Twisted Tree Acres

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12/09/2025

47.7K likes, 842 comments. “Here's me commentary on Max the Brave! 🔊🎙 (via )”

12/09/2025

Check out Must Be Calgary’s video.

10/25/2025

Truth!

10/25/2025

AI generated never was so good !!! Bob painting the Dodgers clubhouse 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

06/25/2025

Hey guys, Jenni D here.. we commited to 7. We cannot commit to more.

that day is finally here, that one I have been warning about. I hope it won’t take us longer than 6 months but we have to closed our doors to intakes, I committed to a few dogs today at OKC and 5 from Avenal. I’ll pick up the OKC dog today, hence the announcements. We are officially out of space.

That puts us at 200 but it’s just not enough. It’s been so so hard to say no knowing that if I do they will literally die but stuffing them in here forever while they wait is also not an option.

THERE IS NOTHING I CAN DO without mass amounts of money. For 6 years now we have tried to save as many as we can and honestly, if we dont do this now, we won’t be able to save another later.
I need 100 people to come here and adopt these dogs. While we wait, 1000 more will die.
In the meantime, I have to take care of what we got and I need the team to do it. And I need time.

So PLEASE adopt, donate, spread the word because my intake hold is firm, and it will be devastating to the ones we won’t save.

100 adoptions. Please hurry.

06/24/2025

Many more people enjoy non competitive riding, I would guess, than dealing with the hassle, the nerves, the expenses of showing and other forms of competition.

Yes, there’s lots of emphasis on who is better, which horse can do what versus that one, but there’s an easy way not to get sucked into all of that.

Saddle up and go ride and let the frenzy go on without you.

Nobody, as in not one living soul on planet earth, cares one way or another if you are there. (Unless you do.)

So if you would rather be somewhere else, just stay home and go ride. It’s as simple as that.

06/24/2025
06/24/2025

Life doesn’t always start easy. A newborn Asian wild horse foal at the Minnesota Zoo faced big challenges right from the beginning. After falling ill shortly after birth, the tiny foal was separated from his mother, Nady, and taken to the University of Minnesota Veterinary Medical Center for emergency care. Though he recovered, Nady no longer recognized him when he returned—an unfortunate but not uncommon occurrence among wild horses.
But love found a way.
Alice, a gentle Pony of the Americas (POA), had just lost her own newborn foal. When her owners heard about the orphaned zoo foal, they offered Alice as a surrogate. The moment the two met, they bonded. Alice accepted the little one as her own, offering him the comfort and care he desperately needed. She’ll remain by his side until he’s old enough to be weaned.
The Minnesota Zoo has long been a champion for the endangered Przewalski’s horse, the world’s last truly wild horse. Since the late 1970s, their successful breeding program has helped welcome more than 50 foals into the world—each one a step closer to a more hopeful future. 🥰

Photo credit: https://www.facebook.com/mnzoo

06/24/2025

🌾🐴 A Wild Homecoming 200 Years in the Making!

Six Przewalski’s horses—the world’s last truly wild horses—are galloping free across the grasslands of Central Kazakhstan for the first time in nearly 200 years! 🌍✨

After a year of careful acclimatization at the Alibi Reintroduction Center, these icons—Ypsilonk, Zeta II, Zorro, Tessa, Sary, and Wespe—are roaming the vast Altyn Dala State Nature Reserve. 🐎💨

🔬 Why It Matters:
Przewalski’s horses are ecosystem superheroes: their grazing and trampling prevent wildfires, fight desertification, and support local wildlife. This historic release is part of the Altyn Dala Conservation Initiative, an international mission to revive Kazakhstan’s steppe.

🌍 A Global Effort:
Thanks to the dedication of ACBK, Frankfurt Zoological Society, Prague Zoo, and many more, these horses are back where they belong. And this is just the start—more horses will join them to build a thriving wild herd!

🐴💚 Here’s to wild horses running free in their ancestral homeland once again!

06/24/2025

The wildlife rescue community recently experienced a devastating loss. Mikayla Raines, the executive director of Save A Fox Rescue, passed away in the manner that so many rescuers do: losing a lifelong battle with mental illness.

Her beloved husband Ethan posted a beautiful tribute on the Save A Fox page that I encourage you to watch, but I also wanted to share some words and thoughts of my own.

I did not know Mikayla well enough to call her a friend, but we were in touch with some regularity, and our work often overlapped, and we shared many close mutual friends in common. From people who knew her well, I heard only positive things. The public often got me and Mikayla mixed up, because we are both fox rescuers who have been open with the public about our struggles with autism and depression. I would always laugh and say, “No, Mikayla’s the pretty one.”

About a year ago, Mikayla was given an opportunity to permanently close a fur farm and save *five hundred* foxes. For someone who dedicated her life to ending the fur trade, this seemed like a dream come true, the pinnacle of her entire career. The fur farm agreed to sell her the cages at a low cost so they wouldn’t lose their investments, and she could have all the foxes for free.

Mikayla moved heaven and earth trying to get veterinary care and find homes for all of them. A lot of people love the idea of a pet fox, but few want an unsocialized fur farm fox that wants nothing to do with them. Zoos and sanctuaries took many of them. We were asked, but ultimately said no because of a lack of space. In the end, Mikayla still had dozens of them left and not enough space and resources to adequately house and care for all of them.

I heard the rumors and the gossip: critics saying that it’s wrong to take that many foxes— much less “buy” them— without a full plan for them. That may be true, but there isn’t a rescuer on this planet who has never made an impulsive decision in a desperate attempt to save lives. But I never doubted that she was doing her best and that her heart was in the right place. I felt for her because I understood how the situation happened.

But I failed Mikayla in my own way. When I saw the public and other rescues criticizing her, I didn’t come to her defense. I thought she was fine— she always looked so happy and put-together— and I thought that the criticism and harassment she faced were rolling off her back. Just one day before her death, I didn’t say anything when someone in the comments on this very page had mentioned “the fox rescue that buys foxes from fur farms.” While I know in my heart that it wouldn’t have made a difference, I deeply regret that I had an opportunity to defend Mikayla and I did not take it.

Mikayla’s husband Ethan is too polite, or too justifiably afraid of retaliation, to say the names of the people who harassed Mikayla to death, but I know them and have had my own dealings with them. One of the people primarily responsible for Mikayla’s death is a convicted animal abuser who was shut down after she hoarded, starved, and tortured wild animals. This person tried to distract from this by pointing fingers at rescues like Save A Fox and For Fox Sake Wildlife Rescue that maintain ethical and financial transparency and have licenses in good standing.

I have often told other wildlife rescuers that when documented animal abusers become your enemy, it’s a sign you’re doing things right. I just wish the public had understood this, and I wish I had used my own voice to speak up before it was too late.

To all who knew Mikayla, please accept our deepest, most heartfelt condolences for your unimaginable loss. We at For Fox Sake are thinking of you in this difficult time and here for you.

And to those who “knew” Mikayla only by following her rescue online, please channel your grief and anger toward helping the animals that Save A Fox still has in their care, so that Ethan can finish the work that his beautiful wife started. You can make a donation through www.saveafox.org.

And, please: while it’s valid and necessary to criticize “rescues” that are not rescues at all— the ones with major, documented cruelty and the ones that engage in true fraud— please check your sources and your facts before trying to destroy a rescuer’s life, because you could succeed.

Finally, this is a reminder to all that suicidal ideation is a medical symptom and a medical emergency. I am not at all ashamed to say that I have had to be hospitalized for my depression when it was too much to bear. It saved my life and it can save yours too. Please call 988 or 911 if you are in danger.

-Juniper Russo, CWR
Executive Director
For Fox Sake Wildlife Rescue

Do not give dogs or any animals away for free. Be careful with their lives. Be careful about buyers. These babies paid a...
04/30/2025

Do not give dogs or any animals away for free. Be careful with their lives. Be careful about buyers. These babies paid a terrible price, and at least one is dead after being horribly tortured.

04/14/2025

I wish...

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