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Associated Press  (click to enlarge)
Sadie, a desert tortoise, and a wild fawn sit together in the corner of a pen at Dotty Cooper's animal rehabilitation center near Cusick. The tortoise and the fawn wandered around the rural farm together.
(click to enlarge)
Sadie walks around her pen at Dotty Cooper's animal rehabilitation center near Cusick on Wednesday. Cooper has custody of the tortoise until she can get it a ride south to a desert climate and into custody of another animal caregiver.
 
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Published: Monday, September 8, 2008

Wayward tortoise looking for ride to Mojave desert

Sadie, found in Idaho, needs a warmer climate

CUSICK -- Sadie the desert tortoise, discovered without explanation at a rest stop on U.S. 95 in Idaho, needs a ride to a new adoptive home to the Mojave Desert -- the sooner the better.

The 10-inch reptile has thrived at the Kiwani Wambli wildlife rehabilitation center north of Spokane since July but is unlikely to do so well with the onset of fall, center operator Dotty Cooper says.

Within the past week there was frost on the pumpkins.

"It's just way too cold," Cooper said. "She needs to get there, the sooner the better."

Like humans, desert tortoises mature at 14 and 20 years of age and typically live 60 to 100 years. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service designated the species as threatened in 1990, and several states provide additional protection.

Despite unfamiliar terrain and food, Sadie is "the mostly friendly reptile I've ever seen," Cooper said.

Sharing a pen with an orphaned fawn, the tortoise even showed the baby deer how to forage and eat greenery from the ground -- a process much harder for humans to demonstrate, Cooper said.

Then there was the time the tortoise dug a hole under the plastic fence.

"When I got home, she and the deer were marching down the road," Cooper said.

Now the fawn has been released into the wild, nights are colder and the dandelions Sadie has enjoyed eating are more scarce. Cold-blooded desert tortoises aren't made for temperatures below 40, much less days when the mercury never gets above freezing. To survive a winter in Cusick, Sadie would have to be kept indoors for months.

"Finding her a place where she can go in the sunshine and live as normal as possible has been a challenge," Cooper said.

Complicating the process for getting the tortoise back to her native habitat, she could not legally be released into the desert immediately because of the chance that she might have acquired germs that might wipe out her relatives.

"Once they've been touched by humans, they're now a domesticated pet. They're no longer classified as a wild animal," said Ginger Wilfong, co-operator of the Bay Area Turtle and Tortoise Rescue in Castro Valley, Calif., east of San Francisco, who was contacted by Cooper to help find a home for Sadie.

Further south, in Blythe, Calif., where adopted tortoises are common backyard pets, Wayne Cusick and his wife Lee Ann read a newspaper article about Sadie and called Cooper, saying they visit friends at Diamond Lake each summer, have stopped in Cusick out of curiosity about the town's name and would be happy to take Sadie.

"I explained our situation and how maybe it was destiny for this tortoise to wind up with the Cusicks in Blythe, Calif., here in the midst of the Mojave Desert," Cusick said.

Sadie would even get a playmate: Speedy, a younger tortoise about half her size.

Still undetermined, though, is how Sadie would get from Cusick to the Cusicks.

Because of her protected status, UPS won't touch her. Cusick said he could drive four hours to get the tortoise in Los Angeles but not all the way to Washington state.

Cooper and Cusick are hoping a big-hearted snowbird or some other southbound traveler can give Sadie a ride. Cusick said he even considered a tortoise relay for a time.

"I somehow don't think that's going to happen," he said, "but I'm hoping that between word-of-mouth and some notoriety, we'll be able to find someone."


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