Caring for Critters provides support for Wildlife Center of Virginia education ambassadors
The education ambassadors at the Wildlife Center of Virginia are some of the most important members of the organization’s team.
The education ambassadors at the Wildlife Center of Virginia are some of the most important members of the organization’s team.
Wildlife Center of Virginia staff members are preparing to provide care for a diverse array of wild patients on Thanksgiving Day.
Milestones are nothing new at the Wildlife Center of Virginia after 42 years of caring for wild animals, but Wednesday’s is important.
Spring at the Wildlife Center of Virginia in Waynesboro is a time to celebrate the release of young bears.
Staff, students and volunteers at the Wildlife Center of Virginia, a non-profit hospital for native wildlife, are experiencing baby season.
The Wildlife Center of Virginia has been watching the reaction of the public to the news that Waynesboro plans to use screaming siren cartridges to deter vultures.
Three orphaned bear cubs, each weighing less than two pounds, were admitted to the Wildlife Center of Virginia in Waynesboro on Feb. 14.
If you or your pets have had a close encounter with a skunk, you are not alone. It’s mating season which means skunks are traveling outside of their territories.
Nine months ago, the Wildlife Center of Virginia began admitting the year’s bear cub patients from several locations throughout Virginia.
The Wildlife Center of Virginia will have new leadership in 2024 after President and Co-Founder Ed Clark announced his retirement on Friday.