Help Give Carolina Wildlife a Second Chance

Organization Image

A nonprofit fundraiser supporting

Wild Earth Conservancy
Fundraiser image

Help us build a lifesaving wildlife center to rescue, heal, and protect Carolina wildlife in crisis.

$0

raised by 0 people

$50,000 goal

New update

Update posted 24 days ago

🌿 WE’RE LIVE! 🌿

Wild Earth Conservancy now has a brand-new home online! 🌎✨

Explore our mission, learn how you can support, volunteer, or partner with us, and see how we’re working to protect biodiversity one step at a time.

💻 Visit us: wildearthconservancy.com
🌱 Your support helps us rehabilitate, conserve, and inspire.


Wild Earth Conservancy

Why We’re Building the Carolina Wildlife Rescue & Rehabilitation Center

Across North and South Carolina, thousands of wild animals are injured, orphaned, and displaced every year. Most have nowhere to go. Wildlife rehabbers are overwhelmed, facilities are at capacity, and many species—especially predators and high-risk cases—are turned away simply because there is not enough space, staff, or medical support.

These young opossums are one example. They arrived scared, alone, and dehydrated after losing their mother. Animals like them depend entirely on the compassion and resources of the people who step up to help. Wild Earth Conservancy was created to ensure these animals never have to face suffering or abandonment without a place to turn.

Our Mission

Wild Earth Conservancy is building a state-of-the-art wildlife rescue and rehabilitation center—the first eco-village style model in the Carolinas. Our goal is simple but urgent: to give injured, orphaned, and threatened wildlife a second chance at life.

This center will serve as a lifeline for fawns, owls, foxes, hawks, turtles, songbirds, raccoons, opossums, and countless other species that need immediate, skilled care.

What Your Donation Helps Build

🏥 10,000 sq ft Wildlife Hospital

A full medical facility for trauma care, X-ray, ICU, intake rooms, neonatal care, and species-specific housing.

🦠 6,000 sq ft Quarantine & Disease Center

Safe isolation and treatment for rabies-vector species, avian flu cases, distemper, mange, and other high-risk admissions.

🌲 Outdoor Enclosures & Aviaries

Spacious, natural habitats with heated dens, hides, and soft-release spaces vital for recovery and successful release.

🕊️ Lifelong Sanctuary Housing

For unreleasable wildlife who cannot survive in the wild due to injury, disability, or human imprinting.

🌿 Future Wildlife Corridor

Protected habitat connecting parts of North and South Carolina, allowing animals to move, migrate, and thrive safely.

Why This Center Is Needed Now

Wildlife rehabilitation is under immense pressure.

• Development is increasing.

• More animals are injured by vehicles, pets, and habitat loss.

• Rehabbers are aging out or at capacity.

• Disease cases are rising faster than facilities can manage them.

Without a modern, fully equipped center, thousands of animals simply go untreated each year.

This project changes that. We are building a sustainable, long-term solution for the Carolinas.

How Your Donation Helps

Your support directly funds:

• Construction of the wildlife hospital and quarantine building

• Medical supplies and equipment

• Outdoor enclosures, aviaries, and heated dens

• Food, formula, and daily care for orphaned juveniles

• Housing for unreleasable ambassador animals

• Staffing and volunteer training

• Habitat restoration and future corridor development

Every donation—large or small—brings this center closer to reality and saves lives.

Together, We Can Give Wildlife a Second Chance

When you donate, you’re not just helping build a facility, you’re helping build hope.

You’re helping build a place where injured owls can fly again, where orphaned opossums can grow strong enough to be released, and where Carolina wildlife can find safety, healing, and a future.

Thank you for believing in this mission. Thank you for giving wildlife a second chance.

Use of Funds

Giving Activity

Comments

Log in to leave a comment. Log in