This winter certainly has taken its toll on all of us. The cold, snow and ice have seemed to come in relentless waves. Knowing how each trip outside makes us feel, one can only imagine what it’s been like for area wildlife. Their normal food, water and shelter have been minimized or eliminated and the shortages are taking their toll. At AEP’s Cook Nuclear Plant, an increasing number of water fowl and animals have been found around the 650-acre site showing signs of severe distress.
But help is available. Cook Environmental Supervisor Kyra Richter and others in her group are coming to the rescue.
“We’re getting a steady stream of calls about distressed animals,” said Richter. “You can tell they are really hurting because in many cases, the ducks are allowing us to walk right up to them and pick them up.”
Richter worked with Kip Wells, a biologist at the Love Creek Nature Center, and two bird rehabilitators who agreed that she was qualified to try and help. So she established what she calls, “The Richter Home for Tired and Confused Ducks” in her house.
With her bathtub serving as a warm and sheltered pond, some cedar chips for a nest and cracked corn to eat, the sickly ducks are quickly recovering, usually in a night or two. Once revived, she brings them back to the plant and releases them among friends in the plant absorption pond.
It has to get warmer and quit snowing sometime … doesn’t it? In the meantime, the Cook Environmental group is helping to bridge the gap to spring for a few neighbors in need.

Cook Plant Environmental Supervisor Kyra Richter assists a struggling duck at the plant site. Photo by Scott Rose.

Once revived, the distressed ducks are brought back to Cook Plant and released among friends in the plant absorption pond. Photo by Kyra Richter.
