Hochatown Rescue Center and Petting Zoo

Hochatown Rescue Center and Petting Zoo Welcome to our Rescue! Around 95% of our animals are rescues, either injured, orphaned or surrendered! Licensed Wildlife Rehabilitation Personell on site.
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We offer an array of barnyard animals, birds, reptiles and even some exotics! We are about 95% rescue! All native wildlife will be released as soon as they can care for themselves!

🐾 Sunday Funday at Hochatown Rescue Center & Petting Zoo! 🐾Looking for something fun to do today? Come meet native wildl...
06/07/2026

🐾 Sunday Funday at Hochatown Rescue Center & Petting Zoo! 🐾
Looking for something fun to do today? Come meet native wildlife, exotic animals, farm animals, and more—all in one place!

Get up close with incredible animals, make unforgettable memories, and enjoy a hands-on experience the whole family will love. Whether it's your first visit or your tenth, there's always something new to see!

Bring the family, bring your friends, and come spend your Sunday making memories with us. ❤️

🐾 Looking for a way to make a difference? Have you ever thought about donating to an animal rescue? 🐾Every day, rescues ...
06/07/2026

🐾 Looking for a way to make a difference?

Have you ever thought about donating to an animal rescue? 🐾

Every day, rescues like ours work tirelessly to provide food, shelter, medical care, formula, supplies, and a safe place for animals in need. Whether it's an orphaned baby wildlife patient, an injured animal, or one of our permanent residents, every animal that comes through our doors depends on the support of people like you.

The truth is, rescues can't do what they do alone. Every donation, whether it's a bag of food, a can of formula, a heating pad, cleaning supplies, monetary support, or other much-needed items, helps us continue providing care to animals that have nowhere else to turn.

Not in a position to donate? That's okay too. Sharing our posts, telling friends and family about our mission, and helping spread awareness can make a huge impact. One share could put our needs in front of someone who is able to help.

When you support a rescue, you're doing more than donating supplies or funds. You're helping feed hungry mouths, provide warmth and comfort, support medical care, and give animals a second chance at life. You become part of every success story and every life saved.

If you've been thinking about helping, now is a wonderful time. Take a look at our current needs list and see if there's something you'd like to contribute. No donation is too small, and every act of kindness is appreciated more than you know.

❤️ Thank you for supporting our mission and helping us make a difference, one animal at a time. ❤️

06/06/2026

🎉 Happy Birthday, Isabella! 🎉

Thank you so much for choosing to spend part of your special day with us at Hochatown Rescue Center & Petting Zoo. We hope you had a wonderful time making memories and celebrating your birthday!

From all of us, we wish you a very happy birthday and hope to see you again soon! ❤️🐾

06/06/2026

⚠️Graphic Content Warning!⚠️
🚨 PUBLIC SERVICE ANNOUNCEMENT: WILDLIFE NEEDS OUR HELP — NOT OUR GOOD INTENTIONS 🚨

Today, we took in seven baby skunks in some of the worst condition we've seen.

They were covered in maggots from head to toe. They had wounds throughout their bodies. Fly eggs covered them. They were dehydrated, starving, and suffering. No animal should have to endure what these babies are enduring right now.

We cannot stress this enough:

If you find a baby wild animal and it is healthy, LEAVE IT ALONE. Mom is often nearby and caring for it.

If you find a baby wild animal that is injured, orphaned, or clearly in distress, PLEASE reach out immediately. Call a wildlife rehabilitator. Contact a rescue center. Call your local sheriff's office, police department, game warden, or animal control. Reach out to someone who can help.

Anything is better than doing nothing.

What we are seeing far too often are people keeping baby wildlife for days because they are cute, because a child or grandchild wants to hold them, or because they think they can raise them themselves. Then, when the animal becomes difficult to care for or its condition worsens, it gets brought to a rehabilitator.

By then, sometimes the damage is already done.

Licensed wildlife rehabilitators have dedicated countless hours, resources, training, and personal sacrifice to properly care for these animals. Wildlife rehabilitation is not simply feeding a baby animal. It requires specialized knowledge, equipment, nutrition, medical care, and legal authorization.

In Oklahoma, it is illegal to possess, rehabilitate, or raise native wildlife without the appropriate state permits and licenses. These laws exist for a reason: to protect both the animals and the people trying to help them.

You may have the best intentions in the world. You may genuinely care. But good intentions do not replace proper training and care.

Just because you cannot see or feel an animal's suffering does not mean it is not suffering.

As a community, we have to do better.

If you see a wildlife issue, say something. If an animal needs help, reach out. If you're unsure what to do, ask.

Please do not wait until an animal is covered in maggots, starving, dehydrated, and fighting for its life before making a phone call.

These animals deserve better.

Please share this post. One phone call can save a life.

I'm a white-tailed doe. 🦌The fawn you found curled in your flowerbed isn't lost. I left her there on purpose.My newborn ...
06/05/2026

I'm a white-tailed doe. 🦌
The fawn you found curled in your flowerbed isn't lost. I left her there on purpose.

My newborn weighs four to ten pounds and can't outrun anything yet. So she does the opposite of running — she lies flat and goes still. She's born nearly scentless, with a spotted coat that breaks her shape in the grass.

The danger isn't her. It's me. I'm big and I carry scent, and a coyote that catches my trail can follow it straight to her. So I stay away. I feed at a distance and slip back only a few times a day to nurse.

I do it near you on purpose. Coyotes hunt the open field edges and the deep woods. They don't work your flowerbeds in daylight. So I tuck her against your deck, your shed, your fence line — and I shift my own day toward the hours when you're awake and the coyote is resting.

A lone fawn lying quiet is a fawn doing everything right.

🦌 If you find a fawn near your home:

- Leave her exactly where she is. I'm feeding nearby and I'll return to nurse.
- Don't touch her and keep dogs away. If I smell people at the spot, I'll wait longer to return.
- A fawn alone for a full day, crying, visibly thin, or injured is the only one that needs help — call your state wildlife agency.

I didn't pick your yard because I'm tame. I picked it because it's the one place the coyote won't look 🌿

06/01/2026

Meet little Dimples 🐐❤️
This little guy has been having the BEST time making new friends, running around, playing with guests, and showing off his big personality!

Sometimes the smallest members of the farm make the biggest impressions 🥹 Watching Dimples play, explore, and love every second of attention has definitely been making us smile.

Safe to say... Dimples thinks everyone who visits is his new best friend ❤️

Wildlife Babies, belong in the Wild❤️Please remember: just because a baby animal is alone does NOT mean it has been aban...
06/01/2026

Wildlife Babies, belong in the Wild❤️
Please remember: just because a baby animal is alone does NOT mean it has been abandoned.

Many wildlife mothers leave their babies alone for hours at a time while they search for food, avoid drawing predators to their babies, or simply do what nature intended. This is NORMAL.

Before picking up wildlife, please remember:

🦌 Fawns are often left alone for many hours at a time
🐇 Baby rabbits spend most of their day without mom nearby
🦝 Many wildlife mothers return when people leave the area
🚫 Taking wildlife from the wild when it doesn't need help can accidentally orphan healthy babies

Please also remember that raising native wildlife without proper permits is illegal in many cases, and wildlife have specialized needs that can be difficult to provide without proper training and licensing.

If you think an animal truly needs help:
✅ Observe from a distance
✅ Keep pets and people away
✅ Contact a licensed wildlife rehabilitator before intervening

The best thing we can do for wildlife is often the hardest thing — leave them where they are and let mom do her job ❤️

When in doubt, ask first. Wildlife belongs in the wild.

Meet baby Meadow 🦌💚This sweet little fawn was found curled up alone in the middle of the road by some kind-hearted peopl...
05/28/2026

Meet baby Meadow 🦌💚
This sweet little fawn was found curled up alone in the middle of the road by some kind-hearted people. Nearby, they discovered his mama had been hit by a car.

Alone, scared, and unsure, Meadow was brought to us for the care he needed. Now this little guy is safe and beginning his journey toward recovery and rehabilitation.

While many baby animals found alone do not actually need help, situations like this are why it is important to assess from a distance first. If wildlife is injured, in immediate danger, or confirmed orphaned, please contact a licensed wildlife rehabilitator before intervening.

Welcome to the rescue center, baby Meadow 🌿💚

❤️ More Than a Petting Zoo — A Place Where Animals Get Second Chances ❤️Every day, animals arrive needing help. Some are...
05/28/2026

❤️ More Than a Petting Zoo — A Place Where Animals Get Second Chances ❤️
Every day, animals arrive needing help. Some are injured. Some are orphaned. Some simply need a safe place to land.
When you visit Hochatown Rescue Center & Petting Zoo, you're not just coming to see animals — you're helping support rescue, rehabilitation, education, and giving animals a second chance.
Come spend the day making memories while helping make a difference.
🦝 Meet amazing animals
🐐 Enjoy hands-on experiences
🐴 Pony rides available
🥕 Feed options available
❤️ Support rescue efforts with every visit
🕙 Open Daily: 10 A.M. – 7 P.M.

🎟 Admission:
Adults (13+) — $15
Kids (3–12) — $10
2 & Under — FREE
Because every animal has a story… and every visit helps write the next chapter ❤️

Found Dog🐕Does anyone recognize this sweet baby or know who this baby belongs to? NOT at the zoo and is currently being ...
05/24/2026

Found Dog🐕
Does anyone recognize this sweet baby or know who this baby belongs to? NOT at the zoo and is currently being cared for by the person who found her while we try to locate her family. Proof of ownership will be required. If no family is found, she does have a loving home willing to keep her, but we would first love to reunite her with her owners. Please message us with any information.

Address

9177 Us 259 North
Hochatown, OK
74728

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 5pm
Tuesday 10am - 5pm
Wednesday 10am - 5pm
Thursday 10am - 5pm
Friday 10am - 6pm
Saturday 10am - 6pm
Sunday 10am - 6pm

Telephone

+15804947387

Website

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