Showing posts with label Tours. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tours. Show all posts

The Magical Season

Spring is here, and tour season at Home for Life is right around the corner. We officially open for tours the first weekend after Memorial Day and offer tours at least twice a week throughout the summer and fall. Tours are reserved for donors and sponsors who make our work possible, but we also offer at least one open house per season,where anyone is welcome who's interested in meeting our animals and seeing Home for Life.

We love to have kids visit Home for Life. Some of our animals are not especially amenable to children. But, there are several areas of the sanctuary that are safe for kids to visit where they can interact with the cats,dogs and other creatures we care for. Most kids find our catteries just fascinating. One child told me that the catteries were like going into butterfly exhibits where butterflies are at liberty in the enclosure to zoom around , alighting on people,then flying off. To enter the cat areas is really like going into a different world.

That experience must seem magical to a child. I tend to look at the cats and the catteries in terms of what needs to be fixed, cleaned more thoroughly,and which of the cats is ill,not eating, needs grooming,ect. It's wonderful to see the cats in their environment through the eyes of kids who are astonished, delighted and completely captivated, both by the cats who approach them and those going about their business, doing what cats do: cats of every size and color, some disabled, long fur, short fur, green eyes,blue eyes, yellow eyes. At Home for Life, all the cats are free to go where they want, moving in 3 dimensions, up and among the cat trees and teepees even going outside through their own catdoors. At our open house last year, several children had the opportunity to meet our cats. Here's Drew, an older cat,catching the attention of a little girl by playing with her hair.


At the same event, a little boy says hi to two of our elderly cats,Dot the calico on the left and Fritzl, who only recently passed away, in the picture on the right.


It's widely acknowledged that animals can provide therapeutic services to people of all ages who are sick.traumatized or wounded. But seldom discussed is the value of the reverse; what people and kids can do for animals who have been wounded and rejected and how all can flourish as a result For any kid simply encountering animals as fellow living beings with whom they share our world emphasizes the value of their understanding and appreciation and that giving is just as worthwhile as receiving. There is value in what people bring to their interaction with animals, especially ones like those at Home for Life who have had less than positive experiences with humans in their past,before coming to the sanctuary. Most kids do not need to hear the stories of what some of our animals have suffered before coming to Home for Life to benefit from the happiness to be had from meeting our animals halfway and having the animals respond . At the sanctuary they can expeirence first hand that approaching animals with an open heart is the key to building a bridge of appreciation and understanding with another living creature. Since the sanctuary is the home of our cats,where they know they are safe, they feel comfortable and confident greeting new people and even children, even though they rarely interact with kids.

Visiting our animals on their own turf offers a valuable perspective to kids where they have the chance to see the world from our animals' point of view and observe our cats where they can be themsleves in a protected environment. For all our visitors, adults and children, sanctuaries reveal that animals have the potential to be so much more than an accessory, an ego enhancement or a source of income, chores and messes or expense. The most valuable service a sanctuary provides is education to transform the way that people think about and treat animals. Sanctuaries can foster an appreciation of animals as as having worth in and of themselves as fellow living beings by allowing people to see and experience the world from the animals' perspective.

These photos were taken by Mark Luinenburg at our 2010 Open House, last August.

More tours at the animal sanctuary

Two Saturdays ago,supporters Sergio and his wife Ruth visited, to present Home for Life Animal Sanctuary staff with donations given to Sergio in honor of his landmark 50th birthday. Sergio, who loves cats, asked all well wishers who attended his birthday party to give donations to Home for Life instead of presents to him. Here are Sergio and Ruth, his wife,visiting the feline leukemia building at the sanctuary. We are so happy that they could meet some of the many animals that Sergio helped through his kindness and generosity.Katie,HFL animal care specialist,with Celeste in her arms, did the tour.

Tour season is starting early at HFL

Tour season has started early this year at Home for Life Sanctuary. With the warmer weather, our sponsors have been anxious to visit the animals they support. A regular visitor is 13 year Ellie from Stillwater, who sponsors one of the HFL shelties Monty.She saved her babysitting money to pay for sponsorship of Monty. The special attention Ellie lavishes on Monty has really brought this very timid dog out of his shell. We had tried to involve Monty in the Renaissance Program but he was too insecure and frightened to learn anything or work with his student. Ellie and her sister Katie come out about every month and spend an hour playing with Monty in one of our fenced meadows. Monty has so much fun playing fetch and chasing the girls that he forgets he is afriad and shy.

We did another tour on Sunday for Megan and her husband, her mom and dad.Megan & Jon directed their wedding gifts to Home for Life to help our animals and have been loyal and generous sponsors for years. We were happy to have them meet the many animals they have so generously supported.

Home for Life's tour season officially begins the first weekend after Memorial Day and continues through the summer and fall. Tours are reserved for sponsors and donors and are by appointment on Wednesdays and Saturdays @1: 30 pm. For those who are curious about Home for Life but not yet supporters we have an open house planned for August in connection with our Memorial Garden event