The Residents

Meet the Animals who call Fripps Farm home.

Elijah

Rehabilitation and Release

Meet the Animals who got better at Fripps Farm and got released back to the wild to live their life the way that nature always intended.

Re-homed

Here at Fripps we don’t just rescue animals; we also re-home them. Sometimes we re-home them because they just aren’t right for farm life (for example a dog with a high prey drive who wants to kill all the other animals) and sometimes it’s because they would make a lovely pet for someone and they are very re-homable. Also by re-homing an animal to the best possible home it frees up more space for us to be able to take more animals that need it and to deal with emergency cases. If we kept all the animals then we would eventually run out of space and wouldn’t be able to help more. We work closely with other charities and organisations like Wanderers Haven Animal Sanctuary (Jodie is also a patron of WHAS) and Friends of the Wild Animal Rescue who help us to find homes. We have a specialist rabbit rescue who can help us to find lovely homes for rabbits and Guinea pigs too. If we can’t take an animal at all then we also act as the middle man and find homes for the animal without it even having to come to us. Eagle Heights Wildlife Foundation have taken some animals for us in the past (Jodie is also a patron of EHWF) and they too are wonderful. We are very happy in the knowledge that any animal we’ve re-homed has gone to the best possible place.

Rainbow Bridge

Just this side of heaven is a place called Rainbow Bridge.

When an animal dies that has been especially close to someone here, that pet goes to Rainbow Bridge. There are meadows and hills for all of our special friends so they can run and play together. There is plenty of food, water and sunshine, and our friends are warm and comfortable.