Volunteer hub

Help wildlife care happen behind the scenes.

Not every volunteer role means handling animals. Max's Shuga Shack needs practical help with supplies, transport, laundry, cleaning, admin, outreach, and seasonal support.

Best first step

Share your availability, location, skills, and comfort level so the rescue can match you with work that is useful, safe, and realistic for your schedule.

Ways you can help

Choose the lane that fits your time, skills, and comfort level.

Supply Help

Donate, pick up, or drop off formula, gloves, towels, bedding, cleaning supplies, carriers, and enclosure materials.

Laundry + Cleaning

Wash towels and blankets, sort clean supplies, and help keep care materials ready during busy seasons.

Transport Help

Help with approved supply pickup, dropoff, release support, or directed transport when a caretaker gives instructions.

Build + Repair

Repair cages, build habitats, make nest boxes, improve storage, and help with practical setup projects.

Admin + Outreach

Update current needs, organize thank-you messages, maintain wishlists, support sponsor lists, and prepare posts.

Trained Support

Some care roles may open only after approval, training, season fit, and direct supervision.

Current needs

Where helpers are most useful right now.

During busy weeks, the biggest help is practical: supplies moving, laundry done, transport coordinated, cages repaired, and admin tasks handled so animal care can stay focused.

Starter current needs
  • Towel and blanket laundry help
  • Formula, gloves, syringes, bedding, and cleaning supplies
  • Supply pickup/dropoff
  • Transport availability for approved routes
  • Admin help keeping needs and thank-yous current
Volunteer interest form

Join the helper list.

Share your helper details below. Animal-care support is approval and training based, but there are many useful ways to help before handling animals.

I can help with
Found wildlife?

Use the intake guidance instead of the volunteer form.

If someone found an injured, orphaned, sick, cold, bleeding, or attacked animal, the priority is safe containment and clear information for the caretaker.

Open found wildlife intake guidance