Forest Friends Mount Pleasant

Forest Friends Mount Pleasant We are a wildlife rehabilitation center located in Mount Pleasant, PA. We officially opened in 2020. We specialize in deer, raccoons, mammals, and RVS species.

We do not admit bats, or avian (birds) of any kind. Our mission is to rescue, rehabilitate, and release injured, orphaned, and displaced wildlife with the goal of returning them to their natural habitats. We are committed to healing animals through medical treatment, nurturing their recovery, and ensuring their long-term survival once released. We are dedicated to providing immediate, compassionat

e care, while promoting public awareness and education on wildlife conservation. Our center serves as both a sanctuary for wildlife in need and a platform for educating the public about the importance of wildlife conservation, fostering a deep respect for nature and its inhabitants. Through these efforts, we aim to contribute to the preservation of local biodiversity and the well-being of our planet’s ecosystems. Donations can be made at:
https://www.paypal.com/ncp/payment/XQWZBEMBWD2KU

04/15/2026
04/01/2026

Forest Friends is a small wildlife rehab in PA. We take fawns and RVS. . Wildlife rehabilitation is not funded by the state, which means every animal we help is cared...

03/24/2026
Speaking of baby season being here, these are our first patients through the door for the season. Sweet, little squirrel...
03/14/2026

Speaking of baby season being here, these are our first patients through the door for the season. Sweet, little squirrels 💚

Our volunteer said it best: We are coming into another baby season… or as our rehabber already said: “Baby season is her...
03/14/2026

Our volunteer said it best:

We are coming into another baby season… or as our rehabber already said: “Baby season is here!”

We are a small wildlife rehab in Mt. Pleasant, and unless we receive donations, the animals we take in are often rehabilitated with our own money.

We are the only rehab center on this side of the state who takes in fawns, currently.

Wildlife rehab is expensive. It might be a great hobby if you have a wealthy spouse or a trust fund… but none of us fall into those categories.

So here we are — selling T-shirts to help save the fox kits, raccoons, skunks, opossums, squirrels, fawns, and groundhogs that will soon start pouring through our doors.

If you’d like to support the work we do, grabbing a shirt is a great way to help care for this year’s babies. 🦝🦊🦨🦫🐿️

Thank you Jennifer Bird for setting up this fundraiser for us!

Forest Friends is a small wildlife rehab in PA. We take fawns and RVS. . Wildlife rehabilitation is not funded by the state, which means every animal we help is cared...

02/18/2026

THE MEAL THAT KILLS.
You look out your window in February and see a herd of deer struggling through deep snow. Their ribs are showing. Their coats look rough.
Your heart breaks. You drive to the farm store, buy a 50lb bag of corn, and dump it in the yard.
You think you just saved them.
You may have just killed them.
You can kill a deer with a full stomach. In the dead of winter, a pile of corn isn't a lifeline; it is a physiological gr***de.

The Myth of "High-Energy Help"
We assume that calories are calories. We think that because deer eat corn in October, they can eat it in February.
The Biological Reality: A deer is not a simple stomach; it is a fermentation vat.
The rumen (the first stomach chamber) relies on a specific population of bacteria and protozoa to digest food. These microbes are highly specialized.

In Summer/Fall: The rumen is populated by microbes that digest starch and sugars (corn, apples, grass).

In Winter: The deer’s physiology shifts. The "starch" microbes die off, replaced by "cellulolytic" microbes designed to break down woody fiber (twigs, bark, cedar, hemlock).

The Scientific Reality: Acute Rumen Acidosis
When you introduce a pile of corn to a deer adapted to winter browse, you trigger a catastrophe.

The Shock: The winter microbes cannot process the high starch content of the corn.

The Bloom: Instead, opportunistic bacteria (like Streptococcus bovis) explode in population, fermenting the corn into Lactic Acid.

The Burn: The pH of the rumen crashes (becoming highly acidic). This acid burns the stomach lining, kills the healthy gut flora, and dehydrates the animal as water is pulled from the blood to dilute the acid.
The Result: The deer dies of toxic shock or dehydration within 24–72 hours, often found dead directly beside the pile of food that killed it. This is known as Corn Toxicity or Grain Overload.

What is Happening Right Now (February)
Right now, deer are in their deepest state of metabolic conservation.

The "Walking Hibernation": Their metabolism has slowed by nearly 50%. They are designed to lose weight. Seeing ribs in February is visibly alarming to humans, but biologically normal for northern deer.

The Fatal Gesture: This is the month when well-meaning humans do the most damage. The "rescue" pile of grain you put out today hits a stomach that hasn't seen starch in 60 days.

Why This Matters Ecologically
Feeding concentrates (corn/pellets) artificially congregates deer.
This density creates a vector for Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) and ticks. It creates a "feeding zoo" where saliva is swapped on the corn pile, spreading prions that can decimate the herd for generations.
Furthermore, it alters migration patterns, keeping deer in areas that cannot support them naturally.

Practical Action: The "Hinge Cut"
If you want to help deer in February, do not open a bag. Open the canopy.

Put the Corn Away: If you haven't been feeding them gradually since November, do not start now. It is too late to transition their stomachs safely.

Drop a Tree: If you own land, perform a "hinge cut" on a Red Maple, Dogwood, or Cedar. Cut the tree halfway through and push it over so it stays alive but brings the buds down to deer level. This provides high-quality woody browse—the exact fuel their winter bacteria crave.

Clear a Path: If snow is deep, simply packing a trail with snowshoes or a shovel helps them conserve massive amounts of energy while moving to natural food sources.

The Verdict
A full belly is not always a mercy.
Nature has tightened the belt for a reason.
Keep the corn in the barn. Let the winter stomach do its winter work.

Scientific References & Evidence
Physiology: Pennsylvania Game Commission. "Winter Feeding of Deer." (Explains the mechanics of rumen acidosis and the microbial shift in winter).

Veterinary Pathology: Woolf, A., & Kradel, D. (1977). "Occurrence of rumenitis in deer fed corn." Journal of Wildlife Diseases. (Documents the lethal effects of sudden grain introduction).

Ecology: New Hampshire Fish and Game. "More Harm Than Good." (Details the risks of CWD transmission at artificial feeding sites).

11/12/2025

Unsure if a wild animal you found needs help? Try using this helpful link that will take you to a series of questions to help you determine if the animal is truly in need and what can/cannot be done for the animal.

Remember: keep your safety and the animal’s safety foremost in your mind.

Wildlife Emergencies The dichotomous keys — or flow charts — for birds and mammals are easy to follow. Directions are listed in the key itself. We have tried to include as many common scenarios as possible, but no tool can cover everything. Given the situation, you may need to talk directly with...

08/18/2025

🦅✨ Come face-to-face with a Golden Eagle, meet owls up close, and see where we care for local wildlife!

Join us for our FALL OPEN HOUSE 🍂

📅 Saturday, September 6th | 1–5 PM
📍 836 Chestnut Street, Youngwood, PA
🎟️ Admission: $5 cash donation (Kids under 3 FREE)

See what we do here as a nonprofit supporting wildlife in our area, meet special guests, and enjoy an afternoon full of learning and fun for the whole family.

🌟 Special Guests:
• Golden Eagle
• Barn Owl
• Eastern Screech Owl
• Barred Owl
And more!

🌟 What’s Happening:
• Meet ambassador animals up close
• Guided tours of the center
• Educational programs for all ages
• Baby animals
• Basket raffle
• T-shirts & merchandise
• Bake sale
• Kids’ activities
• Food & drinks for purchase

💡 Bring an item from our Wish List for a chance to win a raffle basket!

📝 Wish List Items:
• Food Items: Unsalted peanuts in shell, bird seed, black oil sunflower seed, shelled corn, scratch feed
• Cleaning Supplies: Paper towels, tissues, bleach, laundry soap, disinfecting wipes
General Supplies: Ziplocks, stamps, AA batteries
• Gift cards: Grocery, Agway, Home Depot/Lowe’s, pet stores

🛒 Full Amazon Wish List:
https://www.amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/2FARPXLZUF24R?ref_=wl_share

Come celebrate wildlife, learn more about our mission, and help support the animals that depend on us. We can’t wait to see you there!

Address

Mount Pleasant, PA
15666

Website

https://a.co/0ghf3b00, https://www.paypal.com/ncp/payment/7LRA5HHQXHN2G

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