The Mobile Wildlife Clinic
Kindly sponsored by Care for the Wild International.
In October 2006, The Wildlife Friends of Thailand was happy to implement the Mobile Wildlife Clinic project in the first half of 2006 with the generous support of Care for the Wild International, supplying the financial means for the purchase of the veterinary equipment for the vehicle "Mobile Wildlife Clinic".
The Wildlife Friends of Thailand purchased a secondhand Volkswagen van "Caravelle 3000cc Injection" built in 1996 for the purpose of setting up a mobile wildlife clinic to help animals upcountry where needed, and to rescue animals from places all over the country when veterinary assistance would be required. With the installed equipment such as pulse-oximeters, IV-pump and a gas-anesthetic respirator the mobile clinic allows us to assess, treat, and monitor animals at the rescue location, and during transit back to the wildlife hospital at the rescue centre.
Since its inauguration in early 2006, the mobile clinic has been used on numerous occasions to rescue wild animals from various locations throughout Thailand, as well as helping our continuing efforts to improve the health of and provide a neutering service for local street dogs and abandoned domestic pets. The mobile clinic has allowed us to assess and treat animals on location at rescue sites, considerably improving the speed with which treatment can commence in injured or sick animals. These animals then have a much improved recovery time following early assessment and treatment, allowing them to be integrated with the resident animals at the centre at an earlier time.
We anticipate that, with continuing improvements to the facilities available in the mobile clinic, the mobile clinic will allow us to improve the health and conditions of some of Thailand’s wild and domestic animals well into the future.
As an example of the kind of work we use the mobile clinic for, on 12 October 2006 the centre received a call from the nearby town of Petchburi, where a young wild male long-tailed macaque had been causing problems on the roof of a car dealership for several days. The macaque had at some stage sustained a nasty wound on its forehead. On arrival at the site in the mobile clinic, we were able to successfully anaesthetize the animal using a dart gun, and clean and suture the wound on site, therefore removing the necessity for further or prolonged anaesthesia on our return to the wildlife centre hospital. The animal recovered well following the rescue.
Thailand is well-known for its wildlife and its tourism industry. All over the country you find elephant camps and entertainment places with wildlife. Although the Wildlife Friends of Thailand does not support or approves of wildlife in entertainment we do help out those elephants that need medical treatment. Elephant camps in Kanchanaburi and Prachuabkhirikhan provinces have received professional care and treatment from our Mobile Wildlife Clinic in the first months of it existence.
Even wild elephants need help at some times. The wild elephant found in Chanthaburi province in June 2006 was found in a mud pool and was not able to get up on its legs. For 7 days the team with the Mobile Wildlife Clinic cared for the elephant and fed him. He died unfortunately as he still could not get up on his feet after that long. The Van could not get closer than 2 kilometers from the elephant as it is not a four-wheel drive vehicle.
The Mobile Wildlife Clinic is used frequently by the Wildlife Friends of Thailand. In just it's first 6 months of use, the Mobile Clinic was used for the following tasks:-
- 1 x Wild Elephant Rescue
- 5 x Domesticated Elephant Injury Treatment & Camp Visits
- 5 x 'Pet' Gibbon Rescues
- 3 x 'Pet' Macaque Rescues
- 1 x 'Pet' Malayan Sun Bear Rescue
- 112 x Python Check Ups and Relocations
- 3 x King Cobra Check Ups and Relocations
A Real Life Rescue with the Mobile Wildlife Clinic - Joy the Stump-Tailed Macaque >>


Latest Rescue
New Malayan Sun Bear Handed Over to WFFT
Febuary 2010 - On Tuesday 23rd February, a 3 month old Malayan Sun Bear arrived at the WFFT wildlife hospital. She was handed in by her owner, a farmer, who stated that he had been looking after her for 2 months. The farmer stated that he found her wandering across a road on his farm land, and took her in... More

Latest News
Four WFFT Gibbons Move to Release Site
March 2010 - On March 4th 2010, the first four gibbons moved from the WFFT wildlife rescue Center to the "Lum Nam Pai Wildlife Sanctuary" in Maehongson Province, Thailand.
At this Wildlife Sanctuary, a lush and dense jungle in the North of Thailand, a unique project was build by the WFFT in cooperation with the Department of National Parks and Mahidol University. The main objective of this project is to prepare gibbons for a return to the wild, to release them and follow up on their moves and behavior as they face the challenges of the wild once more... More
Running Campaigns
Tourism & Wildlife
2007 to present - Our Tourism and Wildlife Campaign aims to inform people of the cruelty and explotation involved in having their photographs taken with exotic wild animals as holiday souvenirs. Not only is the use of animals for entertainment inhumane and unacceptable from an ethical point of view, but also extremely damaging from a conservation perspective... More
Orangutan Smuggling
2006 to present - Hundreds of orangutans are being smuggled through Thailand on a daily basis. Currently, there are over 70 young orangutans waiting to be repatriated, but despite their uncertain fate, the government is failing to act... More