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Manatee fundraiser Final Day



It’s officially flipper chewing time here at Manatee Central.

It’s the final day of my fundraiser benefiting the endangered manatees of Belize. I am so glad to see the total reach $620, but would love to raise that total to the goal of $700 or even more.

You may have recently seen news of the amazing manatee rescue operation in Florida, where 19 manatees were pulled from a drainage pipe in which they had become trapped. A large group of people worked all night to rescue them, involving city workers, manatee specialists and volunteers. It really takes some equipment and human power to deal with all the issues (most of them human caused) which afflict manatees.

In Belize there is a ready group of volunteers, lead by the amazing Jamal Galves.

Click to view Oceana's video about Galves and manatee rescue in Belize


What is missing is the equipment to quickly respond to injured manatees. The group has relied on borrowed equipment and this isn’t acceptable when every second counts. As Jamal explained in a message,
These important tools we need I can assure you are the difference between us rescuing an injured or sick manatee or dragging away a dead carcass. 
$700 is not the total needed to purchase a boat, truck and trailer for manatee rescue. It is just a fraction of the total needed, but each increment brings Protect Our Manatees Belize (under the auspices of Sea to Shore Alliance) closer to their goal.

Please help me help this great cause today! 25% of your purchase price from the denisebrain Etsy shop and the denisebrain web store will be added to the total. If you prefer, you may donate directly on my YouCaring.com page set up for this fundraiser. Even $5 brings us closer!

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Manatee fundraiser Day 21



Here’s where we stand (float?) today on the fundraiser for the protection of manatees in Belize.

Two days ago I took encouragement from the number we had reached and up the goal to $700 for the month. I couldn’t do this without the generosity I have been shown.

Then yesterday, there was this post on the Protect Our Manatees Belize Facebook page:
Our Belize Manatee Project team was just starting to think it possible that they would finish the week without a dead manatee reporting but sadly, a deceased female calf was found late this evening. The team has not been able to get through a full week without the report of a dead manatee since the start of 2015.
Manatee mortality is still very high in Belize and the need for continued conservation efforts is more pressing now than ever.
Manatees are endangered because of human activity, and it is our responsibility to work to protect these gentle creatures. If your pocketbook is empty, would you help me spread the word? And if it’s not empty, even $5 will help. Thank you so much!!

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Upping the goal for manatees in Belize!


OK. It's like this: With 11 days to go in my fundraiser I have upped the goal to $700. Does that sound like a lot? Well, did you know that an orphaned baby manatee must drink a bottle of milk every two hours? And that in Belize the milk they must be fed costs $14-17 US dollars per bottle? You can see how even the wee-est manatee costs quite a bit of money to help, not to mention expertise, equipment, heart and soul. 
Even $3 makes a difference. Let's do this for the manatees! (And many thanks to those who have already chipped in!)


Manatee calf rescued in Belize, photo by Shelley Bowen Stonesifer

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Manatee fundraiser Day 14



Love the cause you are supporting!

And I love hearing that from customers! Because of your purchases, and the support of individual donors, my Protect Our Manatees Belize fundraiser is up to a total of $509 today. If we can top the goal of $600, believe me, it will be well used in protecting, rescuing, rehabilitating and advocating for manatees in Belize. 


By the way, Happy Valentine’s Day! 

xox, denisebrain

Image courtesy of Peppermint Narwhal Creative


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Manatee fundraiser Day 7






One week of February has gone by and I’m pleased to say that we have raised $174 for the rescue of manatees in Belize.

Belize is a stunningly beautiful, ecologically diverse country. Tourism dollars are very important to the economy, but the dredging for marinas, ripping out of mangrove swamps and increased boat traffic have put endangered manatees at more risk than ever before.

With injuries and loss of habitat the very rare manatees of Belize are in need of protection, rescue, rehabilitation and advocacy. Sea to Shore Alliance is one organization working on all those fronts. When I read that there is a project (called Protect Our Manatees Belize) to raise funds for a boat, truck and trailer in order to get help to manatees quickly (they have relied on borrowed equipment) I felt I had to see what I could do to assist.

I have every faith in the good of this group. If you haven’t already heard of Belizean Jamal Galves, please read the article Meet the Man Saving Belize’s Manatees, One Baby At a Time. Mr. Galves’s gofundme page can accept direct donations for the cause. The financial goal is ambitious, but so is the ambition to protect manatees. Ambitious and absolutely necessary.

Another way for you to help the cause is to make any purchase from my denisebrain web store or Etsy shop. 25% of your purchase will go to the cause during the month of February. I would also be glad to direct funding to Protect Our Manatees Belize through Sea to Shore Alliance if you would like to make a contribution through my YouCaring page. I will donate 100% of any donations offered to me on that page.

Manatees Forever!

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Fundraising for manatees in Belize


The manatee hugger is back! ...Actually she never goes away. You knew that, right?


This time I am announcing a month-long campaign to try to help raise money for the rescue and protection of manatees along the coast of Belize. Two years ago, when I raised money for a manatee tracking unit for Belize, I first became aware of a manatee expert who is truly a great force for the endangered species. His name is Jamal Galves. Searching for manatees in Belize, Jamal’s photo comes up often, often with a rescued orphaned baby manatee in his arms.



Recently Jamal won a prestigious award from Oceana Belize, which named him an Ocean Hero. I dare you to watch this video and not feel the power of this one young man’s dedication. 




I found the page Protect Our Manatees Belize on Facebook and asked what kind of support or help I could offer. Jamal himself got back to me with an urgent fundraiser for manatees through the organization Sea to Shore Alliance. Here is part of the text of the gofundme.com page set up for Protect Our Manatees Belize.

The “Protect Our Manatees Belize” project, coordinated by Jamal Galves, is organizing a fundraiser to help save our manatees. Mr. Galves, the Belize Manatee Program Coordinator for Sea to Shore Alliance (S2S) works in collaboration with the Coastal Zone Management Authority and Institute (CZMAI) to protect threatened coastal species and their habitat, in particular the West Indian manatee. Belize has the highest known density of Antillean manatees, a subspecies of the West Indian manatee, in the world. Unfortunately, because of rapidly increasing coastal development, human related manatee deaths are rapidly increasing.  Boat kills and habitat destruction are currently the major threats to the survival of manatees in Belize. Research conducted by S2S have been used by the Belize government to establish sanctuaries, speed zones and other actions that help ensure the survival of manatees in this remarkable country.

With the increase in report of manatee strandings (from 11 in 2009 to 30 in 2013) and the lack of the necessary resources our response to these stranding has been limited.  To try and address these glitches we are organizing a fundraiser with hopes to raise enough funds to purchase a truck and a small boat that will aid us greatly in our response to the growing numbers of reports. Securing these vehicles for the Protect Our Manatees Belize program will alleviate the dependency on others to transport a manatee to the rehabilitation center, or having to wait for someone to offer their boat to respond to a sick or injured manatee in the event of an emergency rescue.  All these instances require rapid and timely response, which can determine the difference in rescuing a sick/injured animal or towing away a dead carcass.

You can play a huge role in helping us to make a difference for these gentle giants.

The equipment to quickly rescue a manatee—Is that so much to ask? I urge you to donate directly to this cause on the gofundme page or through my youcaring page set up for the purpose, or to find vintage clothing from the denisebrain.com web store or Etsy shop. 25% of your purchase will go to this fundraiser during the month of February.

Jamal Galves and his friends are counting on us!


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We did it!

I am OVERJOYED to say that the manatee fundraiser put on by Rosie and me reached our goal, on the button.

Of course there is no way we could have reached this goal without very generous support from many people: Customers who purchased from my denisebrain vintage shops, those who contributed directly on my YouCaring page, and all those who spread the word and offered encouragement.

My greatest thanks goes to the Save the Manatee Club for being the manatee’s constant advocate. I have just sent them the proceeds of our fundraiser, $1000.

Yes Rosie, we did it!! (photo of Rosie the manatee by William Garvin)

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Go Rosie! Another manatee fundraiser update


Rosie and I are truly astonished to say that the goal we set three days ago ($700) was met, the goal we set two days ago ($800) was met, the goal we set yesterday ($900) was met...and now we are trying for $1000 by July 17!

Photo of Rosie by William Garvin

For Rosie and all the manatees, this is so great!

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Rosie and I are back with another Save the Manatee update



Rosie, denisebrain official manatee adoptee, is feeling pretty hopeful about our fundraiser! I have heard from people all over the world who appreciate the cause (who doesn’t love Rosie?) and are glad to give back with their purchase.

In case you haven’t heard, Rosie and I are hoping to raise at least $600 by July 17 for a donation to Save the Manatee Club. We have a YouCaring.com page where I am recording 25% of my sales at denisebrain, and I can also accept direct donations on this page.

A lot needs to be done to save the manatee, so Rosie and I would really appreciate if my donation could be even greater than $600. Are you in?

The denisebrain Etsy shop
The denisebrain web store 

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Another manatee fundraiser update


When I speak of the beleaguered manatee, please know that partisan political forces are representing the species as not so endangered. Right now, steps are being taken to delist the endangered manatee for the benefit of few. Notice (from this Tampa Bay Times article) that manatees have never been more endangered in recorded history. A gentle, intelligent herbivore that has been on our planet practically infinitely longer than we humans (30-60 million years vs. our 170,000 years) deserves a chance to survive. 

I am glad to say that our manatee fundraiser is on the right track to help out. I would so much love to increase the donation to beyond $600. 

Right now, and through July 17, 25% of your purchase price from my vintage fashion venues online will go to Save the Manatee Club. You may also donate directly (as a number of caring individuals have done) on my YouCaring.com page. 


Please:

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Update on manatee fundraiser



Rosie and I are back to let you know that our fundraiser has gotten off to a grand start from a couple of very generous donors and purchasers (25% of denisebrain purchases are going to the cause). See the total over on my YouCaring.com page.


Thank you!

We can do it...but not without you!

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What is it about me and manatees?

This is a variation on a theme I’ve written about before, and with my current manatee fundraiser, it seemed time for a reprise.

Every now and then the odd collection of my interests and pastimes seems to baffle people. Take manatees: Why am I, a woman living in Washington State, passionate about the plight of the manatee, which lives nowhere near me?

I have always had a great concern and fondness for endangered creatures of all kinds. I vividly recall first becoming aware of manatees as a little girl, before much publicity was being brought to their plight. I couldn’t believe I’d never heard of them before, and was fascinated by such awesomely large, perfectly gentle creatures, the corners of their mouths always turned up like little smiles. How could anything so wonderful be at risk of extinction?


Then in 2000 I had the opportunity to visit my relatives in Florida, and they took my husband and I for a short boat tour at Blue Spring State Park. We saw amazing plant life and any number of alligators, but what we really yearned to see was a manatee. There were hints that they were near—

—but it wasn’t until we got off the boat and were just standing watching the river that we saw some clamor, as a group of volunteers met a van. Out of the van the group of people hoisted a manatee which had been rescued and rehabilitated. 



When this manatee was released into the water, another manatee immediately came up from the bottom of the river and nudged the newcomer, unmistakably like a greeting.


I had tears streaming down my face...I was IN LOVE with manatees!

Since then I’ve tried to find out all I can about this creature, and have been amazed. For instance, manatees are intelligent (“capable of understanding discrimination tasks, and show signs of complex associated learning and advanced long term memory.” [Gerstein, E. R. (1994). The manatee mind: Discrimination training for sensory perception testing of West Indian manatees (Trichechus manatus). Marine Mammals 1: 10–21.] They demonstrate complex discrimination and task-learning similar to dolphins and pinnipeds in acoustic and visual studies. [Marine Mammal Medicine, 2001, Leslie Dierauf & Frances Gulland, CRC Press]. The manatee’s closest land relation is the elephant, not the cow, despite their being called sea cows in many parts of the world. They are thought to have evolved from four-legged land animals some 60 million years ago.

Think about it: Manatees have made it 60 million years on the Earth and now their survival is threatened.

Katie Tripp, Director of Science and Conservation of Save the Manatee Club, wrote a succinct essay about the threats to manatees and what the future might hold (After Devastating Losses, What’s in Store for Manatees in 2014?). As she concludes, manatees “need our voices and our support now more than ever.”

Please help me support Save the Manatee Club and all they do to protect manatees. I am hoping to raise $500 by the end of the day on July 17. 25% of sales through my business will go to the cause, or you may donate directly at my YouCaring page


If you can’t contribute but would like to do something, please help by spreading the word. 

Rosie the manatee and I are counting on you!


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For Rosie and all the manatees

If you read my blog, my Facebook page posts, my tweets on Twitter, or know me personally, you are certain to be aware that I have a thing about manatees. I love the gentle giants, and am deeply concerned for them as an endangered species that is terribly vulnerable.

Photo © David Schrichte

Last year was the worst on record for Florida manatees, with an estimated 829 perishing. With no natural predators, their adversaries are humans. Every year many manatees are killed or injured by boat strikes. In addition, we encroach upon and pollute the manatees’ vital habitat.

With humans so responsible for the grave endangerment of the manatee, we must also be responsible for their survival. 

Save the Manatee Club is devoted entirely to the survival of the manatee and its habitat. Manatees have no greater friend than SMC, and I support them whole-heartedly.

That’s why today I am announcing that 25% of my sales for the next month (June 17-July 17) will go to Save the Manatee Club, with a goal of raising $500. I have also set up a  YouCaring.com

 page for those who don’t find any vintage to suit themselves but who would like to help.

$500 is a lot of money, and a sum I could never offer up on my own, but my customers have always come through, and I know will want to do their part for the manatees again.

In fact, I’m confident enough to pose as Rosie!

Appropriately, I have just symbolically adopted a manatee named Rosie as the honorary manatee of denisebrain.com and this campaign.

Rosie is a beloved manatee, known to all who visit Homosassa Springs Wildlife State Park. She is decidedly vintage, having first been brought into captivity in 1968. Rosie is not a suitable candidate for being released into the wild because she has an equilibrium problem that causes her to swim in right-hand circles. Instead, she is the babysitter to the orphaned and injured young manatees brought to Homosassa for rehabilitation, nursing the calves and shepherding them around the spring waters.

Rosie, photo © William Gavin

Rosie epitomizes all manatees, who are known for their great intelligence and gentle good nature. While Rosie may have a home safe from boats and other perils living at Homosassa Springs, most of the few thousand Florida manatees left do not.

For Rosie and all endangered manatees, please help me reach this goal. I know

We Can Do It!

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Last day for the manatees


Did that title worry you?

I am always worried about manatees—I wouldn’t want to live on a planet without them. 

My goal is to complete raising the funds for a manatee tracking monitor by the end of tomorrow. If you haven’t already contributed at my YouCaring.com page, or purchased from my shops (1/3 of your purchase going to this cause) this is the time. We are 90% of the way there with 24 hours to go.

Man versus Manatee (http://mvsm.omnomzom.com), used by permission

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Today is Earth Day

It’s Earth Day and a very good day to remind you that vintage clothing is a chic way to go green.

I also want to remind you that 25% of every purchase from any of my shops through the end of April will help endangered manatees through the Save the Manatee Club. Please read about how far they've come, and how much is left to do, by reading that organization’s Earth Day message.

This is also the anniversary of denisebrain, which I started in 1999 on Earth Day. 1999...can you believe it? I scarcely can!



An early effort






...and more recently.

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