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His Wild Kingdom
Joe Taft's 200 big cats get to live out their lives in peace. He gets to live a lifelong dream.

Photos by Paul L. Meredith
By Gretchen Kalwinski
JOE TAFT WANTS his bedroom back. For four
months it’s been inhabited by a baby tiger
named Max, while Taft, who’s 60, crashes on
the couch. “I can’t get him out of my house until I
move these other cats into the new pens being
built,” he says. “Then I
can finally have a bedroom.
The walls are
pretty raggedy in there.” He means claw marks,
like the ones in his kitchen and living room.
Taft walks into the bedroom and pushes open
the sliding door to the pen where Max is. The
tiger immediately dives for his ankle. “Now don’t
bite your dad,” he says. Max then tries to get his
paws around Taft’s head.
Taft is director of the Exotic Feline Rescue
Center in Center Point, Indiana, which provides
homes for big cats—lions, tigers, panthers,
pumas—that have nowhere else to live out their
lives. The cats come from across the country, primarily
from government agencies such as the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service and the state Department
of Natural Resources, which take the animals
from owners who’ve neglected or abused them—
sometimes circus people, mostly private individuals.
Taft can’t take all the cats he gets calls about.
“There are a number that we don’t take that are put
to sleep,” he says. “Several cats that we didn’t take
remained where they were and got in trouble—bit
people or escaped. Some of them were placed in
other centers.” Taft usually won’t take a cat he
doesn’t have room for, but Max was a special case—the DNR rescued him when he
was just seven weeks old.
The EFRC has been operating
since 1991, when Taft moved to
Center Point with two tigers and
a leopard. It’s now home to 200
cats on 110 acres. Taft doesn’t
advertise, but word of mouth
brings him around 7,000 visitors
a year, most of them kids on
school trips. There aren’t many
other reasons to visit Center
Point, a sleepy place 240 miles
southeast of Chicago that’s like a
ghost town—the main drag has a
boarded-up general store and
antique shop, a diner with no
patrons. But that’s exactly what
Taft wanted. When he was
scouting properties he told the
real estate agent, “I’m looking for
a place with no neighbors.”
With good reason. Taft put the
butchering area right at the
entrance to make it easy for
farmers to drop off sick or dead
livestock, so the first thing a visitor
often sees is a blood-spattered
employee hacking up a cow
with a chain saw. And the area
reeks of urine, feces, and rotting
meat, though the rest of the
center just smells like an ordinary
zoo. At one point while
Taft’s giving a tour of the center
he walks up to a ten-foot pile of
mostly eaten carcasses on pallets.
“One of the most unending jobs
we have around here is waste
control,” he says, squirting charcoal
lighter fluid on the heap. He
lights one match after another
and tosses them on the pile, and
finally flames shoot up. A barbecue
smell fills the air.
The center’s head butcher and
assistant director, Suzanne Taylor,
takes the admission fee from visitors,
then warns people not to get
too close to the fences or put their
hands through the mesh. “If a cat
appears distressed by your presence
walk away quickly,” she says.
“If it turns its back end toward
you it’s going to spray—and that’s
when you should run.” But people
keep coming because the EFRC
provides a more intimate experience
than a zoo.
Around 130 cats are on display
in the main visitors’ area, and 30
more are down the road in overflow
pens in the yard behind Taft’s
house, which also contains the
EFRC’s offices. People who want
to watch the cats at night can pay
$120 to sleep in his extra bedroom,
from which they have a
great view of three of the tigers in
the lighted backyard. Another 35
cats are in a restricted area an
eighth of a mile away because
they’re aggressive. “This tiger
killed his trainer,” Taft says, as he
walks past its pen. “Those two
tigers sticking their heads around
the bend are extremely aggressive.
We don’t let anybody near them.”
The chain-link fences separating
people from cats are 12
feet high and topped with barbed
wire. Visitors walk through the
narrow pathways of the main visiting
area unsupervised by staff.
Near feeding time tigers sometimes
stalk them, licking their
chops. Taft says that the enclosures
are more than sufficient to
keep the cats on their side and
that because the animals are well
fed they’re not dangerous.
Taft’s affinity for big cats goes
back to childhood. Raised in
Colorado, he loved the Denver
Zoo and remembers when it first
opened outdoor enclosures for its
cats. During his undergraduate
studies in philosophy at Indiana
State University one of his professors
talked about having once
kept a lion as a pet, and shortly
afterward Taft stopped at a pet
store near his apartment. “I asked
them about keeping big cats, and
they said, ‘Oh, sure, that’s something
that people can do.’” He
says he started fantasizing about
“driving around with a wellbehaved
cheetah in a Lotus.”
He bought his first cat, an ocelot
he named Ozzie, from the pet store. Soon he dropped out of college
and moved to Chimayo, New
Mexico, where he could let Ozzie
run unleashed in the national
forest—something he says he’d
never do now. “My education
began with Ozzie—living with her
was a tremendous learning experience,”
he says. “I also read a lot
of books on animal behavior, on
keeping pet ocelots, about people
who’d spent time with the circus,
and books like the ‘Born Free’
group, which was a series of
books and then movies by Joy
Adamson, whose husband was a
game warden in Africa. They
raised three orphan lion cubs who
pretty much ran loose. I also went
to places where they kept cats and
saw how other people did it. I
went to zoos—I’ve always been a
big zoo fan. I went to Texas,
where there are a lot of private
owners and facilities, a few of
which were nice and many that
were horrifying. I’ve also visited
facilities in the Las Vegas area,
Ohio, New York, Illinois, Indiana.”
After Ozzie died Taft got a
leopard, Taaka, from a private
owner in California who’d kept
her in the parking lot next to her
mobile home. Taaka had the “run
of the house most of the time”
during the two decades she lived
with Taft. “I probably spent the
first two years thinking that I’d
made a terrible mistake and
being halfway afraid to be home,”
he says. But that changed. “She’d
sleep on my bed in the winter.”
Taft stayed in Chimayo for 20
years, running a construction
company and working as an excavation
contractor. But he knew he
wanted to open a rescue center.
“All I ever
wanted to do
is share my
life with
cats,” he
says. He
wanted a
place where
he could give
the animals
a lot of room
to move
around, and
he knew he
could do that
in Indiana. He also knew he’d
have access to plenty of livestock
there. Taaka and two tigers in
tow, he drove back to the midwest.
Today the EFRC has 11 fulltime
and 2 part-time staffers and
a $375,000 yearly operating
budget. Last year visitors’ fees
brought in approximately
$135,000; additional money
came from fund-raisers like the
Run Through the Jungle 5K
Walk/Run as well as memberships,
sponsorships, grants, and
the sale of T-shirts, hats, and
magnets with cat images on the
Web site. Vet care costs $15,000
per year—there’s a clinic in the
office basement for the vet, who
lives nearby. The center’s cat
food may be essentially free, a
gift from the local farmers, but
Taft says processing it costs
approximately $35,000 a year,
since one staffer “does nothing
but go around and pick up dead
livestock.” The cats go through
3,000 pounds of meat per day.
“If we weren’t able to process our
own livestock,” he says, “if we had
to do some kind of commercial
carnivore diet, we wouldn’t be
able to do this.”
Taft’s construction skills come
in handy at the center. “A large
part of [keeping cats] is being
able to build,” he says. His formal
education hasn’t proved particularly
useful, but he prefers hiring
people with relevant degrees. “If
they’ve stuck it out for four years
in school, then they’ll probably
stick it out for a while on a job,”
he says. “The college grads we’ve
had are better at record keeping,
noticing aberrant behaviors,
noting the onset of illness and
disease. And they make more
astute observations about mating
cycles and all the attendant
aggression—and certainly make
for better tour guides.”
Rebecca Rizzo, a 24-year-old
staffer wearing glitter eye
shadow and blood-and-fecesstained
cargo pants, studied
zoology. “I always loved animals,
wanted to work with big cats,”
she says, “so I put two and two
together and found this place.”
The work is primarily feeding
and cleaning. “It’s just loading
carts and pens and remembering
who eats what, cleaning the
cages. Sometimes I butcher up
deer and calves.”
Nine of the 11 staffers are
women. “We’ve had guys interview
but the pay is just not there,
and to guys that is usually a big
issue,” Rizzo says. “Some of them
also had trouble working under
women. And I think the cats are
just used to women.”
Taft and his staff spend as much
time as they can educating people
about the plight of the cats. He
occasionally gives lectures, and
Jean Herrberg does presentations
at schools. The center also publishes
a seasonal “Cat Tales” enewsletter
and offers guided field
trips, a volunteer program, and
credit and noncredit internships.
Many of the volunteers and
interns are from Indiana University,
staff and students who drive
the 35 miles from Bloomington
to build cages, clean pens, and
sometimes prepare meat for the
cats. Taft has no interest in having
anyone train the cats. “We don’t
try to teach our cats to do anything,”
he says proudly.
ALL EXOTIC-CAT rescue centers
are supposed to be licensed
by the USDA. The EFRC is, and
the agency periodically inspects
it. DNR officials have also
checked it out. “The animals all
appeared to be well cared for,”
says the department’s Linnea
Peterchaff, who went to see how
Max was doing this past winter.
“Their cages provide a lot of
space in a natural habitat, with
plenty of room for the cats to
walk around and jump on platforms.
Some even have ponds in
which the cats can swim and
play. The cages and perimeter
fence were all secure.” She calls
the staff “very knowledgeable.”
In 15 years there’s been only
one accident at the center, and Taft says it was because safety
procedures weren’t followed. The
pens have two sets of paired guillotine-
style slide gates that allow
workers to open the outer one
and set down food, then close the
outer one and raise the inner one
so the cat can get it. They also
use the gates to corral the cats
while they clean the pens. “This
kid had worked for a while and
was cleaning a cage, and instead
of paying attention to what he
was doing, he got distracted,”
Taft says. “He started looking at
this beautiful girl who’d walked
up—he pulled on the cable to
open the slide gate and was
standing there looking at her
with the door open. The tiger
came up to him, grabbed his
shoulder, dragged him to the
feeding pile, and bit him in the
butt.” Taft was nearby, and when
he heard the girl scream he ran
toward the cage yelling. He says
as soon as the tiger heard him it
let go of the guy. “I picked up the
shovel and a bucket that we used
for picking up poop, because
having those things in your hand
does a lot in terms of managing
them and making them move
around. Not that I ever hit them
with the shovel or anything, but
having something in your hand
always impresses them. You’ll see
that sometimes circus trainers
have just a little stick in their
hand, and cats respond to it. So I
went in, and the tiger backed off
from me, and I pulled him out.”
After getting cleaned up at the
hospital, the guy went back to
work. Taft says he’s never been
seriously injured in 41 years of
dealing with wild cats. “I’ve only
gotten cuts and scrapes. Had a
good chunk of hand sliced off by
a lion’s claw once. It hurt like hell
but wasn’t life threatening.”
Just because a rescue center is
licensed doesn’t mean it’s well
run. Taft has two leopards that
came from a man who ran a
center near LA. “When state and
wildlife officials went to his
home—which was not where he
was supposed to have cats—they
found almost a hundred dead
lions and tigers and other cats in
really bad shape,” Taft says. “A lot
of them were babies. With babies
you can make money by letting
people take pictures with them
or by selling them, but once
they’re grown you have to feed
and house them, and they
become a liability.” According to
a New York Times story, the man
was sentenced to two years in
prison. The guy who owned Max
had a USDA license to breed and
sell his animals, but after the
DNR raided his property last fall
they seized most of his 24 tigers
and other exotic animals.
According to an Associated Press
story, the head of the DNR called
the conditions there “horrific.”
Taft, who frequently accompanies
DNR, U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, and USDA officials on
rescue missions, thinks the main
reason cats wind up being mistreated
is that people have unrealistic
expectations about what
owning them entails. “People
that get these animals don’t
realize how big they are,” he says,
“how aggressive they are, and
don’t realize the kind of care or
food it takes to feed them.”
Despite the abuse he’s seen,
Taft believes some people can
handle them as pets. “I know
people who do a really good job
with these cats,” he says. “It is
very important that people be
able to develop relationships
with animals, and if people aren’t
able to build relationships with
animals, then there’s a lot of things about them and about us
that we’ll never know.”
He goes on, “I think there are
direct and strong parallels
between the way animals behave
and the way people behave—and
I’m not trying to be anthropomorphic
here. I mean, we all deal
with aggression and flight and
hunting one way or another—
providing our sustenance, dealing
with social interaction. And animals
do all of this just like we do.
So I think a relationship with
animals with that in mind opens
us up to learning things about
ourselves, and that understanding
in turn helps us understand
animals in a better light.”
TAFT ISN'T MARRIED and has no
children. “At least none that
are bipeds,” he says. As he’s
walking through the pens he sees
three male lions scuffling and
chastises them: “Now daddy told
you to stop that!” One of the
lions comes up to the fence and
roars in his face. “Tucker, do not
growl at me!” Taft says, looking
offended. “Do! Not! Growl!” A
moment later Tucker begins nuzzling
Taft’s leg through the fence,
suddenly an amorous house cat.
Taft walks past a leopard. “Hi,
Kayla,” he murmurs. Kayla
hisses, baring teeth. “It’s OK,
sweetie,” he says, chuckling.
Taft is usually the only staffer
who goes into a pen with a cat.
“We make sure that there are two
people there, and one is outside
the cage to call for help or close
doors,” he says. “You certainly
have to always have that awareness
that it is a wild animal, that
they do have this potential for
aggression, that they are bigger
than you are, and that if they’re
becoming aggressive you’re not
going to hold up to them or be
more aggressive than them. Some
people will tell me, ‘Yeah, I’ll just
go in there and back it down.’ But
these are animals that take down
multi-thousand-pound prey, like
2,000-pound water buffaloes.
They’re certainly not going to
back down to a 200-pound man.”
The only other precaution Taft
takes is to be armed with his
bucket and shovel and “my
awareness.” Asked what makes
him different from exotic-animal
lovers like Timothy Treadwell,
the subject of the documentary
Grizzly Man, he says, “Well, if
Max would decide to eat me he
could eat me—and I’d make sure
that he’d still be locked in the
cage. It’s the exposure of other
people to risk and the exposure of
the animal to an escape potential.
To be in the audience where some
idiot walks an unleashed tiger
through a bunch of people, that’s
nuts. I’m not getting on the same
side of a fence with a strange
tiger, nor would I let anyone get
that close to one of my tigers.”
Yet he confesses that there are
“a handful of cats that I go in the
cage with just because we’re
friends and I want to spend time
with them.” They include Kiki, a
spotted leopard. “She was one of
the three cats that was with me
when I first started this place,”
he says. “When I come to her
cage she will stand up on her
hind legs and hug me. You know,
that’s pretty special.”
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