The Turtle Pond Wildlife Centre located in the Greater Sudbury community of Val Caron is at its peak time right now caring for orphaned, ill and injured mammals, reptiles and birds.

Officials with the centre told CTV News that it offers specialized care like having formula on hand for each different species and medications to heal wounds and broken turtle shells.
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Caregivers at Turtle Pond said they are helping a grandfather Blanding’s turtle heal from a broken leg after being hit by a car while other turtles are being treated for broken shells.

“When they come in their shells are usually fractured which is a bone fracture so it’s very painful,” said Gloria Morissette, the centre’s founder.
“We have two to three different types of medication that we use for them to control pain as well as antibiotics so those medications are really expensive as well.”
In the centre’s songbird nursery several baby birds need feeding and on the menu is a high-protein supplement and insects for a young robin.

“It’s costly,” said Morissette.
“For example just for the baby birds we go through between $400-$500 a week just for insects and that is just for our songbirds.”
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This is a very busy time at the centre with over 300 visitors that belong in the wild but need some help right now.

“A lot of the animals that we get either whether they are babies and they need specialized formula and specialized nutrition or if they are adults and they have injuries they need specialized care specialized medications,” said Celina Hockley, a registered vet technician at the centre.
“Some medications work for some species others not so much so you really need to have a broad variety of knowledge on different species.”

As a registered charity the Turtle Pond Wildlife Centre relies on donations and fundraising efforts.
“June and July are the busiest months of the year,” said Morissette.
“We get in trauma cases as well as a lot of orphans. The goal is to get as many of these wild animals that need care back out where they belong.”

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Turtle Pond said the cost to feed wildlife each year at the centre is $80,000 with medications costing more than $10,000 annually.