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Kangaloola Wildlife Shelter in Victoria, Australia
GP0STUFRM
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Kangaloola Wildlife Shelter during Australian Bushfires
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Australian Bush Fires - Edit for External media
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Australian Bushfires (Photos & Videos)
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Kangaloola Wildlife Shelter in Victoria, Australia
Joey feeding time at the Kangaloola Wildlife Sanctuary. The kangaroos are split into rooms depending on their age and feeding requirements. Gradually as they get older, they get less and less human contact, until they are moved into an unfenced area of the property that joins the Stanley State Forest and are free to roam in the wild as they like.
Kangaloola Wildlife Shelter is nestled on a private property within the Stanley State Forest, 15 minutes from Yackandandah in Victoria's north-east. Purpose-built and in operation for 25 years, the shelter has more than 100 Australian native animals including kangaroos, koalas, wombats and an emu. The shelter is run by Glenda Elliot and her husband Ron, along with a team of volunteers. In 2003, bushfires threatened the shelter so Glenda took the animals into an old mineshaft on the property to keep them safe. Two fires came into the area and burned all around the mineshaft, however the fires did not impact the shelter because the animals had kept the undergrowth low, reducing the fuel load on the ground.
Creator:
Alana Holmberg
Unique identifier:
GP0STUFRM
Old Image ID:
AlanaHolmberg_WildlifeShelter_023
Type:
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Ranking:
★★★★
Size:
2657px × 3543px 7MB
Keywords
Keywords:
Animal rescue centres
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Animals
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Climate (campaign title)
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Close ups
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Emergency shelters
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Kangaroos
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KWCI (GPI)
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Rescue