Gallery

Young Miss Piglet
Miss Piglet
The Bear
Gimpy and Orphans (Big Sis, Little Man, Little Sister)
(L to R) Macon, Piglet, Brownie, Blondie, Little Red. Piglet was so tiny. Her and Brownie were inseparable except when Piglet and White Foot were following their Human to see what he was doing.
Ranger Pig – Son of Werewolf Pig
Egret
White Foot Sleeping in Garage during Hurricane
Raven napping in the yard
Limpy nursing one of her piglets. She brought her piglets to the facility like she was so proud of herself for being a mother and wanted to show us. She was a good mother to all of her litters.
Lower Keys Marsh Rabbit Baby
LK Marsh Rabbit Juvenile
LK Marsh Rabbit Adult
Gimpy showing his twisted leg and foot from Brucellosis and his torn ears from the hunting dogs that led to his field castration.
Manatee just prior to giving birth in our creek
Raven showing the hardware of a feral boar
Otter Creek
Seamus limping from Brucellosis damage to his back leg
Scarlett the Southern Water Snake eating a whole mullet
Ribbon Snake that joined in to help with catching stranded minnows after the hurricane. One for me. One for you.
Cope’s Gray Tree Frog
Climber. She would climb on anything. Sadly she injured her front foot and lost a hoof/toe. That stopped her from climbing.
Otter Creek
White Foot loves white bread with his medicine
Security Pig and her fuzzy ears
Security Pig and Piglets
Van Gogh after the dogs tore off his ears
Otter Creek eating shrimp
Flo sunning herself on the banks of the river
Fawnie, showing her brown coat and white belly, feet and tail like a deer. Fawnie became very ill and came back to the facility to die, bringing her new litter of piglets to her “safe place”. Brownie and Miss Fatty adopted the piglets.
Ornery as a piglet showing the recessive watermelon stripes of a European boar
Our Water Security
Hitchhiker
Miss Limpy showing her favorite Human she can SIT politely for her favorite treats
Otter Creek eating shrimp
Brownie showing the worst signs of Brucellosis. With natural antibiotics, vitamins and a warm place to rest, she soon recovered but is still lame. Fortunately the disease does not transfer to piglets from nursing. She had an active litter when this picture was taken.
Big Red gets to sample our first run of medicated feed which contained vitamins and essential oils and protein. This was the first step to get the pigs to eat from the feeders which will dispense our vaccines for field testing.
Pig winter meeting under our facility. It is hard to complete construction when you have so many helpers moving stuff around at night.
That is Brownie in the background barely moving from the Brucellosis. She stayed for several nights until she got stronger
Brownie, Limpy and Miss Fatty brought their piglets around for treats and medicine
Visiting Muscovy Ducks from down river
Rida, two years younger than Flo, suns herself on a fallen tree in the creek
One of a dozen Pileated Woodpeckers in our area