wildlife. Former PAWS staff member and volunteer Monte Merrick,
who recently worked with Houston-based Wildlife Rehabilitation and Education, shares
his personal account of wildlife rescue in Louisiana.
“Our team worked the coast out of Houma, a small
town about an hour from New Orleans. Hurricane
Katrina damaged as many as 150 offshore platforms.
Levees broke not just in New Orleans, but all through
the delta and its bayous. Storage tanks holding as much
as two million gallons of oil were
utterly washed away. Well over
seven million gallons of oil were
reported spilled, probably more.
Here the levee had broken and
taken a pipeline with it. What had
been the town of Nairn flooded with fouled water and the marsh
outside the levee flooded with oil. The day before a
Brown Pelican had been rescued covered in crude oil
and sewage, unable to fly. This day we discovered over
forty dead birds, coated in oil. Mostly Clapper Rails
and King Rails, but also Great and Little Blue Herons,
Snowy and Great Egrets, a Mottled Duck.
We searched Nairn’s
small streets in an air
boat—water still high
one month after the
storm and every single
house destroyed. We saw
only four birds in a few
square miles of newly
formed bayou: a Great
Blue Heron, a Double Crested Cormorant and two
Kingfishers.
The morning of October first we released the Brown
Pelican on a beach near Grande Isle. Much storm debris
had been removed and Rita cleared out the rest. It was
windy and hot with a choppy two-foot surf, high for
this part of the coast.
The pelican hopped out of his carrier, spread his
seven-foot wings and sailed out over the waves. He
landed past the break and bathed in the salty gulf. Two
more Brown Pelicans flew over and circled, hovering
above him in the wind. He rose to join them, and the
new trio flew off to the east. In my binoculars I could
see many pelicans—three, and then five and then
thirty—he could have been any of these. And in the
near background and as far as the limits of these lenses,
I saw oil platforms and rigs and the many boats that
serve them, more than I cared to count.”
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