Wildlife center hunkers down for Helene

VENICE — The protocol to prepare for a tropical storm is very familiar by now.

Make sure all the medical instruments are disinfected.

Stock up on water, food and other supplies.

Have heat packs and incubators ready.

Check that generators are fueled up.

Bring in the patients who are in outside enclosures and put them in crates for safety.

That last step is one of the few differences in the preparations at the Paul A. & Veronica H. Gross Wildlife Center of Southwest Florida compared to a “people hospital.”

The center usually keeps a variety of its patients — raccoons, possums, herons, cranes and such — outside because it’s better for them to be in more-natural habitat, Executive Director Pam DeFouw said.

But there are two risks in leaving them there in severe weather: They could get injured, or their enclosure could be damaged, which might allow them to escape, she said.

The center’s buildings are “pretty sound,” she said, and two or three people always ride out the storm with the animals, in case they need help, because a lot of them are in critical condition. Also, she said, baby animals need to be fed every four hours.

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