How to help


Make a Donation

ZanzibarWe have made it as easy as we can! We offer two ways of donating: online via our secure donation form or through the widely accepted and used PayPal. Remember, all contributions are tax deductible. Thanks for your help.

Wish List

Please take a moment to look at our Wish List. On this list, you will find the necessary items needed to make IEAS an even better facility. Perhaps you have some of these items, know someone who does or your business uses or sells these items. Your donations are tax-deductible to the extent allowable by law.

Adopt-An-Animal

The Adopt-An-Animal program gives corporations and individuals the opportunity to adopt one or more IEAS animals. In addition to knowing that you have guaranteed the financial security of your selected animal, you will receive additional benefits for your adoption.

Sponsorship

The sponsorship program gives corporations and individuals the opportunity to sponsor one of the animals and his/her habitat for a year. Your name or company logo will appear on the animal's habitat at the sanctuary, your sponsorship will be recognized in our newsletter, as well as on our website. Please contact us for more information.

Yellowbrick Mall

We have now partnered with Yellowbrick Mall to provide you with the best online shopping experience! When you click through to Yellowbrick Mall (from our site), and make a purchase, a portion of that purchase (the percentage or dollar amount listed under the merchant's name) goes to help the animals of IEAS! It's that easy!

Volunteer

See our volunteer page for more information and how to apply. Its a unique experience but lots of work from painting to digging post holes to mowing to raking...the list goes on and on!

Tom Thumb Reward Card

Remember, the IEAS number is 2074 when shopping at Tom Thumb. IEAS wants to thank all that have used their Good Neighbor Card as the animals are the benefactors of your shopping at Tom Thumb.

Kroger Plus Card

ATTENTION!
By using your Kroger Plus card you can enroll in their program that donates a percentage of your purchases to IEAS. Once per year you can go to http://www.krogerneighbortoneighbor.com/, print the page with the instructions and barcode which you take to your local Kroger and have it scanned and added to your Kroger Plus card account. Every purchase you make from May 1, 2008 through April 30, 2009 will help the Sanctuary. You will be contributing towards our goal of providing our animal friends the best possible living accommodations and enhanced quality of life. If you need us to send you the printed instructions, please call the office at 940-433-5091 or email us at richard@bigcat.org.

Kroger Cards are only valid in Texas and Louisianna.

GoodSearch

Now with just the click of your mouse, you can raise one cent for the animals of IEAS. Goodsearch is a search engine which helps to raise money for charities. Simply go to www.goodsearch.com whenever you are searching the internet. Under the “Who do you Goodsearch for?” tab, type in International Exotic Animal Sanctuary and then click the Verify button. Now with every search you can raise one cent for IEAS. Goodsearch is powered by Yahoo so you will get all of the same great results! Just think…if 1000 people made just 2 searches per day, that would raise $7,300 a year for the Sanctuary! That’s amazing! So start clicking! The animals will thank you!




Sanctuary News

HURRICANE IKE SURVIVOR
IS RESCUED BY IEAS!


Many of you may have heard the story about the man in Crystal Beach, TX who took shelter in a church with his pet lion during Hurricane Ike. Michael Ray Kujawa ran what Crystal Beach visitors called a make-shift home zoo that had housed goats, an emu, and big cats. Evidently, this man waited too long to evacuate Crystal Beach as Hurricane Ike tore through the area. As he attempted to drive to safety, he was trapped by rising waters. In the back of his vehicle was Shackles, an 11 year old lioness. Sympathetic people who had taken shelter at the First Baptist Church in Crystal Beach gave sanctuary to the man and the lion he described as his pet.

What many people don’t know is that there was another big cat who had been left abandoned at the man’s make-shift zoo. Back at his home, a 400-pound tiger was left in a locked enclosure, with nowhere to go and no choice but to attempt to ride out the storm. Amazingly, this tiger survived.

The tiger relaxes after she arrives at IEAS

A local veterinarian, Dr. Sarah Matek and Carl Griffith, the former Jefferson County Sheriff went out to investigate the situation. “They had been feeding it, but he was a very aggressive and angry cat,” said Griffith. “There were only two choices. It was either put it to sleep or they were going to have to kill it.” Griffith and Matek, along with Texas Game Wardens decided to tranquilize the animal so that they could help her. The tiger was moved to an animal refuge facility near Somerville in Central Texas. The tiger was only to be kept here temporarily, so the question remained – Where would this tiger go?

Hurrican Ike survivor arrives at the IEAS Quarantine Facility

IEAS heard of the tiger and we knew that we had to help. This amazing animal had been left abandoned in the direct path of a massive, destructive storm. One can only imagine how she managed to survive. With the assistance of Two-time NASCAR champion, Tony Stewart, the International Exotic Animal Sanctuary and The Tony Stewart Foundation, the tiger will have a permanent home. She needs your help too! She will be housed temporarily in our Quarantine Facility until her new, permanent home is ready. Construction on her habitat has already begun to provide the quality of life she deserves for years to come. She will have a pool to get into in the hot Texas summers, enrichment items, trees for shade and the best possible care.



TWO NEW RESIDENTS CALL IEAS HOME

Two new residents can now call IEAS home. Back in August, a serval and a caracal were abandoned on the doorstep a wildlife rehabilitation center in New Mexico. Staff members of the center contacted IEAS to see if we would be able to take the animals. They arrived in late August and are currently being housed in our Quarantine facility. They will soon move to their permanent home where they will have grass, trees for shade, misters to keep them cool, perches to lay on, and a house for shelter.


The IEAS Board of Directors have decided on names for these two magnificent animals. We would like to honor two of our most dedicated volunteers by naming these cats after them. The caracal’s name is now Billy. Billy O’Brien has been a volunteer at IEAS for the last five years. Billy’s hard work and dedication to the animals of IEAS are so greatly appreciated. Billy is always willing to help with whatever we may be doing at the sanctuary. On one day you may find him leading our conservation education tours or spending time with our adoptive parents as they visit with animals. On another day you will find him involved in many of the activities that occur at the Sanctuary, including painting, welding, building caves or pools, mowing, and weedeating. The serval’s name is now Barbara. Barbara Tinsley has been a volunteer at IEAS since 1998. Barbara devotes much of her time to all of the landscaping throughout the facility. Barbara keeps IEAS looking beautiful with all of the flowers and other plant life that she attends to. She takes care of many of the vines at the Sanctuary to ensure that the animals always have access to shade. Barbara is also one of the Sanctuary’s photographers. She takes pictures of the animals at the Sanctuary that can be used for our website or can be sold in our gift shop. Thank you, Billy and Barbara, for all of your hard work and dedication to the animals of IEAS!

Billy O'Brien and Barbara Tinsley

About Us


WHO WE ARE

Barnum International Exotic Animal Sanctuary, Inc. ( IEAS) was founded in Boyd, Texas in 1988 as a 501(c)(3), nonprofit tax-exempt corporation. IEAS's current mission is the care and welfare of its animal inhabitants, as well as educating the public about their needs. The inhabitants include bobcats, cougars, jaguars, leopards, lions, tigers and bears among other species. As of April 2007, sixty-one felines call IEAS home, with spacious habitats, pools and houses. The employees and volunteers who care for the animals give of their time and talents to ensure the quality of life to which they are entitled.

What we do

Our Mission: The purpose and goals of IEAS are to provide a permanent sanctuary for exotic animals that have been abused, abandoned, neglected, confiscated, or previously owned by people unwilling or unable to provide for these magnificent beings. Additionally, IEAS educates the public through school programs, tour lectures,support for conservation programs, and public appearances about the value and worth of these sensitive, intelligent and perceptive animals, so that their future, as an important part of our world, is insured. We are committed to strengthening and promoting conservation education and other avenues to foster conservation in which we can participate.
 

WHY DO WE EXIST

Nala and KuruIt is a fundamental question that one can ask: why is there a need for a sanctuary for abandoned, abused and/or confiscated exotic animals? Well in recent times one can find the answer weekly just by watching TV or reading the newspaper on occasion. It seems that there is a proliferation of incidents involving exotic animals all across the country, whether one reads about the 24 big cats confiscated in New Jersey, the tiger kept in an apartment in New York, or the incident in Arizona where a keeper was mauled and seriously injured by a tiger while she was cleaning the compound. The story that stands alone for horror, is the case where dozens of big cats were confiscated in Southern California in unbelievably terrible condition, and authorities found a number of dead cats littering the buildings located at the same facility. Click here to read more: Why Do We Exist?
 

HOW WE DO IT

NoelOf course, we give the animals the very best food that is appropriate for their needs, mixed with minerals and vitamins that are necessary for them to have a well-balanced diet that satisfies all their nutritional needs. We also give the animals very large habitats with a variety of elements that take into account their species-appropriate utilization of space, such as ramps, swimming pools for all tigers and jaguars, trees, perches, climbing poles, and a variety of enrichment items. In addition, we satisfy the animals' emotional needs with a unique program we call "Emotional Enrichment" . Exotic animals are as individual as humans. Sure, there are some generalizations that can be made about a specific species, but there are many more distinctions from one individual to another within that species. So, we work with each individual according to its personality and emotional needs. In general, we have our staff and volunteers treat each animal with the respect and dignity that would be accorded another human. Care is taken not to agitate, irritate, or unduly excite any animal. Our Animal Behaviorist physically interacts with a large number of the large cats. Some of them have never had direct contact with a human. Most of the cats that have had direct contact previously considered it adversarial, as training methods of domination/control were apparently used. We find that most of the cats respond surprisingly well to our method of utilizing only affection, trust, and respect in direct interaction. They obviously enjoy and want positive emotional interaction. We want to caution the reader that without extensive experience, this approach could potentially be very dangerous, and we do not advocate it for anyone that has not had a great deal of experience and training. Read more...