Baby Opossums Go For a Ride "I was sitting in my office when I saw what looked to be very mangy cat, and then realized it was an opossum with 12 babies on it. I snapped a quick picture with my phone. I realized how slow she was moving and we have a 200 foot long building so I ran out of my office down to the other end of the warehouse, cracked open the exit door and lo and behold she was coming right for the door. So I pulled out the phone again and started filming as she made her way closer, and closer, and almost walked right in the door I was filming! Once I figured she wasn't coming in for a visit, I stuck my arm out and got the super close up at the end there."
Pet cat adopts baby lynx rejected by its mother An ordinary domestic cat has adopted a baby lynx called Nika at the Novosibirsk Zoo in the city of Novosibirsk, Thursday. One of the zoo workers noticed that the mother of the lynx refused to feed her cub because it was the runt of the litter and decided to find an innovative solution. One employee brought her cat to the zoo after it recently gave birth to kittens and soon the pet started to nurse the little lynx along with her own brood.
Rescued lioness walks on grass for first time in her life Yuna, a lioness rescued from an abandoned house in Kiev after the start of the war, was living in a 3 x 4m enclosure with a concrete floor. Evacuated to a wildlife rescue centre, she was then bombarded by Russian missiles, leaving her severely traumatised and unable to stand. It took months of specialist care for Yuna to recover from her post-traumatic stress disorder. Overweight due to inactivity and poor diet, she slowly regained her strength. The first lioness rescued as part of the Big Cats in Crisis campaign , Yuna has regained her confidence in her new sanctuary. Having never walked on grass before, she began to explore her new surroundings with curiosity and determination.