Saturday, September 24, 2011,
Just look at that face. Is that the face of a happy canine or what? This little vixen is relaxing in the tall grass after being released at the Timber Point Golf Course in Great River. A real diamond in the rough. Isn’t she a beauty? These are her first few moments of freedom after spending over two months convalescing at Sweetbriar Nature Center. She was rescued here back at the end of June and now she’s back home.
My friend Janine is one of the wildlife rehabilitators at Sweetbriar and she invited me to photograph the release of this young Red Fox. Thanks again, Janine. This is a photo op that doesn’t come along very often. Janine is the rehab tech that responded when Sweetbriar got a call concerning an ailing fox seen on the golf course.
An exam back at Sweetbriar revealed that the fox was a female kit – that means puppy to you and me – and she was only about two or three months old, tops. Possibly the victim of a hawk attack, she had puncture wounds and scrapes all over her body. The little lady wasn’t using her left foreleg and one of her eyes was completely clouded over due to an infection. She was also very underweight and dehydrated and covered with ticks. I saw her within days of her rescue. She was not a pretty sight and this was after the Sweetbriar crew had already cleaned her up. It was heartbreaking to see this tiny girl, dwarfed inside a medium sized dog carrier, favoring her injured leg and obviously blind in that milky eye. It was her not her best day.
She was taken to Commack Animal Emergency Hospital for a checkup. The folks there do a lot of pro bono work for Sweetbriar but sometimes they work it out in trade. In this case, Janine had to take three baby squirrels off their hands. A fair trade, I think. The vets x-rayed the fox’s leg and had a look at her eye. Luckily, there were no broken bones and with medication the eye would mend.
Good luck in the world, little one. JK




