Location
  • Australia
Length
1 to 12 weeks

Program Details

Language
English
Age Min.
17
Timeframe
Short Term Spring Break Year Round
Housing
Host Family Hostel Tent
Groups
Small Group (1-15) Medium Group (16-30)

Pricing

Starting Price
530
Price Details
Project fees vary by location and project duration and start from $800 AUD for one week. Accommodation and meal options vary for each project.

Project fees include:
Pre-departure support
24 hour In-Country support
Project Information Book
Project orientation
Training
Field equipment and materials
24-hour O2E emergency phone
Certificate of Participation, if requested
What's Included
Accommodation Activities Meals
What's Not Included
Airfare Domestic Airfare SIM cards Travel Insurance Visa
May 30, 2024
Mar 27, 2018
113 travelers are looking at this program

About Program

Oceans 2 Earth Volunteers is an Australian charity organisation specialising in volunteering projects for animal lovers and marine conservation offers a wide range of exclusive Australian animal welfare projects committed to the rescue, care, rehabilitation and release of Australian wildlife. Volunteer activities include bottle feeding animals, exercising wombats, collecting gum leaves for koalas and preparing the animals’ food, scrubbing sea turtles’ shells, cleaning enclosures, hand-rearing baby bats, assisting in animal rescues and emergency treatment, providing animal enrichments, building nesting boxes, undertaking environmental education activities, beach cleanups, marine surveys, reef monitoring and research assistance such as the GPS tracking of marine wildlife.

Animals requiring care include koalas, kangaroos, wallabies, wombats, possums, turtles, flying foxes, bandicoots, wallaroos, lizards, snakes, echidnas and birds of prey plus many more!

Program Reviews

4.75 Rating
based on 28 reviews
  • 5 rating 92.86%
  • 4 rating 0%
  • 3 rating 0%
  • 2 rating 3.57%
  • 1 rating 3.57%
  • Impact 4.75
  • Support 4.7
  • Fun 4.45
  • Value 4.4
  • Safety 4.75
Showing 25 - 28 of 28 reviews
Default avatar
Gara
5/5
Yes, I recommend this program

It's the best rescue center I ever been, I recommend it 100%

It's one of my best life experiences.
It changed my way of thinking, my working ideas, everything. I learned how we should take care of the animals and the people, what are the important things in my life and how important is to help the wildlife globally. I went back to Spain being a different person with clear ideas about my future.

It's run by Glenda and Ron and local volunteers, everybody is very helpful and gentle, they will help you with any thing that you need.
You will get so close to kangaroos, wombats, possums, koalas, psitacids, reptiles, wallabies... when you rescue them you help Glenda to go to the Vet or to help them at home, you will feed them with bottles, teach them how to recognize the bush area... you will be their new family, you will get very attach to them and it's wonderful to see them growing and getting ready to be released.

You have also the possibility to met other volunteers and learn about different countries, ideas, way of working.. is a very enriching experience.

If you have the opportunity, you have to go! Go go go go!!

Gara

66 people found this review helpful.
Default avatar
Cecilia
5/5
Yes, I recommend this program

Cecilia Santos Peinadi

For me as a vet overseas this experience was totally amazing. The staff involve you from the first day on all the procedures with the animals ad give you support and a lot of love. They were amazing with me and I felt as a member of the big family of the local host organization from the first moment. You will learn how to grow marsupials and birds, you will improve your medical skills and also, your interpersonal skills. The staff is always worried about how do you feel in the centre and they do everything they can to make you feel like at home. No bad words for anyone o any situation. You are going to work with wildlife in they environment and that is just AMAZING.

68 people found this review helpful.
Default avatar
Alice
5/5
Yes, I recommend this program

Forget about the real world. This is a different planet.

There is a very detailed review above of what happens during a typical day, so I won't repeat that.

I will say that you need to be prepared for some hard work and very basic living conditions. I loved it and didn't even notice the lack of electricity, running water or mobile coverage. It's also deep in the forest 15 min drive on a dirt road from the nearest shop. It definitely helps if you can drive (even better if you can drive a manual) so you can go on rescues.

Another very important part of this program is Glenda. She is the most amazing, strong woman I have ever met. She basically runs this massive wildlife shelter on her own, with no financial help from the government, and is often physically alone with several orphans to take care of. She will do everything for those animals, to the point of neglecting herself. If you are hard working, willing to learn and can work independently, she will love you. I love her to bits and wish I could do more to help.

Definitely a worthwhile program to spent you time and effort in!

What would you improve about this program?
Kitchen & shower conditions could be improved and are currently being worked on. We need 2 Glendas!
61 people found this review helpful.
Default avatar
Nathalie
5/5
Yes, I recommend this program

Prepare yourself, jump and enjoy!

In this project you "work" from morning to night but you don't feel like working. Conditions are not like a 5 stars hotel, that's for sure, but you certainly get out of it richer then you got in!

We use to wake up at around 7h30 am to prepare the bottles of milk (powder with hot water. Each baby has it's own quantity and medication if to add in it, if needed. You start feeding the babies around 8 (inside). After that you have breakfast yourself (usually cereals withy milk or toasts).

Then you take the older kangaroos (teenagers!) in the bush for a walk and exercice. Then the wombats needed exercice too so we were back in the bush with them too.

After that you have to hang some clean "nappies" (that you use to clean the babies while feeding them) on the ropes outside.

Lunch time! Almost always pic-nic like (sandwichs, etc.). It had to be done fast (we are not there to lose time are we?). Then eating lunch all together outside looking at the australian bush, taking our time was really nice.

After that, 4 hours after the first bottle we gave at 8 a.m. it was time to feed the babies again (at noon).

Then comes the "give grass" and fresh water to the older roos, sweet potatoes to the older wombat, feed the birds and parrots and sometimes go in the bush to feed some other birds that lives there.

Some of the "almost ready to be released kangaroos", those who lives outside, have to drink their milk too so you go outside and give them then you put them to bed. Sometimes with their bottles in the bed, you wrap them in their "pouches" which are covers!

2-3 times a week you have to change the eucalyptus branches that the koalas are eating (taking out the old ones and giving them new leaves to eat). Also do the same for the parrots.

Somebody has to pass the broom too once in a while (outside).
Sometimes wood needs to be cut to feed the fire so you cut wood!
Sometimes you have to fix a shelter for possums or some other things that needs to be done on the site. Fixing a fence or whatever needs to be done.

At 4 p.m. (4 hours later) it's, again, time to give the Joeys (babies kangaroos) their bottles of milk.

Some of the wild kangaroos needs to be fed too (those who have been released and also some others that know there is a "free food all you can eat" at the volunteer project site!!). That means that there are about 50 kangaroos looking at you in the bush or around the house! (you can see their eyes shining in the bush!) You have to open some barrels full of cereals and a type of "cookie" and throw it on the ground so they can eat it. Usually at this time you see the sun going down on the bush (and it's amazing!). It's the most magical hour of the day with the bush walk in the morning.

Now it's your tune to have diner! Inside, all together we cook and eat watching t.v., talking, etc.

As you gave the bottle at 4 p.m. and it's now 8 p.m., you have to do it again! (it can take up to 2 hours, depends on how many babies there are). You give the babies wombat their bottles of milk too!

Then you watch a little t.v., take a shower or read, whatever... until it's midnight (4 hours later = feeding time!). This time you are preparing the bottles for the present feeding, the next one at 4 in the morning (don't worry, Glenda insist to do it herself so you don't have to cut your night of sleep in 2 parts!).

When this last feeding is done, you go to bed happy, dreaming of that kiss you had just before going to bed (a baby kangaroo liked your ears)!

What would you improve about this program?
I would give volunteer a video of a "everyday life in this program" showing every task they will have to do once there BEFORE they arrive. Also pictures of the installations in terms of beds, shower, etc. People tend to expect being in a hotel and it's not the case. If they need volunteers it's because they don't have the money they need to do everything that needs to be done so just so the volunteers would be prepared to what they will meet I think they need more "previous preparation". That said, I think whatever you do BEFORE, you will never be prepared for all that affection and love you will receive from the animals you will take care of. This is truly an experience you will never forget and be prepared to dream about going back after!
68 people found this review helpful.

Questions & Answers

Hi Thank you for enquiring about volunteering with O2E (Oceans 2 Earth Volunteers). We would be delighted to have you contribute to one of our projects, however there are some limitations when you are under 18. These are the projects we offer in Australia if you are under 18: Great Barrier Reef Turtle Rehabilitation https://www.oceans2earth.org/animal-care-rehabilitation-pro…...

Hi Suzanne, Most of our projects require volunteers to be 18 or over, with a couple having an age requirement of 20 or 21. Our Great Barrier Reef Marine Conservation project can be completed by under 18s if they have a legal guardian present who is over 18 as their responsible person. We can also take 17 year as independent travellers at our Great Barrier Reef Turtle Rehabilitation project. They...