Hi Everyone,
Just wanted to share this with you.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3YQK78bBmBo
luv Bev
We recently republished our book “For the Love of Wildlife” in eBook/Kindle format and it is now available at a discounted price of $2.99 on Amazon http://www.amazon.com/dp/B004WF3J4I .
Attached below is the review from Colin Seddon, a wildlife rescue expert in UK, which was published by BBC Wildlife Magazine.
Our purpose in republishing the book electronically is to raise funds to support our non-profit, Campaign against Canned Hunting (CACH).
We would be very grateful if you could assist us by forwarding this to all of your members and contacts, asking them to:
1. support the Campaign by checking out the book’s website, http://fortheloveofwildlife.com, and buying the book.
2. spread the word through their own social networks to encourage their family and friends to do the same.
Any help that you can give us will go straight to the cause of animal welfare and you know how badly this is needed in South Africa.
We’d be delighted to offer a note of thanks and a link to your site on fortheloveofwildlife.com in return.
Chris Mercer & Bev Pervan
Campaign Against Canned Hunting (CACH)
Registered non-profit NGO – PBO930030402
“For the Love of Wildlife”
2007 Marchig International Trust Award for service to animal welfare
http://www.cannedlion.org
BBC Wildlife magazine Review of the book For The Love of Wildlife
This book relates the working history of the Harnas Lion Farm in Namibia and the personal history of its founder, Marieta van der Merwe and her family. The book is characterised by an authenticity apparent to anyone who has worked in animal rescue centres – especially those continually struggling for funding. The authors – themselves founders and managers of a wildlife rehab centre in the Kalahari – make no attempt to paint a rosy picture of wildlife rehabilitation, detailing mistakes made, organisational short comings, the value of volunteers and the chaotic nature of sanctuary life.
Dotted throughout is information about animal behaviour, the nature of the Kalahari desert and the appalling lack of rights afforded to wild animals in Southern Africa. This absorbing book is at times moving, depressing, amusing, informative and uplifting.
Working with wildlife is not all fun, it makes clear, but if you want to know how it really is – warts and all – then this is the book for you.
Colin Seddon
Wildlife rescue expert
BBC WILDLIFE MAGAZINE