Wanderlust Acres Animal Sanctuary; home to 130 rescued ducks

Tina Austin (left) and Jennifer VanderMeer. (Courtesy, Janet Vormittag)


By Janet Vormittag

WKTV Contributor



In 2011, Jennifer VanderMeer was working on a project in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. During a walk along the James River on her day off she noticed a man with two young girls. The girls were crying because their dad was going to pitch two ducklings into the water.


VanderMeer intervened. 

“That was my first rescue,” she said. For six weeks, the ducklings lived with VanderMeer in an apartment. When the job ended she brought them home to Michigan where they lived long, spoiled lives.

VanderMeer is an ornithologist. “I love birds. It’s a passion and has been a profession for over 20 years,” she said. 

For years she volunteered for Michigan Duck Rescue. In October 2020, with the encouragement of her late husband Lenny Rockwell, she opened Wanderlust Acres Animal Sanctuary. The Rockford-based rescue specializes in ducks.

“Ducks and other domestics get overlooked,” VanderMeer said. “They need someone to be their voice. They’re sweet souls.”

Home to 130 ducks, 10 breeds

Close to 130 ducks are housed at Wanderlust with 10 breeds represented. Each duck has a name and VanderMeer can tell the story about how each one came to be a resident of the sanctuary. Most are from Michigan: Millennium Park, the Flat River in Lowell, the Muskegon Causeway, a busy intersection in Jenison, a Sand Lake park, a pond behind Home Depot in Grandville and several other recognizable locations. A few came from Indiana and Illinois. 

“They were dumped — in ponds, lakes, streams, wherever there is water,” VanderMeer said. “Don’t dump ducks. It’s illegal to abandon animals.” 

Domestic ducks can’t fly, so they can’t escape predators. They also don’t know how to forage for food. “They either fall prey to a predator or they starve to death,” VanderMeer said. 

Most of the dumped ducks are drakes; male ducks. She explained that people get ducks for their eggs. When they discover their ducks are drakes, they get rid of them. People also buy ducklings as Easter presents. When they grow up and the novelty wears off, the ducks are dumped. Ducks also come from classroom projects; eggs hatch into fluffy cute ducklings, and then what?

Ducks can live 10-20 years


Jennifer VanderMeer with Gertrude, who has a deformed leg. (Courtesy, Janet Vormittag)



The rescue of one duck, Gertrude, almost didn’t happen.



“Lenny said no more ducks,” VanderMeer recalled. But he agreed to go along to see the Khaki. Someone had put a zip tie on Gertrude’s leg when she was young. As the duckling grew the hard plastic didn’t budge causing deformity and infection.

Lenny’s no more ducks turned into we’re taking her after he witnessed the abuse done to the young duck. He even held her while the veterinarian examined her.

“He had the biggest heart,” VanderMeer said. Lenny died Sept.14, 2022, three months after being diagnosed with cancer. The couple had 21-1/2 years together. 

While Lenny was sick VanderMeer devoted all her time to him and relied on volunteers, especially Tina Austin, to care for the ducks.

“She’s a godsend,” VanderMeer said. 


Years ago, the two women met while working as waitresses. They reconnected through Facebook after the sanctuary was started. Tina, a vet-assistant and owner of a pet care business, has 17 chickens and seven ducks.

VanderMeer’s dad, a biologist and a lover of animals, also volunteers. He has five flocks at his Ada home that will soon be moved to the sanctuary. 

Gertrude survived and is part of the Disabled Flock; all have leg issues. They live in a fenced area in the garage where they get extra care and aren’t stressed by abled ducks.



“Her leg is permanently disabled, but that doesn’t stop her. She’s very tenacious,” VanderMeer said. 

Duck Village

The majority of the ducks live in Duck Village, a maze of dog kennels that provide homes to small flocks such as the Dirty Girls Flock, Eaters Flock and the 19-member Dutch Village Flock that came from the Dutch Village in Holland. 

Each flock has a coop where they spend nights.  The coops are latched, chained, and for extra security a cement brick is placed in front of its door. It takes close to an hour each evening to tuck all the flocks in for the night. 

Numerous predators

Domestic ducks have numerous predators including raccoons, possums, fox, hawks, coyotes and snapping turtles.



“The words ‘sitting duck’ is quite applicable,” VanderMeer said. 

Duck Village is predator-proof. The 20 enclosures have woven wire tops, chicken wire skirting, and dig guards. In addition, there is a camera surveillance system so Duck Village can be monitored at all times.

In the summer there is a pond where the ducks get supervised swim time.

Funded by donations

The sanctuary is funded through donations. It costs $300 to $500 per month for food and the wood shavings used for bedding. They go through a 40-pound bag of duck pellets every day. Ducks also eat corn, greens and mealy worms. They love fresh vegetables and fruit, but the food has to be cut into small pieces because ducks don’t have teeth. It takes close to four 5-gallon buckets of cut-up eatables to ensure enough for everyone.

Frozen peas are a favorite treat.

 

Last fall people from the Rockford area donated enough uncarved pumpkins to fill the garage.

VanderMeer sells duck eggs to help pay the bills. When egg sales and donations don’t cover expenses, VanderMeer pays the difference.

But the expense is worth it. While the ducks aren’t cuddly like a dog or cat, they can be sweet and sassy. They wiggle their tail feathers when they recognize their names and they’re trainable.

“They all have different personalities,” VanderMeer said.

When she told the usually chatty, loud flocks that Lenny had died there was silence across the sanctuary. Some ducks lowered their heads, others turned their backs to her, some went into their houses or into corners.

“Ducks understand more than people give them credit for. They’re feeling emotional creatures. They form strong bonds, not just with other ducks, but with people. A lot of people don’t see that.”

Since Lenny passed, VanderMeer has struggled with the workload of running and caring for the animals at the sanctuary. She also has three cats and four dogs.

“It hasn’t been easy.”

For more information, follow Wanderlust Acres Animal Sanctuary on Facebook and other social media sites.


How you can help

Volunteer, buy supplies through Amazon Wish List, donate through Venmo@WanderlustAcres, paypal.me/WanderlustAcres or Cash App $WanderlustAcres.

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