Healers of the Wild: Rehabilitating Injured and Orphaned Wildlife
Wildlife Photography Resource
Wild Prism
September 30th, 2009 at 7:56 pm
Healers of the Wild: Rehabilitating Injured and Orphaned Wildlife
Tags: Healers, Injured, Orphaned, Rehabilitating, Wild, Wildlife5


10:00 pm on September 30th, 2009 1
A field guide, a resource, a text, and overall an outstanding book. An absolute MUST for anyone interested in this field. Clear, concise, and complete. Each and every wildlife rehabilitator or researcher can benefit from the information in this volume. I am truly thankful that I bought this book. If you are compiling any type of wildlife library, it is not complete without this book. HIGHLY recommended.
Rating: 5 / 5
12:20 am on October 1st, 2009 2
How great that a second edition of Shannon Jacob’s “Healers Of The Wild” has come out. It is so much more than just a “guide for young people…” as she modestly states on the cover of her first edition.
While there are many heartwarming success stories in which injured, orphaned or abandoned animals have been successfully reintroduced to the wild, there are also stories of man’s stupidity causing harm to some of nature’s most innocent creatures.
For those brave enough to wander into the depths of a wildlife rehabilitator’s world, a life-altering experience awaits you on the pages of this book, through the anecdotes and accompanying photographs.
Not being able to read this book again for the first time, I must be content to read it anew, for no other reason than to relive the warm, fuzzy success stories.
This book is a keeper.
Kudos to Shannon Jacobs, and wildlife rehabilitators everywhere.
Rating: 5 / 5
2:31 am on October 1st, 2009 3
Healers is a must-have: concise, clearly-written, and easy-to-read. I consider it a critical reference for anyone whose life is touched by wildlife in some way, shape, or form. The book has tons of helpful information, addressing all the panic-stricken questions you have at that fateful moment when you happen to cross paths with an injured or orphaned creature. It’s just the thing to grab in a wildlife emergency and the flow charts in the book that help sort out what action to take are the best I’ve ever seen. I’ve used these charts many times in dealing with wildlife emergencies, so I consider the flow charts alone to be well-worth the price of the book. Plus the updated edition has even more information than before. It’s a real quality publication. As far as I’m concerned it’s an indispensible wildlife reference and I wouldn’t be without it.
Rating: 5 / 5
3:15 am on October 1st, 2009 4
As a wildlife writer who writes about animals in their natural setting, I found Jacobs’ book on rehabilitators to be fascinating and informative, bringing the story of what happens to creatures when they have a run-in with humans, but are fortunate enough to be aided by these caring folks. As a birdwatching columnist, I am asked all the time about what to do when they find a baby bird. This book’s “I Found A Baby Bird” flow chart is very good, and I am recommending it to my readers.
Rating: 5 / 5
5:41 am on October 1st, 2009 5
As a wildlife rehabilitator, I am picky about book on the subject. I was very impressed with Healers…the quality of information, the layout, and the fact that it is valuable for ALL ages….for anyone who cares about wildlife, wants to know what it is like to dedicate yourself to helping wildlife and what it takes in time, money, and skills, how to aquire those skills or just where to go for help when you find injured or orphaned wildlife…and when to just leave it alone. This is a book that should be in everyone’s library.
Rating: 5 / 5