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Doesn't it make it harder to catch the animals when everyone is wearing bright red and yellow? Are the animals color blind?
I know its safety gear but I would think the animals could see you coming a mile away and it would just make the rescue take a lot longer.
Yea unfortunatly they can see us a mile off but the colour was goverened by The Local government department and is all about being visual and safe. We have had permission to use gilly suites
http://www.ghilliesuitplus.com/ghillie-pants-and-jacket-sets.html
which the darters are alloud to put on to approach the animals. Their is lots of 4WD's going around that the Wallabies seem to be use too so we were finding we could get quite close in the cars, then the darters were very good shots.
Some of the rescues took along time like a couple of hours due to the terrain. One of the vets spoted a mother wallaby badly burned with her young joey playing neart her. The joey kept bouncing around then coming back and they would put their arms around each other. The vet had to stay watching them while we tried to get across the dry river bed with the 4WD as the guys with the darting guns couldn't go by foot and get the guns wet as they seize up.
It took us almost 2 hours to try to find away to get to the vet watching the wallabies as the rain set in. In the end I parked the 4WD as close to the river as I could and the darter and another vet made their way by foot across to find the wallabies. The other vet made her way back to us and was drenched and shivering from standing out in the wether for so long. She was very emotional as she explained to us how loverly the mother was hugging her joey to her as she watched on. It only took a few minutes for the guys to come back after darting both joey then mother.
Then I managed to get bogged making our way back but with some clever team work we managed to get unboogged and made our way back to triage with mother and joey.
Tash the vet who watched them for so long and myself took them into traige for treatment. The mother was the first to be looked at and it was obvious that she had to be euthainzed. Poor Tash burst into tears even though she knew that the burns were just to severe. The joeys feet were in great condition so he was transfered to the local shelter for long time care.
I rang yesterdsy to see how he was going only to hear the sad news that he was tranfered to another shelter but after his first morning feed they found he couldn't stand and had probably sustained some damage escaping from the fires and kicked out in his pouch and the damage became evident and he had to be euthanized. I don't have the heart to tell the young vet after such a committment on her part. Unfortunatly their are more sad stories than good endings.
I might be heading back next week if we can get some section 32's on using fire arms in the National Parks. This is an individual licence that each shooter has to apply for so its a long slow process.