Kelly’s Wildlife Care

Kelly’s Wildlife Care Licensed wildlife rehabber located in Montague County, TX Kelly's Wildlife Care is a 501(c)3 non-profit wildlife rescue based in Nocona, TX.

We provide care to orphaned and injured wildlife from Montague and surrounding counties.

06/17/2026

Only 2 more days to register for our Racoon class! Registration closes on June 18!

Class date: June 20 from 10 am to 12 pm.
Location: SPCA of Texas Dallas Animal Care Center

Registration link: https://www.txmwr.org/classes

06/13/2026

HOW TO SAVE A LIFE DURING BABY SEASON.
This time, it’s the life of a rehabber.

I know this will mostly only reach our followers, and so we are preaching to the choir here, but maybe you can pass along an important list of "Don'ts" to those around you.

DON’T ASSUME that because you know that a rehabber loves animals that they can take more. We know that you desperately want to help the animal you have found. So do we. But if we took every animal in need, there would be carriers and crates stacked to the ceiling and no one able to care for them. There just aren’t enough of us.

DON’T GUILT US. People who become rehabbers are givers, caregivers, empaths, helpers. We are volunteers who have given up everything, our family, our free time, our sleep, our money, our sanity, to save these animals. The HARDEST thing about this work is learning to say no. It kills us all inside not to be able to help, to save. The idea of an animal needing us and we can’t take it haunts us. HAUNTS us. Long after you have forgotten about it. Trust me on this.

DON’T MAKE US FEEL WE AREN’T DOING ENOUGH. There is a reason the su***de rate in the animal profession is the highest of any. We are giving our all to breaking point. THERE ARE NOT ENOUGH OF US, it’s not that we aren’t each enough. Some can take one litter, some can take 20. Each number is different, but trust that we are ALL maximizing. ALL OF US. It is not as easy as it looks on the internet.

DON’T THREATEN US. There are too many animals in need and not enough rehabbers to save them. Full stop. Telling us if we can’t take an animal it will be euthanized is not fair. It is abusive. Find another alternative or try to figure something out. It cannot all be on us. We are already doing more than almost anyone else to try to be a solution.

DON’T IGNORE THE TRUTH. Just because an animal in need has come to you and you are desperate to help it, doesn’t mean that there aren’t ten other people who feel exactly the same way who have already called us that day. Who have cried and pleaded. Who need us to be the hero. Your situation isn’t any more or less deserving than all of those other people’s who are trying to find help.

DON’T YELL AT US. One more time for those in the back. Rehabbers are all exhausted, feeling inadequate. Pushing ourselves. Judging ourselves. Trying to be superhuman because we love these animals. Volunteering all of our time and efforts at our own expense. Telling us we don’t care because we can’t help you is a gut punch some of us can’t survive. We will each hit a point where it’s too much and we want to give up. If you make us quit because you are the last straw, that is even fewer animals who will be saved and another tragedy.

DON’T ASSUME that you know everything about what another person is going through. We can never know. Some people only post the positive. Some don’t have time or energy to post. Some want to be brave. Just because people don’t show their struggles doesn’t mean they aren’t there, real, or privately completely overwhelming.

And perhaps the biggest of all:

DON’T DROP OFF ANIMALS IF WE HAVE SAID NO. Saying no to intakes is THE hardest thing for us. We are rehabbers. We can’t look at those faces and not do something either. Drop offs are a criminal level of disrespect. We are all recognizing our limits, sometimes too late. Forcing more on us can break us. If we have mustered the emotional strength to close for quarantine reasons and you unknowingly bring us babies who are sick, and we lose 50 more we have already brought through because you didn’t listen when we said no, you cannot possibly understand the devastation that brings.

Someone who ignores the limit and drops off six babies anyway and then goes home and goes swimming, or has a barbeque, or goes to sleep, or sees their family, or goes on vacation, or does any of the things that all of us give up because we want to help these babies DOES NOT GET TO CALL THEMSELVES A HERO. They did ten minutes of work and just gave a rehabber months of anguish. The only thing we can control is the feeling that we are deciding what we can take on. We make the choice. Taking that away is the most abusive thing you can do to a rehabber. It can ruin their marriage, their life, their health, or their desire to do this. This is not hyperbole. We are all drowning out here this time of year.

I am not whining or complaining or reprimanding. I don’t usually post with this tone, but, I am trying to shed light and give inside perspective on the reality of the field out here. Unless you have lived through a rehab season as a rehabber, with the relentless demands and phone calls, with the expectations others (and you) place on you, you simply cannot understand from words alone.

We are here, sweating in our gowns and gloves at all hours of the day and night, sitting alone holding a baby we fought with day after day, hoping, trying, fighting right with them, doing everything we could, but watching the life ebb away anyway. We are crying but we don’t have time to grieve. Our heads know we did all we could, but our hearts don’t, our doubts don’t, our anguish doesn’t. But we have to go on because there are more mouths to feed and more cages to clean more phone calls to pick up but we don’t have the right answers. There is the constant pressure of having lives in our hands. Every decision means a potential to make a mistake. We are all fragile right now, we are all exhausted, we are all maxed out. We are all incredulous and terrified that it’s only June. We need help and we need kindness and understanding.

And a note to the other rehabbers who are in the same boat: Please, let's try to hold each other up. Not attack each other, not resent each other. We are each where we are and we are all there for the same reasons: to save these lives. Can we love and support and respect each other? Can we trust that we are all giving all we can and doing all we can. And tell each other we understand, and that it’s enough. We see you, we honor you, we are grateful to you. Hang in there and let’s try to love each other so we can continue to love these precious animals.

06/13/2026
05/31/2026

What we witnessed yesterday at the Texas Parks and Wildlife Commissioners' Meeting was an absolute travesty of the democratic process that should have every Texan who cares about wildlife and wild things enraged.

The State gives us very limited means and limited access to the Commissioners to begin with: no phone numbers, no email addresses and no access to their staff to be heard. Only the singular opinion portal and that only for limited subjects and for a very limited time.

And still, Texans spoke out loud and clear even within those confines!!

The State's survey regarding their newly proposed regulations garnered a 95% DISSAPROVAL RATE!!

About 1400 TEXANS took time out of their day to let the department know that they were off track, out of touch and off base in their handling of wildlife rehabilitors.

87% disagreed with every word of the new proposal.

And yet it passed.

There are only 200 wildlife rehabilitators in Texas trying to serve all 254 counties

FOR. FREE!!!

There are about 550 Game Wardens.

The State's PAID staff are underpaid, overworked, and the Department is constantly understaffed and recruiting new employees.

Do you see the problem yet??

The department's mismanaging of our indigenous whitetail deer populations, prioritizing profits from high-fenced genetically freakish big antlered trophies over Texas' native deer populations and long-standing sustainable, sustenance hunting heritage has allowed Chronic Wasting Disease to threaten our state.

They did that.
Their policies.
Their overcrowded deer FARMS.
Not wild life.

And certainly not rehabbers.

At nearly 60, I'm the YOUNGEST rehabber in my county. The State is so unwelcoming to new rehabbers, the process so cumbersome, that few new, young people are willing to jump thru the hoops to come on board.

The State says you need to document 600 HOURS of VOLUNTEER WORK to become a new rehabber.

I say you need 15 minutes of training to learn how to pass a feeding tube into the stomach of an orphaned possum to be of great help to me out here in the real world.

Even though we heard Commissioners say things like, "I don't think we've ever voted on changes with this poor of an approval rating", they still moved forward.

They knew.

But still they voted.

And approved them.

And it's not that I'm mad about this effect on me, my life, my veterinarian, my finances and my support network (though certainly I am).

I'm mad for the wildlife. Enraged you might even say.
..every migrating bird that falls off course because there's so much light pollution.
..every songbird taken out of a domestic cat's mouth
. .every deer hit by a car or entangled in a fence that carelessly crosses his territory
...Every tiny, starved baby raccoon whose mom was trapped and hauled off or shot for no crime other than trying to survive right where her ancestors had.

We try to repay just the tiniest fraction back to the wildlife of all the harm humans cause in bulldozing pristine habitat into "masterplanned communities", by our criss-crossing roadways and incessant light and noise pollution.

We give our hearts and souls and every dollar we can earn, beg or borrow...
.. while the bureaucrats in Austin with their clean hands and fancy clothes and desk jobs sit pompously and act outside the loud and clear will of their constituency and tie our hands. And with absolutely -0- idea about what goes on in the real world out here.

You should be ashamed.

Every one of you.

Their blood is on your hands.

***I don't think any of our elected officials are listening, but feel free to share***

05/02/2026

Closed until end of May!

04/26/2026

Critics say new rules could hurt wildlife rescue efforts.

04/18/2026
I’ve been quiet on the page lately and it’s for multiple reasons. First, there have been shared whispers among rehabbers...
04/12/2026

I’ve been quiet on the page lately and it’s for multiple reasons.

First, there have been shared whispers among rehabbers that posting photos of our intakes regardless of content could earn repercussions from the state. Including loss of our permits. So to stay safe I’ve stopped posting.

Unfortunately, that has led to a steep decrease in donations. Over the past year and a half I have received roughly $990 in donations. My first couple years of operation I received double to triple that just from Texoma Gives. This amount barely covers the cost to rehab a couple raccoons to a releasable age. It no where near covers what I’ve paid out of pocket for the squirrels, opossums, raccoons, fawns, and occasional domestics I take in. It’s simply not even remotely sustainable anymore.

That’s not to say this wasn’t unexpected. Rehabbers like most animal caretakers don’t expect monetary success. We’re always running on fumes and hopes and dreams. We love what we do and that pushes us on despite the heartbreak and stresses that come with animal rescue. So I’ve kept chugging along.

On top of this Parks and Wildlife has made many changes to the structure and maintenance of rehab permits. These include continuing education requirements, stricter record keeping, and limiting factors that make earning a new permit much harder. While some of these rules have been easy to adjust to for myself, as I have no sub-permittees attached to my permit, other larger enterprises are feeling the squeeze. Rehabbers across the state have started disappearing. Two of our closest in Wichita Falls are now closed and that leaves just me across several counties.

But the calls keep coming….requests for me to meet people half way, to answer calls during family dinner and birthday parties, to answer calls at 2am, to be open at late hours for drop offs. I try to accommodate but I’m just one person. A person with a job, 6 year old, and responsibilities of my own. I’ve been cussed out, told “well they’ll just die if you don’t come”, told I’m a terrible person for having an active permit if I can’t help them NOW!

I’ll be completely honest. The rehab is drowning. I’m drowning. Rehabbers across the state are too. And now more restrictions are on the horizon. That means less of us holding on to our permits, less new rehabbers being trained, and ultimately no where for orphaned and injured wildlife to go. We are becoming extinct day by day. I’m doing my best to maintain my permit and keep my doors open but it’s hard. I feel the guillotine looming overhead constantly these days (not to be over dramatic 🫣).

So, please help however you can. Unlike domestic rescues I can’t really have volunteers. The public is not supposed to interact with the wildlife. But, there are other ways to help. Sign a petition, talk with your area representatives, donate, sponsor an animal, share a post… and above all else, just be kind.

💜Kelly

75 signatures are still needed! Protect wildlife rehabilitation in Texas

01/04/2026

I’m having minor surgery tomorrow that will knock me down for a few weeks. I am closed until I get back up and going.

Don’t forget that wildlife don’t wear watches!
11/03/2025

Don’t forget that wildlife don’t wear watches!

Forgoing the “spring forward, fall back” pattern could save 33 human lives, 37,000 deer and more than $1 billion per year, study suggests

Address

Nocona, TX
76255

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