Michigan woman's backyard becomes haven for animals in need

Keirstie Carducci, 65, of Ottawa Lake, feeds fawns in the fawn pen at her home in Ottawa Lake on Thursday, June 29, 2023. Fawns are Carducci’s favorite animal to take care of, and she said one day she hopes to cut back on rescuing animals and only take in fawns.
Keirstie Carducci, 65, of Ottawa Lake, feeds fawns in the fawn pen at her home in Ottawa Lake on Thursday, June 29, 2023. Fawns are Carducci’s favorite animal to take care of, and she said one day she hopes to cut back on rescuing animals and only take in fawns.

“I’m heading out back,” Keirstie Carducci said to her husband, Lee Carducci.

That was the phrase that expanded into a full-time job of taking care of wildlife from her backyard. Out-Back Wildlife Rehab Center was officially founded in 2003, but Keirstie has taken on the role of wildlife rehabilitator for over 40 years.

Keirstie Carducci, 61, of Ottawa Lake, always had an affinity for animals.

“I was the neighborhood kid that everyone brought them to,” she said. She still is.

Bagel, the muskrat, eats a banana that Keirstie Carducci, 65, of Ottawa Lake fed him in Ottawa Lake on Thursday, June 29, 2023. Bagel was released over a year ago, but he keeps wandering back to the Carducci home because he knows Keirstie can't resist feeding him.
Bagel, the muskrat, eats a banana that Keirstie Carducci, 65, of Ottawa Lake fed him in Ottawa Lake on Thursday, June 29, 2023. Bagel was released over a year ago, but he keeps wandering back to the Carducci home because he knows Keirstie can't resist feeding him.
Keirstie Carducci, 65, of Ottawa Lake, opens the muskrat cage to feed them in Ottawa Lake on Thursday, June 29, 2023.
Keirstie Carducci, 65, of Ottawa Lake, opens the muskrat cage to feed them in Ottawa Lake on Thursday, June 29, 2023.

Carducci officially started in the field by fostering a couple animals per year for Michigan’s Humane Society. Last year, her organization, Out-Back Wildlife Rehab Center, took in 719 animals. Online, the operating hours are 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., but most days Carducci receives calls as early as 5:30 a.m. and doesn't expect to eat dinner before 11 p.m.

Out-Back takes in fawns, woodchucks, squirrels, chipmunks, mice, rats, moles, voles, shrews and bunnies. Her collection of animals is not limited to her rescues, but her 10-acre property in Ottawa Lake in Monroe County is also home to more than 150 domesticated animals. To name a few, two geese (Remmi and Gimpy), who are the “babysitters” of Carducci’s animal kingdom, 45 cats and a 40-year-old donkey named Simon, whom she refers to as her “little old man.”

A fawn follows Keirstie Carducci, 65, of Ottawa Lake, as she makes her way to release a bunny that she brought back to health in Ottawa Lake on Thursday, June 29, 2023.
A fawn follows Keirstie Carducci, 65, of Ottawa Lake, as she makes her way to release a bunny that she brought back to health in Ottawa Lake on Thursday, June 29, 2023.
Keirstie Carducci, 65, of Ottawa Lake, releases a bunny from her backyard in Ottawa Lake on Thursday, June 29, 2023. This bunny came to Carducci's home with head trauma, and wouldn't stop going in circles. After treatment and care for five days, Carducci was able to release the bunny and it ran straight into the wild. "I just love this so stinkin' much," Carducci said when returning to the barn after releasing it.

Carducci speaks of the animals on her land like they are part of her family.

“This is Delilah, Earnie’s girlfriend,” Carducci says, while introducing one of her chickens. “All chickens fight over her.”

She treasures her Flemish Giant bunny, Clover, who was found in the dumpster at a dollar store.

“He’s one of the best pets I’ve ever had,” she said. “Lenny too, of course,” referring to her turkey standing nearby. Lenny wandered into the Carduccis’ home a week after Thanksgiving last year and hasn’t left.

“You really never get lonely,” Carducci said.

Keirstie Carducci, 65, of Ottawa Lake, carries Clover, her favorite Flemish giant bunny, back to his side of the yard after he escaped in her backyard in Ottawa Lake on Thursday, June 29, 2023. Carducci refers to Clover, who was found in the dumpster of a dollar store, as "one of the best pets she's ever had."
Keirstie Carducci, 65, of Ottawa Lake, carries Clover, her favorite Flemish giant bunny, back to his side of the yard after he escaped in her backyard in Ottawa Lake on Thursday, June 29, 2023. Carducci refers to Clover, who was found in the dumpster of a dollar store, as "one of the best pets she's ever had."
Keirstie Carducci, 65, of Ottawa Lake, picks up weeds that can be fed to bunnies for days to come in Ottawa Lake on Thursday, June 29, 2023. Carducci said this is her least favorite job, but the bunny greens are very expensive and Carducci doesn't have the time to run to her local grocery store, Ciolino's daily.
Keirstie Carducci, 65, of Ottawa Lake, picks up weeds that can be fed to bunnies for days to come in Ottawa Lake on Thursday, June 29, 2023. Carducci said this is her least favorite job, but the bunny greens are very expensive and Carducci doesn't have the time to run to her local grocery store, Ciolino's daily.
Keirstie Carducci, 65, of Ottawa Lake, directs Karen Malone, a Grosse Ile Animal Control animal transporter, back to her car after she dropped off an injured squirrel in Ottawa Lake on Wednesday, July 26, 2023. People roll up to Carducci's driveway all day, from Michigan residents to conservation officers. Carducci greets everyone with the same high energy and willingness to help each animal she receives.

Summertime brings an extra level of chaos in the Carducci home because it is squirrel and fawn birthing season.

“It’s 18 hours a day, seven days a week,” Carducci said. Along with “200 phone calls every day.”

Carducci works closely with the animal control officers and conservation officers that regulate her work, some of which attend her infamous Nacho Night at her home each year.

"It makes it more worth it because we have their respect," Carducci said. "We're all working together to try to save these animals."

Keirstie Carducci, 65, prepares bottles of goat milk for morning fawn feeding in Ottawa Lake on Thursday, June 29, 2023. Carducci feeds the 15 rescue fawns that are being taken care of in her home twice a day.
Keirstie Carducci, 65, prepares bottles of goat milk for morning fawn feeding in Ottawa Lake on Thursday, June 29, 2023. Carducci feeds the 15 rescue fawns that are being taken care of in her home twice a day.

The same can't be said with the state's involvement. Instead, it enforces regulations that are difficult to meet.

"The state should train rehabilitators, but they dump it on us," Carducci said. "If we got to have a say in some of the decisions from the state level it would make things run a lot better."

Carducci has had helpers in the past, but this year the state denied her helpers licensing, due to their distance from Ottawa Lake.

"Shouldn't it be their decision if they want to drive here to help," Carducci said.

Additionally, Carducci was told that if she wants helpers, she needs to train them herself, but she simply doesn’t have the time.

“The state is so far removed from what we do with these animals,” Carducci said.

Keirstie Carducci, 65, of Ottawa Lake, feeds two rescue fawns in the morning in Ottawa Lake on Wednesday, July 26, 2023. These fawns aren't ready for Carducci's fawn pen, due to injuries, and require extra attention and care. Carducci keeps them close to the barn where she works most of the day and allows them to roam free in the front part of her yard.
LEFT: Keirstie Carducci, 65, of Ottawa Lake, feeds an injured squirrel an avocado in Ottawa Lake on Thursday, June 29, 2023. RIGHT: Carducci cuts up apples and sweet potato to feed the squirrel rescues dinner in the evening in Ottawa Lake on Friday, July 28, 2023. Carducci prides herself on only feeding the animals high quality food and jokes that the rescue animals "eat a lot better than me."
Keirstie Carducci, 65, of Ottawa Lake, feeds an injured squirrel, who is in the intensive care unit in her barn in Ottawa Lake on Thursday, June 29, 2023. Carducci has an intensive care unit section of her barn for animals that need extra monitoring before they can be moved to larger cages.
Keirstie Carducci, 65, of Ottawa Lake, feeds an injured squirrel, who is in the intensive care unit in her barn in Ottawa Lake on Thursday, June 29, 2023. Carducci has an intensive care unit section of her barn for animals that need extra monitoring before they can be moved to larger cages.

Rehabilitators do not receive money from the state either, so the businesses are funded straight from owners’ pockets and donations.

Perhaps Carducci's biggest help comes from her husband, Lee. He supports Out-Back by funding the animals' care as well as helping with stall and horse duties.

“He never complains, no matter what I get in here or how much it costs,” Keirstie Carducci said. “He’s even taken up cooking.”

Lee first heard about Keirstie when she was still working as an economic analyst at Chrysler.

“She was the crazy lady on the 12th floor that had kittens under her desk,” Lee said.

Keirstie Carducci, 65, of Ottawa Lake, takes a moment to respond to messages by her pond after finishing most of her rehab duties in the evening in Ottawa Lake on Friday, July 28, 2023.
Keirstie Carducci, 65, of Ottawa Lake, takes a moment to respond to messages by her pond after finishing most of her rehab duties in the evening in Ottawa Lake on Friday, July 28, 2023.
Lee Carducci laughs with his wife, Keirstie Carducci, as she replies to a text about a rescue animal past 10 p.m. while eating dinner in Ottawa Lake on Friday, July 28, 2023. The couple joked about putting the phone on silent for once, to which Lee playfully replied, "I wish I could put you on silent," causing them both to laugh. Jokes aside, Lee is a major support system for Keirstie, not only funding her animal care organization, but by helping in any way he can when he's not working himself. "He never complains no matter what I get in here or how much it costs," Keirstie said. Lee helps finish Keirstie's stall duties at the end of the day and waits for her to finish feeding before having dinner, which is past 11 p.m. on some nights.

Keirstie said she “would like a little more freedom” to visit her daughter in Florida or go on a date with her husband, but the constant influx of animals prevents any sense of normalcy in her personal life.

“It’s exhaustive, expensive and time-consuming, but nobody forced me to do this,” Keirstie Carducci said. “I do this ‘cause I love it.”

Carducci’s love shines through as soon as she steps outside to see the animals. Her voice rings like a bell to the wildlife.

“Hi, guys!” she repeats while making her way through her vast backyard.

“This is the best job in the world,” she said.

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Keirstie Carducci, 65, of Ottawa Lake, leads Malibu, 24, into the barn for the night at 9:30 p.m. in Ottawa Lake on Friday, July 28, 2023. Taking the horses and donkey into the barn for the night is one of the last activities before Carducci ends her rehab duties.
Keirstie Carducci, 65, of Ottawa Lake, leads Malibu, 24, into the barn for the night at 9:30 p.m. in Ottawa Lake on Friday, July 28, 2023. Taking the horses and donkey into the barn for the night is one of the last activities before Carducci ends her rehab duties.

This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Out-Back Rehab Center in Michigan's Ottawa Lake rescues animals