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Home The Post Cover Stories

The Struggles and Vision of Hills Wildlife Sanctuary

A local gem

by Claudia Butjerevic
2 April 2025
in Cover Stories
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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The Struggles and Vision of Hills Wildlife Sanctuary

Nestled in Dural, backed by Berowra Valley National Park, and on 35 acres of natural crown bushland, is the Hills Wildlife Sanctuary.

Established in 1977, the Sanctuary was formerly known as the Kangaroo Protection Co-operative, a not-profit organisation founded by a woman with a love for kangaroos. The valuable acres were given to the organisation by the state government under then-Premier Neville Wran.

Since, the Hills Wildlife Sanctuary has evolved, and takes on Australian wildlife to rehabilitate, care for, and rescue.

All funding comes from grassroots advocacy, philanthropic donations, and the community. Though native wildlife is under the protection of the crown, the Hills Wildlife Sanctuary and other organisations like it receive no government funding for their work. Federal government deems it a state issue. The state government is currently undergoing an extensive review into the wildlife rehabilitation sector.

During the Black Summer bushfires of 2019, the Sanctuary received an unprecedented number of calls, asking for assistance. Lack of funding and lack of resources meant that many requests had to be turned away, and the wildlife was left to suffer.

For the future, the vision for the Sanctuary is to have a state-of-the-art hospital, with specialised care for injured wildlife. To be able to establish an Emergency Response Centre to rapidly rescue wildlife during natural disasters, including mobile vehicles with technology and equipment for on site treatment. To support threatened species by introducing endangered breeding programs for micro-species such as reptiles, amphibians, small mammals, birds, and fish. To develop an education hub for the public to learn about and experience native wildlife.

Most of Hills Sanctuary’s animal residents come to them after either being hit on the side of the road, surrendered by people who have tried to domesticate wild animals, or confiscated from illegal trafficking operations.

Wendy the Wombat is one such resident. Adopted by a family after being found on the side of the road as a baby, Wendy was treated as a common house pet. But Wendy is a wild animal, and when she became too difficult to look after, she was surrendered. Other residents are the dingoes on site, who were sold on gumtree to be raised as domesticated dogs. Casper the albino kookaburra is visually impaired and would have a hard time fending for himself. The animals like Wendy and Casper and the dingoes who are not able to be released back into the wild stay permanently at the Sanctuary as ambassador animals.

The Wombat Rehabilitation Facility on site is sponsored by organisation Allowed to Grow Old, founded by Linda Meumann, owner of Calabash Kennels in Arcadia. IFAW (International Fund for Animal Welfare) also contributed towards its construction. The new Flying Fox Rehabilitation Facility is being funded by Servcorp. Harris Farm is sponsoring the installation of a cool room at the Sanctuary. Platinum sponsors are Servcorp and Allowed to Grow Old.

More funding and support are needed to keep the Hills Wildlife Sanctuary running and saving the lives of native fauna.

Support Hills Wildlife Sanctuary: donate here
Claudia Butjerevic

Claudia Butjerevic

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The Post is the premier independent newsmagazine for the Hornsby Shire and Ku-ring-gai communities. We deliver hyperlocal news across Sydney’s Upper North Shore, covering stories that matter most to our neighbors—from local council decisions to arts, business networking, and school achievements. With our new Audio Edition, local news is now more accessible than ever.
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