
Help Save Our Shelters


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In 2018 a pair of goats were found roaming our neighborhood. With the help of our wonderful neighbors, they were caught and the search to find their owners began. After months of searching and working with animal control, no owners were found. At the time we were clearing our yard and just so happened to need help with an over abundance of blackberries. We knew nothing about goats and in fact were actually scared of them.
We would spend hours at a time every day trying to befriend the two goats that we named Cupcake and Sassy. Cupcake bonded immediately to goat dad, where Sassy took a few weeks longer to win over and bonded to goat mom.
After falling in love with Sassy and Cupcake, learning their personalities and becoming incredibly important in our lives, at six months of living with us Cupcake had become increasingly ill. We had brought her to one of the best universities for testing and learned she was in the final stages of lymphoma.

Winter was coming and Cupcake was given weeks to live. Absolutely devastated we set out to build a barn special for her, so she wouldn't die without a home to call her own.

Every day, all day, we worked tirelessly on the new barn. We had to get the shelter up before Cupcake lost her fight. She meant the world to us and we owed it to her. Our blood sweat and tears were literally poured into this project for her.
We finished her barn and installed a window on the side she loved to look out while resting. She was able to enjoy a barn made just for her for about a month before she lost her fight.

That day we made a promise to Cupcake on her dying breaths, while being held and surrounded by family, that we would save animals like her. Any animal that would have been used, abused, dumped, or given up on we would do right by her and give them that second chance they so desperately deserved.

We had started to save many goats with similar circumstances as Cupcake and Sassy would have potentially faced. Hope saved from slaughter, Buttercup had lost her mother and was handicapped from birth, Chip pardoned from slaughter with fragile disfigured horns, and many others to follow.

In 2019 we extended our care to chickens, using quick kit coops from retail stores. After learning more about chickens and our area's predators, we knew we needed to build something better for them to protect them and offer top tier care. These tiny coops with fragile frames were no match to foxes, coyote, raccoons, or larger animals. Goat mom's father was then on a quest to help design the best coops we will have ever laid our eyes on.

Protecting animals is what we promised to do, we take that quite seriously. We spent quite a bit of time designing the new coops in such a way that any predator, even as small as a rat or snake could not infiltrate them and cause any harm. These are the Fort Knox of coops.

We can safely say without a shadow of a doubt, if anything was to get into the chicken's coops, that it would have to be human and at that point they'd have to deal with the resident's momma bear. We don't recommend that.
Soon after we opened our home to ducks and geese.




Going into 2020 we had found our true specialty being special needs and handicapped goats. We then purchased a prefabricated pole barn for our wheelchair and special goats to have a fully enclosed structure to keep them safe at night. Odin being one, is fully blind and needs this extra safety.

Sid being another that snuggles up with Odin and Peanut at night inside their handicapped barn. Sid was born with contracted tendons in his front legs that require physical therapy, splints, and the aid of a wheelchair as he grows. At night and nap times he is taken out of his cart and back in the handicapped barn for added safety.



All of these structures play critical roles in our resident's and rescue animal's safety. We cannot operate without them. Please help us in our darkest hour.
We are 100% volunteer and no donations go to payroll ever. All donations will always go to the animals.
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