
You can a lso donate directly into our bank a ccount: You can follow our progress online a nd we'd be very grateful if you could share the link with in your networks: cause/ dancing- with-the- pigs. We’re certainly hoping for a mild day for that one! On reaching $10,000, we will don our finest op-shop ballgowns a nd waltz through the goat paddocks - will a ny ballgown be left intact? For every milestone on the way to our ultimate goal, we will entertain you with some creative a nimal care! A ctivities include livestreamed pony walks, cockatoo games, goat feeding, a n a nimal look- a like competition, a nd paddling in the pig wallow. These a re difficult times for everyone, so this is a different kind of fundraiser that we hope will bring a smile to your face. We urgently need your help! Due to the COVID-19 restrictions our charity shops closed for two months, a nd customers a re only just starting to return. We a re thousands of dollars short, a nd need to raise $10,000 to tide us over until spring.Ĭan you help us survive, so that we can continue our animal rescue work ? They have grown so fast - below you can see Clover when she was only a couple of months old. As well as helping fund our winter feed supplies, it was a significant help with some of our recent vet bills, such as operating on a rooster with an eye ulcer and desexing our five recently rescued bunnies. The money came through just in time to help us survive the COVID-19-related lockdown, which required us to close our fundraising charity shops for nearly two months. We’re also hugely grateful to everyone who donated to our Dancing with the Pigs fundraiser. Special thanks go to all our animal sponsors - your generosity makes all the difference when paying off our substantial food and animal care bills. After three operations, the surgeries seem to have been successful, with no sign of cancer returning. The other good news is that Trotter, a friendly kunekune pig who suffered from persistent tumours in his mouth, is thoroughly enjoying life and able to chomp on his favorite food, bananas.


He enjoys his new freedom and turns up regularly at breakfast and dinner time to be hand-fed his special meals.

Soon he had recovered so well that we were able to release him into the paddocks to wander with our other geese. As he was very thin and sick when he arrived, we initially housed him in our predator-free enclosure, so we could ensure his safety while monitoring his health and weight. Moose, a goose with a deformed beak, is also regaining his strength and independence.
