{"id":79887,"date":"2021-12-26T22:30:00","date_gmt":"2021-12-27T07:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/to-the-rescue-animal-ambassadors-educate-recuperate\/"},"modified":"2021-12-27T18:19:59","modified_gmt":"2021-12-28T03:19:59","slug":"to-the-rescue-animal-ambassadors-educate-recuperate","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/to-the-rescue-animal-ambassadors-educate-recuperate\/","title":{"rendered":"To the rescue: Animal ambassadors educate, recuperate"},"content":{"rendered":"
This story has been updated to correct a spelling error.<\/em><\/ins><\/p>\n People in Southeast Alaska share a home with abundant wildlife — often glimpsing the animals surrounding us in the Tongass National Forest. Sometimes people and wildlife intersect for better or worse. This week, the Empire is featuring a multi-part series about the work of animal rescue groups that stand by to assist animals that need help.<\/em><\/p>\n Last summer, a hiker on Kruzof Island found a tiny Sitka black-tailed deer alone in the woods. The deer’s umbilical cord was still attached, and it was the size of a cat.<\/p>\n Fearing the young deer had been abandoned by the mother, the hiker collected the fawn and turned it over to a local Alaska Wildlife Trooper.<\/p>\n “Someone found the deer and brought it to town,” explained Trish Baker, executive director of the Alaska Wildlife Conservation Center<\/a> in Girdwood, near Anchorage, the sanctuary now caring for the fawn.<\/p>\n “Someone had good intentions, but there as no evidence the animal was an orphan,” Baker said in a phone interview last month, explaining that many mothers leave babies to forage as part of normal protocol.<\/p>\n After a stay with a local wildlife trooper,<\/a> state officials transferred the deer to the Alaska Wildlife Conservation Center — a place where sick, injured and abandoned animals arrive from around the state for care and rehabilitation.<\/p>\n State officials flew the deer to the sanctuary for care based on a contract between the center and the Alaska Depart of Fish and Game.<\/p>\n Initially named Iris after Iris Meadows on Kruzoff Island, the staff at the sanctuary named the deer Rainbow and often call her Rain for short.<\/p>\n