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Florida law requires that all charities soliciting donations disclose their registration number and the percentage of your donation that goes to the cause and the amount that goes to the solicitor. Our registration number is CH-11409 and non-program expenses are funded from tour income, so 100% of your donations go directly to save the cats. We are a 501 c 3 charity as determined by the IRS Federal ID#59-3330495. Our 990s are available online at GuideStar.org with a complete breakdown of how your donations are spent.
 
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Frosty

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Serval at Big Cat RescueFROSTY Male White Footed Serval

DOB 1/1/95

Frosty was born into the pet trade.   He is the father of the only two white servals in the world, which were born here at the sanctuary. Big Cat Rescue stopped breeding in the mid 1990’s because there is no reason to breed an exotic cat for a life in a cage. Frosty loves when you toss him a snack and will jump as high in the air as he can to catch it before it falls. Frosty is quite acrobatic and if a keeper tosses him a treat, he will jump high into the air to try to catch it before it hits the ground. Frosty is much more stocky then the other servals and looks quite different with his pale coat and snow white socks. He loves enrichment and will get worked up into such a frenzy rubbing on a cardboard tube scented with spices that he will soon sports two thick strands of drool hanging from the corners of his mouth. Frosty also loves to mark his territory, including his keepers. He has quite a range and can spray more than three feet with exceptional accuracy. Several keepers have been "claimed" by Frosty!

white serval kittenBecause white footed servals and white servals are rare, people will pay to see them, so breeders will inbreed to get the defective genes that produce the un natural coat color. They cannot survive in the wild because they could not hide from predators and cannot sneak up on prey even if they did manage to survive to adulthood. They do not live where it snows. There are only a handful of white footed servals in the world and only two white servals that are known to exist. These are not albinos as they have pale blue to green eyes and some golden patches. They are born and mature approximately 20% larger than the normal colored servals. For the first year, their health is much more delicate and we have never known of white serval females to survive more than two weeks. We will not sell (although we’ve been offered $75,000.00 each) nor allow others to breed to our white servals because we do not want them to be exploited and the only way we can control that is to control their offspring. The demand for white tigers causes many of the normal colored cubs, born to these litters, to be destroyed. We will not be a part of anything that could cause the same to happen to golden colored servals. We do not breed cats, nor sell cats at Big Cat Rescue.

 

Most of our servals were rescued from people who got them as pets and were not prepared for the fact that male or female, altered or not, they all spray buckets of urine when they become adults. Some were being sold at auction where taxidermists would buy them and club them to death in the parking lot, but a few were born here in the early days when we were ignorant of the truth and were being told by the breeders and dealers that these cats should be bred for "conservation." Once we learned that there are NO captive breeding programs that actually contribute to conservation in the wild we began neutering and spaying our cats in the mid 1990's.  Knowing what we do about the intelligence and magnificence of these creatures we do not believe that exotic cats should be bred for lives in cages. Read more about our Evolution of Thought HERE

 
 
Be a Big Cat Rescuer by making a $5.00 donation to help rescue and care for these exotic catsYour support provides lifetime care to lions, tigers, white tigers, leopards, cougars, snow leopards, jaguars, bobcats, Canady lynx, caracals, fishing cats, Geoffroy cats, jungle cats, leopard cats, ocelots, sand cats, servals, Siberian lynx and even a few domestic cats and hybrids.  You can save tigers in the wild, end animal abuse, improve sanctuary standards and provide educational resources, such as our teacher's resources, games, screensavers, wallpapers, e-cards and social networking site, with just a few dollarsCheck out our finances and you will see that we make every dollar you donate go farther for the cats.  You can actually see the good you do when you visit Big Cat Rescue, see laws change or in every newsletter