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Domesticated & Farmed Animals at WRR
Click here to
visit our Dog & Cat (and Other Animals) Adoptions page.
It is important to mention that there are
those of us who believe that when you work in the field of
animal protection, that work should translate into respect
for all animals, not just those you are caring for and rescuing.
Every cow and chicken wants to stay alive just as much as
every monkey and large cat. The industry that houses and slaughters
countless millions of cows, turkeys, chickens, pigs, goats,
and others does so in a cruel and brutal manner. These animals
are forced to languish on feedlots, in battery cages —
and worse — while simply waiting to be slaughtered to
satisfy the country's appetite for "meat."
We need to begin considering the consequences
that other beings face as a result of our insatiable desire
to have whatever we want. Non-human animals are not here for
our entertainment, they are not here to feed us or educate
us; they are beings with their own desires, wants, and needs,
and it will be a new world indeed when we finally decide to
let them all live in peace.
For many years Wildlife Rescue & Rehabilitation
(WRR) was located on 21 acres near Boerne, Texas. When we
acquired the 187 acres in Kendalia, Texas, which is our new
home, we knew that in addition to being able to provide much
larger living areas for the animals in our care, we would
finally be able to rescue animals who are commonly found on
farms.
Though WRR has always rescued ducks, geese,
turkeys, and chickens, we were not able to provide them with
as much space as they deserved and we were not able to rescue
any cows, donkeys, mules, goats, sheep, or pigs. Now all of
these animals are living here at what we call "The Wildlife
Rescue Do No Harm Farm."
Here at the new sanctuary there are over a
dozen acres of pasture, and the entire 187 acres is ideal
for free-roaming mules and donkeys. The "farmed animals"
who now live at the sanctuary have come from as far away as
North Carolina, Oklahoma, and California, and as nearby as
Austin and San Antonio. Many of them were being kept as pets
until their people could no longer care for them. Many others
have been rescued off the auction block and still others were
confiscated by law enforcement officials after they had been
abused or abandoned.
The pigs and goats have over 12 acres of pasture
that is bordered by trees. The sheep are able to roam free
on the sanctuary grounds, as there are no longer any natural
predators who live in this part of the country (being that
this is Texas, the predators have all been killed). The chickens
have their own grassy yards and large chicken house, the turkeys
enjoy life in their very own pasture, and the ducks and geese
have their choice of two year-round ponds.
All of the photos below were taken at
Wildlife Rescue & Rehabilitation (WRR) in Kendalia, TX.
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Lynn Cuny with Chicken and Boris

Boston Blackie (Cow)

Chicken

Chicken with Adopted Ducklings

Donkeys

Sicilian Donkey

Donkeys

Sicilian Donkey

Ducklings

Duck

Duck

Geese

Goat

Chocolate (Goat) and Mouflon Sheep

Mulie (Mule)

Beauty, Mulie, and Cletus (Mules)

Pigaro (Pig)

Lucky (Pot-bellied Pig)

Rabbits

Sheep

Sheep

Sheep

Sheep

Oliver and Rocky (Sheep)

Sheep

Turkeys

Turkeys
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Chester (Cow)

Chester (Cow)

Rooster

Rooster

Sicilian Donkeys

Donkeys

Donkeys

Muscovy Duck

Duck

Egyptian Goose

Goats

Lynn with Baby Billy (Goat)

Chocolate (Goat)

Mulie (Mule)

Violet (Pig)

Pinkie (Pig)

Pigs

Rabbit

Sheep

Sheep

Sheep

Rocky (Sheep)

Oliver and Rocky (Sheep)

Sheep

Sheep

Turkeys
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