Critter Crossing Wildlife Rehabilitation

Critter Crossing Wildlife Rehabilitation If you find an injured or orphaned animal please call or text for help.

06/12/2026

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.

Three of the animals that will be on display on Sunday for pir fundraiser arrived today. Two Painted turtles and a box t...
06/03/2026

Three of the animals that will be on display on Sunday for pir fundraiser arrived today. Two Painted turtles and a box turtle. We still have some room if you want to participate. Use the info below to register.

The Great Horned Owl is making progress. She moved to an outside cage yesterday and had a rabbit for dinner last night. ...
05/20/2026

The Great Horned Owl is making progress. She moved to an outside cage yesterday and had a rabbit for dinner last night. The rabbit was dead on the road side so it didn’t suffer. Hopefully she will be released very soon.

There is still time to get your wildlife shirts. Place your order by Friday
05/20/2026

There is still time to get your wildlife shirts. Place your order by Friday

Buy a t-shirt or sweatshirt to help Critter Crossing care for orphaned or injured wildlife.

Want to help support wildlife rehabilitation?  Order a sweatshirt or t-shirt today. Use the link below to order yours.
05/08/2026

Want to help support wildlife rehabilitation? Order a sweatshirt or t-shirt today. Use the link below to order yours.

Buy a t-shirt or sweatshirt to help Critter Crossing care for orphaned or injured wildlife.

Almost 20 years of rehabbing wild animals and for the first time last night I had to pull a tick off of me. It was attac...
04/21/2026

Almost 20 years of rehabbing wild animals and for the first time last night I had to pull a tick off of me. It was attached to my scalp in my hair behind my ear. It took a little work but I got it off. Luckily it wasn’t engorged so it probably wasn’t feeding yet. Checked in with my doctor just in case though. The nurse took a picture of the wound for me since I can’t see it.
So you ask where did it come from? On Saturday I did trip and fall on the ground so I may have picked it up then. The only other possibility is one of the dogs carried it in. Oh well alls week that ends well.

It looks like my three fawns from last year made it through the winter just fine. I haven’t seen them in months, just th...
04/10/2026

It looks like my three fawns from last year made it through the winter just fine. I haven’t seen them in months, just their tracks in the snow. It always does my heart good to see an animal that I raised survive and hopefully thrive in the wild.

02/14/2026

Looks like someone wants spring too. Grumpy pants had the usual broccoli and brussel sprout breakfast this morning then crawled back to bed. Not spring yet.

12/08/2025

Nobody ever taught you table manners but you are too damn cute not to share.

Address

Syracuse, NY
13215

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 8pm
Tuesday 8am - 8pm
Wednesday 8am - 8pm
Thursday 8am - 8pm
Friday 8am - 8pm
Saturday 8am - 8pm
Sunday 8am - 8pm

Telephone

+13152471072

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Critter Crossing Wildlife Rehabilitation posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share