Fundraiser collage showing the sanctuary, rescued animals, and unfinished building work

These animals need your help.

For many years I have paid for the animals and this project myself. The costs have continued to rise, my savings are exhausted, and I am now asking for support so I can keep providing food, medical care, and a safe place for the animals already here.

Our sanctuary was created to give five rescued horses and nine dogs a safe and peaceful place to heal. Until now, I have managed all of this on my own. I have reached a point where that is no longer possible. Any help, no matter how small, means real food, real care, and real stability for the animals who depend on this place every day.

Daily care, safe space, and the quiet work of keeping this place alive.

Rescued horses standing together under a large mango tree at the sanctuary

The horses

Hay, feed, minerals, hoof care, medicine, fencing, and the daily presence that helps them stay safe and well.

Sabine feeding the sanctuary dogs in the courtyard

The dogs

Food, consistency, and a place where they can live freely, learn trust again, and be cared for with attention.

workers-building-wooden-stable

The place itself

Water, maintenance, shelter, repairs, and the simple conditions that let healing happen in peace.

This work is already real. Support helps protect it and help it continue.

Aerial view of the sanctuary with the round pen and surrounding land
Construction work underway inside the sanctuary building

Over the last years, the sanctuary has already taken shape through constant work and personal sacrifice: land clearing, fencing, the round pen, a deep well, solar power, a house for the worker, and road repairs after heavy rains.

  • The sanctuary land and round pen are already in use.
  • Water and solar infrastructure are already part of the project.
  • Construction and organization are still needed to make the place more stable, usable, and welcoming.
  • Your support helps finish practical essentials, not imagined extras.

Reality

When I found Shuki, he was severely wounded, his body was being eaten by worms, and he had been left to die. Support is not an abstract idea here. It becomes treatment, time, food, labor, shelter, and the chance for an animal to survive and heal.

Every donation helps hold this sanctuary together.

If this place speaks to you, please support it directly through Sabine’s fundraiser. Your help goes toward the animals, the land, and the practical work that keeps both safe.