Sea savior
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Suzie Harrison
It only takes one visit to the Pacific Marine Mammal Center to get
hooked. When looking into the eyes of any of the rescued patients,
the addiction starts immediately.
California sea lion pup, Tommy, who was rescued on June 14, is one
such patient. His mother left him within hours of giving birth. He
was sitting in icy cold water alone when he was found at Moss Point
Beach and rushed to the center with hypothermia. Tommy weighed in at
a mere 15 pounds. He is now up to 37 pounds, and has been using his
pool to learn to swim on his own. He spends his time playing and
chasing fish.
To help Tommy and their other patients, the Pacific Marine Mammal
Center will have its third annual Sunset Sea Lion Cruise on Thursday
aboard the Phoenix, which is docked at the Balboa Fun Zone.
“This is one of my favorite events we do, it’s a chance for all of
our supporters to get together and be on the water,” director of
development and marketing Emily Wing said. “Because we do the harbor
cruise, it’s also an opportunity to see the healthy sea lions in
their natural environment and to celebrate what we do.
“The money goes toward our general operating expenses, which is
especially important since over the past three years our patient load
has more than quadrupled.”
Each year the rescue facility treats up to 250 marine mammals.
A lot of the day-to-day expenses have increased, in addition to
the increase in patients. All proceeds go toward funding the
life-saving efforts of the center, including medicine, food, supplies
and other necessities.
“The fundraisers are really important to us now more than ever,”
Wing said.
There’s a high demand to meet the costs for patient care. The
marine mammal center rescues, medically treats and rehabilitates sea
lions, seals, dolphins and whales that wash up along the Orange
County coastline due to injury or illness.
Center workers see harbor seals who have been shot, females
suffering from domoic acid poisoning and stranded sea lion pups.
Animal care supervisor and education coordinator Kirsten Sedlick
said the event also raises money for the important animal care and
education programs.
One example is the Kids Club education program for children ages 8
to 12, which will start Sept. 24.
Each month the kids get to learn a new topic, and then get to
watch the animal care duties and rescue efforts when an animal
arrives at the center.
“I’m so excited,” Sedlick said. “It’s really nice to see them
learn, do experiments, dissections and arts and crafts, games and
activities.”
The Orange County Parrot Head Club hosts the cruise with the
marine mammal center being a major charity it supports in the area.
“Everybody always has a good time, it’s a fun, relaxed
atmosphere,” Wing said. “[We have] great live music, dancing under
the stars and we usually get a sunset [weather permitting].”
The sunset cruise fundraiser will include hors d’oeuvres,
cocktails a silent auction and opportunity drawings. Tickets are $20
per person, and space is limited. Boarding will begin at 5:30 p.m.
and the cruise will be from 6 to 9 p.m. Contact Wing at (949)
494-3050 for tickets and donations.
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