When wildlife rehabilitator Mats Janzon found a starving, motherless otter pup curled in the grass near his Swedish home, he faced an uncertain journey of raising a wild animal he’d never cared for before. He named her Leya, taught her to swim in a kiddie pool, and watched her gradually reclaim her wildness. Over time, Leya wandered farther and stayed out longer until she was living in the wild. Yet even now, when Janzon paddles his kayak across the lake at dawn, Leya sometimes swims up and climbs aboard for a ride and a cuddle, choosing connection over solitude. “When an animal trusts you, it creates a bond deeper than words can explain,” Janzon says, though he’s quick to remind others that Leya isn’t a pet — she’s a living soul who deserves to be loved and respected for exactly who she is. Their story reveals something tender about love itself: that sometimes the deepest bonds are the ones we hold lightly, honoring both closeness and freedom.
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How One Man Raised and Released an Orphaned Otter | DailyGood
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