A Lifetime of Love: Rescue is Not a One-Time Event
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At Catskill Animal Sanctuary, we’ve learned a thing or two in 22 years of rescuing farm animals from the horrors of animal hoarding, backyard butchers, abandonment, and industry, and in recognition of World Farm Animals Day.Â
If you’ve followed our journey, you’ve heard us say that rescuing farm animals is the easy part of our work. After all, wanting all animals to know the same love and care that we offer our dogs and cats is why we’re here. It was the very foundation on which we were built back in 2001, when we rescued Dino, an elderly Shetland pony, the sole survivor of an arson at Brooklyn’s Bergen Beach Stables.Since that first rescue, thousands have come down our driveway to experience what love feels like, many for the first time in their lives.
Rescuing animals is also what generates interest from sanctuary supporters: you cheer us on when we announce new rescues, you share our social media posts, and you give generously to the effort. Without you, we truly wouldn’t be able to say “Yes, we will take them” when we learn of urgent situations, like the 41 sheep sick with infections and life-threateningly anemic from high parasite loads whom we welcomed last winter.
The initial rescue of a needy animal is a moment of triumph and hope for all of us. However, though the headlines disappear, rescue is not a one-time event. We don’t post every day about the sheep we rescued nine months ago, but they’re here, because at Catskill Animal Sanctuary, rescue is a lifelong commitment. In this blog post, we explore what it means to care for animals for the rest of their lives.
The initial rescue of a farmed animal–that life-affirming moment when we get to say, “You’re safe now”-is just the beginning of a life journey that includes.
The Lifelong Commitment
Rescuing farmed animals comes with a deep and enduring responsibility. When we recently rescued days-old Milton and Anya, two desperately sick dairy calves separated from their mother, we knew that each of them would weigh 2,000 pounds or more at maturity, and that they could live two decades or more with us.
Our lifelong commitment includes:
Caring for farmed animals is a lifelong journey–a journey that sometimes requires more of us than we knew we had to give. But we do it all–even the heartbreak, time after time, of saying goodbye to those we have loved so deeply–because the rewards of come back to us, whether in tiny private moments or occasional momentous victories, each and every day:
This work, this “right livelihood” as Buddhists call it–is truly good for the spirit, and even on our worst days, most of us wouldn’t trade it in. But the lifelong commitment to meet the animals’ physical, emotional, and social needs is no small obligation–it’s one that requires animal lovers like you to step up in support of that care, and of our vision of a kinder world for all beings. We hope you’ll join us:
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