Reflections Magazine Issue #56 - Winter 2002 | Page 39

Amy Noland Cooke ‘81 is back home in Monroe after traveling and teaching in Japan for 11 years. She and husband Ian (who is from England) are parents to Reina, 5, and Daniel, 2. Amy recently submitted one of 16 entries chosen out of 100,000 Joseph Vitale, Jr. ‘80 of Canton, to name new metallic-colored has one son, Joseph, and works Crayola crayons. “Sheen Green” for Wabash as an application engi- will be one of the new generation neer. Crayolas. I still work for Marshalls to pay the bills. Updating my skills as a job coach is my goal for this year.” Thomas is doing well with his business and lives in Rochester, NY. Lonnie Shipe ‘81 lives in Fay- sales with Richey Barrett Co. etteville, NC, with wife Eugeniae Ellen teaches in the Cleveland and daughter Alexis. Lonnie says Public School system. “I miss all my Siena friends.” Jerry Klinger ‘82 of BrownsSteven Best ‘82 of Sylvania, OH, ville, TX, is a golf pro at the Valley is a lawyer and real estate International Country Club. Jerry broker. and wife Martha have 3 children: Jerry, Matthew, and Samantha. Jeffrey ‘82 and wife Ellen (Barrett) Gisser ‘84, and children John Meszaros ‘82 is the admisCate and John live in Bay Vil- sion/marketing director for Boyslage, OH. Jeff is in insurance ville of Michigan in Detroit. He Caryl Widdowson ‘69 Handling the wild ones in Gray, Maine This article originally appeared in Portland (Maine) Press Herald. It is excerpted here by permission. The sick baby raccoon had been chased by some children and was hiding when it was found, shivering and dehydrated, by an animal-control officer who brought it to the Center for Wildlife in Cape Neddick. From there, the raccoon made its way to the home of Caryl Widdowson, a wildlife rehabilitator. For the past month, Widdowson has nursed the animal back to health at her home in Gray, Maine. Widdowson is one of the nearly 100 “rehabbers” throughout the state who are licensed to care for wild animals. Their intervention could have prevented an incident in Old Orchard Beach in late June, when a Massachusetts man accidentally exposed a rabid baby raccoon to hundreds of people. Rehabilitators say the case shows how well-intentioned, untrained people like Don Belmore, who brought the raccoon to the campground, can put themselves and others at risk when caring for wildlife. Dozens of people who came into contact with Belmore’s raccoon are now receiving a series of preventative shots. The raccoon was euthanized in order to test the brain for rabies. “People shouldn’t bring hurt wildlife home,” Widdowson said. “They should get it to a rehabber.” Rehabilitators like Widdowson work a middle ground between game wardens and people like Belmore. Henry Hilton, a staff wildlife biologist with the state Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife, says only a game warden, veterinarian or rehabilitator can decide the best course of action for a sick, injured or abandoned animal. “Officially, we say if it’s wildlife, leave it alone. Wildlife lives a life very different from ours. It doesn’t have a protected life, and there’s a lot of mortality,” he said. Sometimes people will see a bird, shivering, vomiting or recovering from a dog or cat attack. It could be carrying a disease or parasite, or it could become aggressive. If a bird can’t move its wings, has droopy wings, bleeds or is shivering, it may be watched to see if its parents will tend to it. “If it’s healthy, it will get along fine,” Hilton said. If a baby animal’s mother has died, a rehabilitator can often help by bringing it to a point where it can survive on its own in the wild. “That’s a good example of when to call a rehabilitator. Let them go to the spot and take care of it,” Hilton said. It’s illegal to rehabilitate wildlife without a license, but sometimes people do. People could accidentally harm an animal by feeding it the wrong type of food. They also might expose the animal to too much human contact, making reintroduction into the wild impossible. Instead of helping wildlife on their own, people should call the state police or a game warden or the Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife and ask for a rehabilitator. Widdowson is in the process of reintroducing two raccoons back into the wild, and trying to treat the sick 9-week-old raccoon. She is also caring for a bat brought to her with a joint problem; gray and red squirrels whose mothers disappeared or died; and a skunk. That’s in addition to her pet rabbits, chinchillas, guinea pigs and dogs. Widdowson keeps her raccoons in modified rabbit hutches in her back yard. The sick baby raccoon eats every two hours, but the healthy raccoons ar