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Help Us Save Wildlife

How does your donation help us . . .

This spring we expect to care for 300+ animals, including orphaned raccoons, opossums, and other native wildlife that desperately need help.

 

Caring for that many animals requires significant resources:

• specialized formulas and food
• medications and medical supplies
• heating pads and incubators for babies
• habitat enclosures and rehabilitation space
• veterinary care
• and the continued construction of our wildlife hospital

 

Our goal is to complete our wildlife hospital so we can properly treat injured and displaced wildlife in a safe, professional environment.

Your donation helps us:

  • Rescue injured and orphaned wildlife

  • Provide medical care and rehabilitation

  • Feed and house animals until they are ready for release

  • Complete our wildlife hospital

  • Continue giving wildlife a second chance

 

Every dollar truly makes a difference.

Together, we can ensure that more animals get the chance to return where they belong — back in the wild.

Thank you for supporting Solano Wildlife Rescue & Education Center and helping us protect the wildlife that shares our world.

Make a difference

Change starts with people like you. Your donation helps make a real impact, one action at a time. Together, we can do more.

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​Every year hundreds of wild animals are injured, orphaned, or displaced by development, vehicles, storms, and human activity. Many of them would not survive without intervention. At Solano Wildlife Rescue & Education Center, our mission is simple: give wildlife a second chance. ​ Behind every successful release is an incredible amount of work. Injured animals arrive at all hours of the day and night. They often require emergency stabilization, medications, specialized nutrition, and weeks or months of rehabilitation before they can safely return to the wild. ​ Some of the animals we care for arrive as tiny orphans who need feeding every few hours around the clock. Others come in injured, sick, or malnourished. Our team works tirelessly to provide them the care they need to heal and regain their strength. ​ Not every story ends the way we hope. Wildlife rehabilitation can be heartbreaking. Despite our best efforts, some animals are simply too injured or too sick to survive. ​ But then there are the moments that remind us why this work matters. Watching an animal we cared for run, climb, or fly back into the wild is something we will never take for granted. Those moments make every sleepless night worth it.

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