Big Cat Rescue in Wisconsin
A visit to a Tiger an Lion Rescue Center
Hi friends! The Wisconsin Big Cat Rescue, and Educational Center is a great place to visit! It is located in Rock Springs Wisconsin. The rescue center was founded, and is operated by Jeff and Jenny. They are wonderful, caring, and very friendly people. Who have dedicated their lives to big cat rescue. They have been operating this center for the last ten years.
The Wisconsin Big Cat Rescue, and Educational Center is a non profit organization. They shelter big cats from around the United States. Many of the cats have been abused, abandoned, seized, or just left in need of a home. At this time they are caring for 29 exotic felines. All of the big cats were very calm, and content.
Jeff an Jenny make sure the big cat's are well cared for, and there environment is kept as natural as possible. The entire Rescue center is very clean, and well maintained.
There Mission is: To provide a safe and comfortable home for abused, and abandoned big cats, and to educate the public about the conditions that create the need for places like the Wisconsin Big Cat Rescue and Educational Center.
Please visit there web site at wisconsinbigcats.org for more information.
Thank you for watching my videos!
Rock Springs Festival 1957
The Rock Springs, Wisconsin festival in the summer of 1957.
Expert: Owning pet lion legal in Wisconsin
Police in Milwaukee are still looking for a lion reportedly seen walking around the city over the past few days - so if it is indeed a lion, who owns it and how is that legal?
Bob and Diane Hillman Wedding - 1957, Rock Springs, WI
Filmed by Kendall Lange at St John Ev. Lutheran Church in Rock Springs, WI.
Some Say State Needs More Regulations For Exotic Animals
As new details emerge about the Ohio man who set dozens of exotic
animals free, some said more legislation is needed to prevent something
like that from happening in Wisconsin.
Margo Spann reports.
Exotic Animal Rescue Raising Funds for New Building
Highlights topics that affect Northeast Wisconsin and the state. Anchored by Cassandra Duvall.
Wisconsin Deer Park
Our venturesome trip to Wisconsin's Deer Park with my dad this time. The lady in the green is my mom and the girl being attacked is my sister
Van Hise Rock
Van Hise Rock located north of the village of Rock Springs, WI on county highway DD is an outcrop of Baraboo Quartzite. It is named in honor of University of Wisconsin Professor Charles R. Van Hise (1857-1918). He used the rock to develop the concepts of structural and metamorphic geology. It is the single most important locality to demonstrate these principles. Photographs by John Wanserski, soundtrack by Malignant Choir.
For more information see:
My Wisconsin Space
Our Pets Outside
Max the coonhound is age 11, bunny the gray cat is age 14-15, Morgan the black and white cat is age 8.
Kibble & Cameras 2012 Baraboo, Wisconsin
Kibble & Cameras, a benefit for the Sauk County Humane Society in Baraboo, Wisconsin. Photographer Laura McArthur takes photographs of pets, dogs, cats, puppies in exchange for a donation of food to the SCHS.
Newsmakers: Cathy Stepp, Secretary - WI Department of Natural Resources
On August 17, 2015, Senior Producer Steve Walters interviewed DNR Secretary Cathy Stepp on how the budget cuts have affected the department and how they are moving forward.
Travel Tip: Vacationing with pets | Discover Wisconsin
Mountain lion gets in guys face!
Intense face to face encounter with man and mountain lion!
Check us out at deepbushsurvival.com And on Facebook at
Thanks
HomeTown Hero 10News TampaBay Rescue Disc Saves Drowning Victims-ResQDisc
Inventor of the Official Water & Ice Rescue Device Don't be fooled by the copy cats! ResQDisc, the Save a Life Disc is recognized and used by the U.S. Coast Guard, U. S. Border Patrol, Homeland Security, State Police nationwide, Fire & Rescue in most U.S. Major cities, Sheriff and city police and fire departments, the U. S. Govenment-FBI, Secret Service, Life Guard Associations worldwide. ResQue disc can be deployed in seconds and used in any water rescue or ice rescue without the need for the rescuers to enter the water or ventue out onto the ice, risking their lives. learn more- Become a Hero invest in a ResQDisc today! The next life saved could be your own!
Six Lives Saved at One Time By One ResQDisc With One Toss!
It was hard to believe that one man armed with nothing more than a thin rope attached to a Frisbee could save the lives of 6 people at one time, yet the story is true.
Many people enjoy the little river in Blount county, Tennessee for canoeing, boating, rafting, fishing and of course swimming. The Little river is generally very calm with the exception of springtime when reaches higher than normal levels from runoff after rainstorms. Boating and swimming mishaps are a regular concern throughout the year, however It is during this time of the year local rescue teams are on high alert.
This Tuesday morning started out to be a typical day in the life of Brian Willis, rescue volunteer for the Blount County Rescue team. Other than the severe tornado that ripped through Altoona three years ago killing 3 people and injuring 32, Brian had not yet experienced anything close to what he was about to on this warm spring day. After dropping his daughter off at the Vonore Grade School he was headed down 129 towards Tapoco to help out with supervising a Boy Scout canoe race involving merit badge qualifications for several local troops.
A day does not go by that Brian doesn't wonder if this will be the day he will be called to save a life. The extent of action he had experienced over two years was a hiker with broken leg, a rock climber with a broken arm and concussion from a fall, rattlesnake bite and burned feet from recklessly discarded coals.
The prior week Brian, along with two team members spent two hours on the shore of Lake Topoco practicing throwing a rescue disc, a Frisbee-type disc with 110 feet of 500 pound test rope wound around it like the sting on a yo yo. The Rescue Service had only just received 12 of these disks as a water rescue tool that is stored in a trunk or rescue bag. Brian quickly became proficient at tossing the rescue disc since he was already an expert with its smaller related cousin the Frisbee. What amazed Brian was the fact that it can be retrieved from the trunk, deployed and tossed to a drowning victim in less than 60 seconds.
As Brian passed the turnoff for I-72 and was unwrapping the second half of his snicker bar, a voice came blasting over the radio, Brian, what's you 20? He responded 129 and 72. Dispatch replied, Three victims thrown from raft quarter mile south of dam, first bend. Fortunately Brian knew exactly where that was and of a service road downstream from the rafters. He was only 5 minutes away! Sure enough, he reached the river just as the three heads came bobbing around the bend. He thought, how is this possible? There were three more right behind these three. No time to question what to do. With this rapid current, they would be passing by in seconds.
Brian grabbed the rescue disc from the back seat of the Jeep and in seconds unlatched the Velcro retainer strap while sprinting to the river's edge then unraveled several feet of line as he went and in one continuous motion slung the Frisbee shaped disc 80 feet out into the river, well passed the approaching people moments before they came rapidly floating by. Responding to Brian's directions to grab the rope, all six grabbed the line simultaneously as he quickly wrapped the line around his wrist, leaned back and dug in his heals. The current swung all six victims into shore where they all crawled to safety.
Brian clearly stated in his report that he not have been able to save one of those people without a rescue disc. He later discovered that the other three drowning victims had entered the water to attempt the rescue of the rafters and got swept away with them. If you live on a lake , river, pond, ocean or own a boat or spend time on a beach consider investing in the number one water rescue device available, a Frisbee-type rescue disc. The life it saves could be your own..
Reedsburg students visit Horkan farm
Students from Reedsburg, WI, elementary schools visited the Horkan farm for the Food for America program, which shows kids how their food is grown, raised and harvested.
The 2020 Rose Parade by KTLA 5
The 131st Rose Parade, on New Year's Day 2020, is themed The Power of Hope. The parade along 5 1/2 miles of Pasadena city streets includes 39 floral-decorated floats, 20 marching bands, 17 equestrians units, and of course the Royal Court and the 102nd Rose Queen, Camille Kennedy.
Grand Marshalls:
-Olympic gymnast Laurie Hernandez
-actress Gina Torres
-performer Rita Moreno
KTLA's hosts for the broadcast of the parade:
-Leeza Gibbons
-Mark Steines
-Micah Ohlman
The Jan. 1, 2020, airing marks the 73rd consecutive television broadcast of the parade on KTLA, L.A.'s Very Own. #RoseParade
Face To Face With A Black Panther
Woman Says She Saw A Black Panther On Paris Mountain
Video of adoptable pet named Hawaii
Hawaii is an adoptable pet with Lucky Dog Animal Rescue in Washington DC. Please visit their website at
Video of adoptable pet named Starla
Starla is an adoptable pet with City Dogs Rescue in Washington dc. Please visit their website at