What we do know is that animal lovers want to help.
Last week, the the International Fund for Animal Welfare asked volunteers to send in all-cotton mittens, to protect the little paws of koalas who'd been injured in the fires.
The request, accompanied by some awfully cute photos of koalas wearing the little white gloves, went viral.
"We're now getting offers from as far afield as Russia, Kazakhstan, China, the U.K. and the U.S.," IFAW's native wildlife campaigner Josey Sharrad told the Australian Broadcasting Company.
Sharrad said that the group has received "thousands" of mitten, enough for all the koalas IFAW is helping, with more to spare. The extras are being given out to other rescue groups -- at least, those that'll take them.
As Mother Jones noted, one group posted to Facebook that it "does not require mittens as they impede the animals ability to hold leaf and branches verses that of specific bandaging techniques" you can see in these images:
"IFAW launched the mittens after requests from vets and carers who do use them," Sharrad told The Huffington Post. "We know that some people use alternative methods. Our mittens will be distributed only to those that use and request them."
But if the immediate need for koala mittens has undeniably quelled, IFAW is now asking those who are handy with a needle and thread to turn their attention to making pouches for orphaned marsupials, like baby kangaroos and possums, many of whose parents died in the fires.
"These joeys need to be kept warm and quiet in a ‘pouch’ like environment so carers use sewn pouches," writes Sharrad on the IFAW blog. "Pouches are changed regularly after each feeding and up to six pouches can be used per animal each day. So if someone has a few animals in care this can amount to a lot of pouches in the wash each day! With regular washing and daily wear and tear plenty of pouches are needed."
Keep the pouches coming. The koala mittens have a fairly limited range of uses, but the marsupial pouches are more versatile -- they're not just for animals hurt in the ongoing fires, which have taken some 30 houses over nearly 30 acres, but also for joeys hurt in other ways, like car accidents.
Here are complete pouch-making instructions. Send your pouches, which should be made of 100 percent cotton, to IFAW at 6 Belmore Street, Surry Hills 2010, Australia.
Don't have a sewing machine but still want to help? That one's extra easy: Send money.
Now hop to it!
Get in touch at arin.greenwood@huffingtonpost.com if you have an animal story to share!
Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/01/13/koala-mittens_n_6458990.html?utm_hp_ref=weird-news&ir=Weird+News and provided by entertainment-movie-news.com
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