Found orphaned, ill, or injured wildlife?

Call 250-337-2021

1331 Williams Beach Road Merville, BC

About Us Icon

About Us

Our Mission

Our mission is to conserve and protect native wildlife and its natural habitat through education and rehabilitation.

We are a charitable organization whose purpose is to:

  • rescue, recovery, rehabilitate, and release ill, injured, orphaned or oiled wildlife
  • educate the general public about wildlife issues through lectures, displays, workshops, reports and publications
  • contribute to the knowledge and understanding of wildlife by participating in research and sharing that information with wildlife organizations and the general public through meetings, seminars, conferences, reports, and publications
  • conserve and protect wildlife and promote the conservation of wildlife habitat

Mars is not a zoo

The current medical facility is very much a hospital and the mammals and birds are very much patients. As far as possible, they are extended the same courtesies a human patient would receive because privacy, peace, and quiet are essential to wildlife recovery. For this reason, we don't allow the general public access to our patients in the hospital.

MARS wildlife caregivers also follow strict protocols to ensure the lowest level of human-wildlife interaction possible in order to prevent imprinting or habituation. We want wild nature to stay wild. Our waterfowl, deer, and racoon enclosures are not accessible to the public.

The enclosures in the Mews (outdoor viewing area) are designed for the safety, security, and privacy of our resident Ambassador Birds. We encourage quiet observation of these birds. We ask visitors to understand that our raptors are not always easy to see as they will perch in the most secluded corner of their homes.

We encourage the public to help with the rescue of injured wildlife by bringing small species to us, or to a veterinarian. With large or dangerous wildlife such as Bald Eagles or Great Blue Heron, our trained staff and volunteers will respond.

Our History

The Founders of MARS Wildlife Rescue

The Founders

MARS Wildlife Rescue founder, Mary Jane Birch, known to

The Founders

MARS Wildlife Rescue founder, Mary Jane Birch, known to many as "Maj", and her husband Keith were both keenly engaged in the protection and preservation of wildlife and habitat in the Comox Valley.

Maj worked tirelessly to rescue, rehabilitate, and release injured wildlife, while Keith built cages to house them all. Maj drew people with the same concern for wildlife rehabilitation to work beside her as volunteers in the early days. It was a shared passion for both Maj and Keith for many years.

The MARS Wildlife Rescue Society

The Society

Mountainaire Avian Rescue Society —still our legal name

The Society

Mountainaire Avian Rescue Society —still our legal name— began on their pretty, forested three-acre property in rural Merville, British Columbia. Maj applied for and received federal and provincial permits to rehabilitate wildlife in 1993; two years later the society was registered as a provincial and federal non-profit charity. Keith died in 2008 after a lengthy illness. His efforts left a legacy that helped MARS grow from treating 100 to 200 patients annually to over 600 at the original location, before the planned move in 2017 to our new home at 1331 Williams Beach Road.

MARS Wildlife Hospital and Visitor Centre

The Hospital and Visitor Centre

Maj dreamed of building a

The Hospital and Visitor Centre

Maj dreamed of building a better facility on a larger property that could treat more birds and mammals, while also acting as an education centre. She wanted to teach the public—particularly young people and children—the importance of preserving and protecting the wildlife and habitat of the Comox Valley and northern Vancouver Island. Our present 11-acre property was purchased in early 2015, with the assistance of a substantial bequest from the Woodrow family. After much planning and installation of services, the new MARS Wildlife Hospital began receiving patients in May 2017 and our Visitor Centre opened in June 2019. Our volunteers and donors—individuals, community groups, and corporate sponsors—have helped us add treatment areas to our hospital, build enclosures for resident and recovering animals, and construct a substantial, multi-area flight pen for recovering eagles and smaller birds. In her will, Maj left a substantial bequest to MARS Wildlife Rescue to help her dreams along. With the continued support of the local community, our generous donors, and dedicated volunteers, we are working to fulfill her dreams and create a legacy for our communities that will ensure wildlife is protected and wild habitats are preserved through public education at the Visitor Centre.

Future vision of MARS Wildlife Rescue

The Future

As the property improvements proceed, we are making things.

The Future

As the property improvements proceed, we are making habitat preservation and recovery a priority. We are providing wildlife corridors through the property by not adding fences which would prevent transit to grazing areas. From a seasonally dry pond, we have created wet habitat for the wild things. Our wetland area is visited by ducks and heron, and deer come to drink. Even our local bear wanders by in the evening. This area has also seen a species of concern, the Red-legged Frog. We had tadpoles in the pools in the spring of 2019 and are hopeful for their continued return. In short, we are trying to provide habitat to our wild neighbours. Over the years, MARS has witnessed an exponential increase in the number of animals and birds that come through our doors. In 2021, volunteers and staff tended to over 1400 patients and are expecting to surpass that total this year. By far the main reason for our growing caseload is human expansion into traditional wildlife habitats. Simply put, all of us are interacting with wild nature far more often than we used to, and MARS is seeing more patients as a result.

Support Us

All of the developments at MARS have been accomplished with donations, large and small, individual and corporate, one-time and monthly. Please consider donating to our ongoing efforts to rehabilitate and release local wildlife through Canada Helps. Our patients increase in number every year.

Material donations are welcomed, too. MARS volunteers bring their talents and energy to this organization in a myriad of ways. Please join us!

Help build our future