Month: June 2018

Rasta Serval (2025)

Rasta Serval (2025)

Farewell Rasta – April 2025

In 2009, WildCat Ridge was contacted about a three year old serval named Rasta, who was being kept as a pet in Iowa. Her owner reported that Rasta had escaped the previous December and spent five days outside in -40°F wind chill. Native to sub-Saharan Africa, servals have no adaptations for such extreme cold. Declawed and already suffering from a poorly healed broken back leg sustained at just three months old, Rasta’s chances of survival were slim. Miraculously, Rasta survived by taking shelter in a neighbor’s outbuilding though she suffered frost-bite on her ears and tail, losing significant tissue on both.

As so often happens when a wild animal is forced to live in an unnatural environment, Rasta after tasting freedom, yearned for more. Over the next six months she escaped multiple times, sometimes disappearing for more than a week. Her health began to decline, and her frustration at being confined manifested in destructive behaviors. Realizing that they could not offer her the freedom that she clearly craved, her owners reached out to WildCat Ridge Sanctuary in an effort to place her somewhere that she could live more freely and comfortably.

Rasta arrived underweight and stressed. But with dedicated care and the freedom to lean into her wild nature, Rasta slowly began to thrive. Over nearly 16 years at WCR, Rasta was given the space and proper care that allowed her to live as wild as she wanted. Her huge personality and irresistible charm endeared her to everyone she met. She shared her life and space with many feline friends over the years, most recently living with Uche until his passing in January 2023, and then with Taji.

As she aged, her previous injuries, especially her broken back leg, began to slow her down, but her zest for life never wavered. Sadly, this spring her little body could no longer keep up with her spirit. Her caregivers noticed her starting to limp on her front leg and radiographs revealed a cancerous lesion on her ulna and a fractured elbow. Knowing that her bone health was severely compromised and that bone cancer often spreads quickly to the lungs, we made the difficult but compassionate decision to give Rasta a peaceful release, her joyful spirit forever unbroken and unbent.

Posted by Natasha Nemyre in Memorials
Josie Bobcat (2019)

Josie Bobcat (2019)

Safe travels, and run free, little lady – May 2019 

JosieJosie was the second wildcat to come to WildCat Ridge back in 1998. She came from a facility in Georgia that couldn’t keep her. Josie was just six months old when she arrived and she became BoBo’s lifelong companion. She was twenty-one years old when she had a seizure in May of 2019. We rushed her to the clinic but found a huge tumor on her heart and she had thrown a blood clot  As heartbreaking as it was, we didn’t wake her up from the anesthesia.

Even though we knew the time would come sooner than later, losing her was still unexpected. Caring for her and being part of her life for so many years it’s still hard to process that we’ll never see her putting silly things on her head, or hear her purr or watch her cuddling with BoBo. She taught us about bobcats and made us want to do all we could for the ones that came after her. Josie was so dear to us and she leaves a huge hole in our hearts. Safe travels sweet girl, we miss you every day.

Posted by Cheryl Tuller in Bobcats, Memorials
Nyssa Cougar (2020)

Nyssa Cougar (2020)

Safe travels, beautiful girl – November 2020

Nyssa

Nyssa

~ The lives of animals are woven into our very being – closer than our own breathing – and our soul suffers when they are gone. ~
We have suffered another devastating loss two weeks ago. Our precious Nyssa is gone. ????

Caryn our Senior Keeper found her unresponsive on her deck just before feeding. She started having seizures and while we were gathering up medication she took her last breath. We were shocked and stunned as Nyssa was a young cat and always healthy.
Through our tears, we loaded her up immediately and took her to Oregon Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory in Corvallis for a necropsy so we could find some answers or any answer to what happened. But despite having a complete examination done, they didn’t find anything concrete.
No toxins, no infection they could find, no vascular disease, and nothing in the brain that showed anything that would have triggered seizures. ????

Losing her was devastating enough but not knowing exactly what happened will always haunt me …

Nyssa came to WCR in 2007 as a young cub. She had been purchased as a pet and her original owners realized very quickly what a mistake they made. They were thrilled that we agreed to take her. She was tough, fearless, bold and we fell madly in love. ❤️

She grew into a stunningly beautiful, confident cougar who would purr as soon as she saw us. But make no mistake, she was a force to be reckoned with and could go from purring to growling and spitting in an instant! Nyssa epitomized everything wild, wonderful, and incredible that a cougar is. Losing her this way has taken a toll on everyone here, she was such a huge part of the Sanctuary and we miss her more than we can say. Our time with her was far too short, but now she is free from any pain and the world that held her captive.

Safe travels, beautiful girl. ????

Posted by Cheryl Tuller in Cougars, Memorials