LIONS & TIGERS BEARS ... oh my! ROWAN COUNTY-BASED TIGER WORLD IS A WILDLIFE SANCTUARY FOR MORE THAN 110 ANIMALS, INCLUDING OTTERS, BEARS, WALLABIES, PARROTS AND, OF COURSE, BIG CATS.

AuthorWanbauch, Taylor
PositionPICTURE THIS

The town of Rockwell in Rowan County is a scene straight out of a Norman Rockwell painting, with one-lane roads winding through an idyllic rural landscape, complete with farms and a sprinkling of old houses and rustic churches. The only sound on a weekday morning is birds chirping, with an occasional hum of a lawn mower or tractor.

That is, until you pull up to the gravel parking lot of Tiger World.

A loud roar pierces the air. Guinea fowl screech while scampering around the grounds. A variety of unidentifiable animal calls ring out periodically. Tiger World is a misnomer, as the facility houses at least 54 different species, with more than 110 animals including lions, bears, jaguars, kangaroos, monkeys, wolves and more. The nonprofit public charity that serves as an endangered wildlife preserve was founded in 2007 by President Lea Jaunakais and officially opened to the public a year later.

"[Jaunakais] really had a dream when she was a kiddo to help tigers," says Erin Carey, Tiger World's director of wildlife. "When she was 3, she was watching National Geographic, and that's when she told her mom, 'I'm going to save the tigers.'"

Jaunakais didn't start off in the monkey business, so to speak. After high school, she left her Rock Hill, S.C., hometown for Arizona State University, where she studied animal behavior and biology. Jaunakais spent her free time volunteering at Phoenix-area zoos before moving back to Rock Hill to join her family's business, water-quality testing company Industrial Test Systems Inc.

Jaunakais, now president of ITS, found the perfect opportunity to keep her promise to "save the tigers" when the U.S. Department of Agriculture closed Rockwell-based Metrolina Wildlife Park, formerly known as Charlotte Metro Zoo, for failing to provide adequate animal care. She bought the 30-acre property, which has since been expanded to 54 acres, and gave the animals living there a new lease on life.

"When a zoo shuts down, those animals are either up for euthanasia or they have to find a new home," Carey says. "Lea was able to get Tiger World started as a public charity. She was able to move forward with helping tigers in her own way."

Tiger World, now in its 10th year of operation, has about 15 employees and relies heavily on the community, volunteers and donations. Its annual revenue has more than doubled in the last five years to $812,000. The budget is about $720,000, aided by partnerships with corporations including Walmart Inc...

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