Is It Worth It?
Maggie van Santen Maggie van Santen

Is It Worth It?

Thinking of becoming a wildlife carer? Brace yourself—it’s not easy. It’s heartbreak, exhaustion, and sacrifice. It’s leaning on mentors, second-guessing yourself, and doing it anyway. You won’t get paid, but you’ll be paid in trust, in love, in the moment a joey looks to you as their whole world. And when you release them back to the wild, knowing they’ll thrive, nurture, and live free—that’s when you’ll know: It’s worth it. Unequivocally, YES.

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She is not OK
Maggie van Santen Maggie van Santen

She is not OK

You’ve found a joey. You want to help. But what you do next could mean the difference between life and death. This blog is not a guide for raising wildlife—it’s a plea to protect it. Because no matter how calm that joey looks in your arms, it is not okay. Trauma runs deep, and well-meaning mistakes can kill. Read this before you act. Then call a carer. Immediately.

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She Didn’t Have to Suffer This Way
Maggie van Santen Maggie van Santen

She Didn’t Have to Suffer This Way

Every day, wildlife carers face the heartbreaking truth that so much suffering could have been prevented. We hold broken bodies, comfort terrified joeys, and bury those we couldn’t save—all while knowing: She didn’t have to suffer this way. This post is a tribute to the lives lost, the carers who keep showing up, and the choices that could have made all the difference.

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To the Carers Who Have Loved and Lost
Maggie van Santen Maggie van Santen

To the Carers Who Have Loved and Lost

There are days in wildlife care that feel like miracles—when a joey takes her first hop, when a wombat finally eats on his own, when the eyes of a once-traumatised possum softens in trust.

And then there are the other days.

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The Cry That Breaks the  Silence
Maggie van Santen Maggie van Santen

The Cry That Breaks the Silence

Nothing pierces the heart quite like the cry of a newly orphaned joey—calling out for the Mummy who will never answer.

Her Mummy is gone. Taken too soon.

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White Candle Day: Honouring the Wild We Couldn’t Save
Maggie van Santen Maggie van Santen

White Candle Day: Honouring the Wild We Couldn’t Save

Every year on 17 August, let wildlife carers across Australia pause to honor the lives that slipped through our fingers—the joeys, possums, birds, and beings we loved fiercely but couldn’t save. This blog is a tribute to them, and to the emotional toll borne by those who care. It’s a candlelit reflection on grief, resilience, and the quiet strength of those who keep showing up, even when the heartbreak feels too heavy to hold.

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Possums in Our Care: The Quiet Complexity of Orphaned Lives
Maggie van Santen Maggie van Santen

Possums in Our Care: The Quiet Complexity of Orphaned Lives

Possums are among Australia’s quietest casualties—gentle, nocturnal beings often overlooked until it’s too late. In care, we see the toll of misinformation and neglect: fragile bodies failing from incorrect diets, orphaned joeys clinging to life, and species like the Ringtail teetering on the edge of extinction. This blog is a space to illuminate their stories, advocate for informed care, and remind readers that every possum life matters.

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Kangaroos and the Cost of Kindness
Maggie van Santen Maggie van Santen

Kangaroos and the Cost of Kindness

Kangaroos are far more than the bounding silhouettes on our national crest—they are emotionally complex, socially bonded beings who suffer deeply when misunderstood. In regional care settings, we see the consequences of that misunderstanding daily: joeys torn from mothers, adults overstimulated or neglected, and survivors like Cherish who arrive on the brink. This blog is a space to reclaim their stories, challenge the narratives that fail them, and celebrate the quiet, powerful work of healing that happens when we choose empathy over exploitation.

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When did it become OK?
Maggie van Santen Maggie van Santen

When did it become OK?

Australia’s kangaroos are iconic, yet increasingly treated as expendable. Behind the labels of “sustainable” and “humane” lies a reality of mass slaughter, orphaned joeys, and cultural disregard. This blog asks the hard questions: When did it become OK? And how long will we stay silent?

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When Did It Become Okay? A Reckoning for Our Kangaroos
Maggie van Santen Maggie van Santen

When Did It Become Okay? A Reckoning for Our Kangaroos

A Land That Once Knew Balance

Australia is a land of paradox — ancient yet scarred, vast yet shrinking in spirit. For tens of thousands of years, kangaroos bounded across this continent in harmony with its people and its rhythms. They were never just animals; they were part of the story. Aboriginal communities understood this deeply, living with the land, not over it.

But something changed.

This blog post is a call to conscience. It draws parallels between the fate of kangaroos in Australia and the wolves of North America — both victims of narratives rooted in fear, not science. It asks: When did it become okay? And more importantly: When will it stop?

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Ruby Roo and the $255 Million Mirage: Welcome to Australia,
Maggie van Santen Maggie van Santen

Ruby Roo and the $255 Million Mirage: Welcome to Australia,

Australia loves its kangaroos—until it doesn’t. Every year, tens of thousands are shot across the country under the guise of management and conservation, often at night, often without public scrutiny, and always at a cost. Meanwhile, animated mascots bounce across tourism campaigns, airline logos, and national branding, selling the kangaroo as a proud symbol of Australian identity. This blog post explores the staggering contradiction: how a nation can glorify its wildlife for profit while systematically erasing it from the landscape. It’s time to ask—what does it really mean to love a species, if we’re willing to kill it to keep it out of sight?

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Thank You, Wildlife Carers: A Love Letter from the Wild
Maggie van Santen Maggie van Santen

Thank You, Wildlife Carers: A Love Letter from the Wild

At Amaris Wildlife Sanctuary, every life matters—no matter how small, how broken, or how wild. Behind every rescue is a story of compassion, courage, and unwavering dedication. This letter is written from the perspective of the animals whose lives have been touched by wildlife carers. It’s a tribute to the quiet heroes who walk through heartbreak to bring hope.

To those who show up, again and again—this is for you.

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The Weight of Advocacy and the Need to Breathe
Maggie van Santen Maggie van Santen

The Weight of Advocacy and the Need to Breathe

Advocating for kangaroos has taken me to some dark emotional places lately. This isn’t just about policy or pet food labels—it’s about bearing witness to cruelty, and trying to make sense of a world that celebrates kangaroos in advertisements while disregarding their suffering. In this post, I reflect on the grief, the helplessness, and the quiet strength it takes to keep going when everything feels too heavy.

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When Did Compassion Become Controversial?
Maggie van Santen Maggie van Santen

When Did Compassion Become Controversial?

Advocating for kangaroos shouldn’t come with cruelty—but lately, it feels like compassion has become controversial. As media attention grows around the commercial killing of kangaroos, I’ve noticed a troubling rise in online abuse directed at carers and advocates who speak up. This blog is a personal reflection on what it means to raise your voice for wildlife in a world that doesn’t always want to listen.

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They’re Not Invading—They’re Surviving
Maggie van Santen Maggie van Santen

They’re Not Invading—They’re Surviving

Living among kangaroos should be a privilege—yet too often, their presence is met with frustration instead of curiosity or compassion. A recent comment made to me got me thinking: when people say “there are more kangaroos than ever,” what are they really seeing? This post unpacks the changes we’ve made to the landscape, the consequences wildlife are bearing, and why visibility doesn’t always equal abundance.

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A National Disgrace: Channel 10’s Kangaroo Segment Wasn’t Journalism—It Was Propaganda
Maggie van Santen Maggie van Santen

A National Disgrace: Channel 10’s Kangaroo Segment Wasn’t Journalism—It Was Propaganda

There are times when the media has the power to inform, to challenge, and to inspire compassion. And then there are times—like this past week—when it does the exact opposite. Channel 10’s recent segment on the kangaroo industry wasn’t just disappointing; it was a gut punch to every wildlife carer, advocate, and compassionate Australian who knows the truth behind the commercial slaughter of our native animals. This blog post is not just a response—it’s a moment of truth. Because when journalism becomes a mouthpiece for cruelty, someone has to speak for those who can’t.

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Did we choose this?
Maggie van Santen Maggie van Santen

Did we choose this?

Two wildlife sanctuaries in Western Australia have just closed their doors—not because they stopped caring, but because they simply couldn’t keep going. This blog is a reflection on the heartbreak, the exhaustion, and the quiet crisis facing wildlife carers across the country. It’s not just about burnout—it’s about a system that leaves us behind, and the question we keep asking: Did we choose this, or did it choose us?

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Why, Oh Why, Is No One Listening?
Maggie van Santen Maggie van Santen

Why, Oh Why, Is No One Listening?

Every winter in Canberra, the killing begins. Behind closed reserves and under the cover of darkness, thousands of kangaroos are shot—funded by taxpayer dollars and justified by a narrative that’s wearing thin. This blog is not just a plea. It’s a cry from all of us who have written, spoken, and wept for years. Why, oh why, is no one listening?

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“Allen Road: The Silence That Kills”
Maggie van Santen Maggie van Santen

“Allen Road: The Silence That Kills”

Dead kangaroos have been found again—this time in a paddock on Allen Road, Walpole

No shooter in sight. No explanation. Just the aftermath: lifeless bodies, likely mothers, left to rot in the open. At this time of year, nearly every female kangaroo carries a joey. So we must ask: what happened to them?

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The Global Shift Away from Kangaroo Leather in Sportswear
Maggie van Santen Maggie van Santen

The Global Shift Away from Kangaroo Leather in Sportswear

For decades, kangaroos—Australia’s iconic, sentient, native animals—have been quietly turned into football boots and fashion accessories. Their skins, marketed as “K-leather,” were prized for being lightweight and durable. But behind every pair of boots was a brutal truth: night-time shootings, orphaned joeys, and a commercial industry that treats wildlife as disposable.

Now, finally, the world is waking up.

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