Haven in the Woods, NJ

Haven in the Woods, NJ Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Haven in the Woods, NJ, Wildlife sanctuary, Old Bridge, NJ.

06/19/2026
06/07/2026

Voices of the Wild Earth

I WASN’T A GIFT ON YOUR DOORMAT.
YOUR CAT’S TEETH WERE TOO SMALL FOR YOU TO SEE.

You found me by the back door.

A chipmunk.

Still breathing.
Still warm.
Still trying to disappear into my own body.

Maybe there was no blood.

Maybe I even looked “fine.”
Maybe your cat dropped me gently, like a toy it had finished with.
Maybe you thought the kindest thing was to put me back under the bushes.

But please do not release me.

I was not playing.

I was punctured.

Cat teeth are small.
Sharp.
Deep.
They can leave wounds so tiny your eyes never find them beneath fur.

But inside me, those invisible holes can become infection, shock, and pain before the sun rises again.

I am a chipmunk.

I was built for tunnels, seeds, roots, fallen logs, and fast little roads through grass.

Not for being carried in a mouth.

Not for becoming entertainment.
Not for being placed outside again while my body is already losing the fight you cannot see.

Please take me seriously.

Put the cat away.
Wear gloves or use a towel.
Place me gently in a small ventilated box with a soft cloth.
Keep me warm, dark, and quiet.

Do not give me food.
Do not give me water.
Do not try to clean the wounds yourself.

Note exactly where I was found.
Call a licensed wildlife rehabilitator, wildlife center, animal control, or your state wildlife agency right away.

Because if a cat caught me, I need help even when I look unhurt.

I was not a present.

I was a wild life
too small to show you
where it hurt.

Wildlife Center of Virginia warns that cat-inflicted wounds can be subtle and says any wild animal caught by a cat should be taken to a permitted wildlife rehabilitator, even if it appears uninjured, because decline can happen quickly. Florida Fish and Wildlife also advises noting the location and contacting a licensed wildlife rehabilitator when wildlife appears injured or orphaned.

05/27/2026

The raccoon on your roof at dusk probably has kits in your attic. And this is the exact week people discover them and make the one mistake that kills the babies.

Raccoon kits are born in April and May. By now, they're old enough to start climbing out of the den site — following the mother along rooflines and down fences at dusk in a single-file line behind her 🌿

The problem: this is when people find the entry point and seal it. If the kits are sealed inside while the mother is out foraging, they starve in the wall or attic. It happens every spring.

🐾 What to do instead:

- Listen before you seal anything. Kits make a chattering, chirping sound, especially when the mother is out. If you hear it, there are babies inside

- Wait until late summer. By August, the kits are fully mobile and leaving with the mother every night. Once they're all exiting together, seal the entry point behind them after they leave for the evening

- If you need them out sooner, a one-way exclusion door lets raccoons leave but not re-enter — but only use this after confirming the kits are mobile enough to follow the mother out. A professional wildlife operator can install one

- If a kit falls from a den site, place it in a box at the base of the entry point. The mother retrieves it after dark. If not retrieved by morning, contact a licensed rehabber

She chose your attic because it's warm, dark, and safe. She'll leave on her own once the kits are grown. Give her the summer.

05/23/2026

We don’t always see Facebook tags, posts or notifications.
We do not monitor Facebook for Wildlife Emergencies. CONTACT -> 908-565-3592. WILDLIFE Emergencies or Concerns.
Haven in the Woods, NJ

05/21/2026

Trapping & relocating, not the solution you think it is. Long but informative read!

When Jack Murphy from Urban Wildlife Rescue Inc endorses an article on humane wildlife control, our ears prick up. And when we see the author is Katherine McGill from 411 Raccoon Solutions (FL) , we're all in. This is such an important read. It was written for humane wildlife control operators, but it's chock-full of good information for the rest of us.

Successful catch, or utter failure? You never know if the raccoon you caught is the "guilty party", or, just one drawn to the free meal in your trap. Pretty much any 10 year old can bait a trap and catch something. Frankly, it is downright lazy, and cruel - and ineffective.
You dump this animal miles away and believe you spared his/her life. Hopefully, was not a mother and that her babies were not left to perish, slowly. When they are found, it is too late. Their mother is long gone, going frantic for them, terrified in a foreign land... while we tell ourselves how lucky she is to have been relocated?
These heartbroken now-orphans will cost a volunteer rehabilitator several hundred dollars, months of time, risk of communicable shelter disease, and less-than-optimum survival skills without their mother.
Now, multiply this one single "good deed" times tens of thousands, year after year... Is that humane? For whom?
Fact: There is no such thing as "humane trapping and relocation". Fact: There is NO Nirvana place where existing animals welcome newcomers you just dumped in their territory - None. We have 15 years of GPS raccoon translocation studies to prove this isn't humane and has poor survival rates of 18%. We have hard science proving conflicts are best resolved in situ; eg, not removing animals. With rules & regs that allow people to do this to our wildlife while KNOWING that over 90% of conflicts today can be resolved without removing the animal, what more can we do as advocates and professionals to ensure proper actions are taken -- and that the science (and our intent to do our best by them) is upheld and better achieved?

1) Recommend people to the most qualified sources we have available to us today. Know your own limitations in this field. Most people will appreciate your suggestions and compassion, but make no mistake that they still want their resolution ASAP. If suggestions are all you can offer, get better at them and still never hang up without putting the number of an HWC operator in their hands. www.AnimalHelpNow.org is the most complete listing of HWCO's. Choose "Conflict" instead of "Emergency" to find them. (HWCO = A Trained Humane Wildlife Conflict Operator)
1a) Even if there is not an HWCO in their zipcode, there will still be one listed there! Most of these Specialists will help people to hire and properly guide a local NWCO provider. They, the paying customer, can dictate what methods are used by any NWCO they need to hire **IF** they know specifically what to demand is done. (NWCO = Nuisance wildlife control operator, aka "trapper")
2) Do not throw out a dozen "remedies" on social media or on the phone as if they alone are silver-bullet complete resolutions, especially without knowing the full story and circumstances. Wildlife conflict resolution involves many steps with a critical goal of an end result that prevents it from happening again.
2a) The more these "humane remedies" are thrown out as incomplete solutions the more they risk failing. Any failure results in less respect and traction for the HWCO industry to prevail and change the paradigm. (The conventional trapping industry loves it when a humane idea fails, and they love to talk about that time it failed as if it always fails. They need less ammunition, not more, please)
3) Do not rush to get babies to a rehabilitator until it is the absolute last resort. Job #1 is to REUNITE healthy babies back with their mothers. Please know your limitations on advising reuniting steps. What works for one age may be unsafe for another age, etc. Nothing feels more awesome and heroic for both you and a Finder than succeeding with a reunite! ❤
3a) Never accept statements of "no mother around". Push for more information which more often than not reveals there is a possibility she still is. You, like I, will never forget the first time you took the advice that babies don't start falling from nest unless mom has been gone for too long. Two hours later, there was the frantic, panicked mother. Lesson learned.
4) Change your state "nuisance" rules and regs, get engaged. As long as the rules allow our wildlife to be killed/removed MERELY FOR BEING SEEN, we are all failing. By all of us, I mean every human on this planet. Every advocate, every "science-abiding" state agency, every animal control law enforcement department charged with upholding state animal cruelty statutes, and every conventional operator selling the worst, most ineffective, money-wasting services there are to unsuspecting, uninformed (thus VULNERABLE) Consumers.... Want to change that industry? Be that change ❤
411 Raccoon Solutions (FL)

05/20/2026
Have a Racoon family in your house? Wanna move them out? Please keep the family together and this is how you do it.THE L...
05/18/2026

Have a Racoon family in your house? Wanna move them out? Please keep the family together and this is how you do it.

THE LINK SHOWS YOU HOW TO MAKE A REUNITE BOX AS WELL AS A LINK WITH RACCOON SOUNDS TO ATTRACT MOM.

RACCOONS NEVER use bare hands when handling a baby raccoon. Keep all skin covered. Wear thick gardening gloves and wrap a t-shirt or pillow case around the baby. Maintain a barrier between your ski…

We need help calling and pushing for a change in Tom’s River for ANIMAL HEALTH AND WELL-BEING!The local government  does...
05/18/2026

We need help calling and pushing for a change in Tom’s River for ANIMAL HEALTH AND WELL-BEING!

The local government doesn’t have a contract to humanely put to sleep sick wildlife. Even those which may have rabies or distemper!

Yesterday resident called Haven in the Woods, NJ up regarding an extremely sick (skunk) most likely with rabies or distemper. She had called the police who were of no help. I called the police to get animal control there to pick up this (skunk) and put it to sleep humainly.

When the contract animal control arrived, he told them to call the state of New Jersey fishing and wildlife to put the animal to sleep and they don’t do that, that he is not instructed to handle Wildlife. He failed to take ownership and protect the people and surrounding wildlife by leaving this sick animal!

It is a state laws state that every town must to provide emergency care of this domestic animals that are found injured and when needed intervene for sick and injured Wildlife, especially rabies vector species, to protect the public, and the surrounding communities!

THE MAYOR, BUSINESS ADMIN, POLICE DEPARTMENT AND THE CONTRACT ANIMAL CONTROL DID NOT DO THEIR JOBS!

Call these people and demand they FOLLOW THE STATE LAWS.

Daniel T. Rodrick 732-341-1000 ext.8255 MAYOR
Jonathan Salonis 732-341-1000 Ext. 8255 BUSINESS ADMINISTRATOR
Chief Guy Marie 732-349-0150 chief of police


Address

Old Bridge, NJ

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 8pm
Tuesday 8am - 8pm
Wednesday 8am - 8pm
Thursday 8am - 8pm
Friday 8am - 8pm
Saturday 8am - 8pm
Sunday 8am - 8pm

Telephone

+19085653592

Website

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