Susan Fiedler is a working mother who has been rescuing animals for many years. She lives in a rural area near Sacramento, California with one husband, two sons, seven cats, many fish, and a 40-year-old boa constrictor. Their property is certified as a Backyard Wildlife Habitat by the National Wildlife Federation.
Susan’s interest in understanding people and animals has been lifelong. At 11, she learned to take care of an orphaned Maine Coon kitten. Later, Susan became the first junior member of the New York Herpetological Society, then based at The Bronx Zoo near her home. One freezing cold March day, a man brought in a baby boa constrictor who had been born after his mother was discovered in a shipment of bananas. Only the size of a pencil, and fed only once since his birth the previous year, he was nursed to health by Susan, and remains with her to this day, although he has grown quite a bit larger and heavier at age 40. At fifteen, Fiedler’s experiences with reptiles and amphibians led her to contribute the humorous column “Snakes Alive” to her summer camp newsletter.
Flash forward to Queens College (CUNY, NYC) where she studied Cultural Anthropology, Psychology, and Ancient Civilizations. At Rutgers University (New Brunswick, NJ) she earned a Master’s Degree in Library and Information Service, which enabled her to become more comfortable with computers and enhance her research skills.
Articles written by her husband David led them to start a publishing company which specialized in reviewing products and services in the computer industry. Two magazines and one newsletter were successfully launched and eventually sold. David kept writing about computers, while Susan went on to other projects.
Two sons and lots of volunteer work later, Susan did what many Moms do: she went back to work. She now works at a pet superstore with some of her favorite animals, and teaches people how to properly care for their own pets.
Susan does not do animal communication "commercially", only within the family.
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