Search results for "C_THR87_2305 Reliable Test Test ๐Ÿ•Ÿ Reliable C_THR87_2305 Exam Book ๐Ÿš‰ C_THR87_2305 Reliable Test Test ๐Ÿ†– Search for โžค C_THR87_2305 โฎ˜ and easily obtain a free download on โ–ท www.pdfvce.com โ— ๐Ÿ˜žC_THR87_2305 Valid Exam Experience"

Results 91 - 100 of 422 Page 10 of 43
Sorted by: Relevance | Sort by: Date Results per-page: 10 | 20 | 50 | All

After the Fall, a Winged Climb Back to the Heights – a Screech-owl’s Second Chance

[…]A brancher doesn’t need the nest anymore, which mean that we could more easily re-unite him with his parents. All we need to find is his family.ย  BAX Wildlife Rehabilitator, Lucinda Adamson briefly holds the owlet so that he can call, hopefully bringing his parents to ivestigate. This method can be a very effective way to locate families. Imagine our own children calling, who we’ve missed. Unfortunately, the annual rodeo was at the park, and the noise and disruption was too great – no Screech-owls were seen or heard. We had to bringย the young owl back to the clinic. Given […]
Read more » After the Fall, a Winged Climb Back to the Heights – a Screech-owl’s Second Chance

They Shoot Coots, Don’t They?

[…]and duck-like habits, are regular winter residents of Humboldt County. In wet years they can be easily found in the ephemeral ponds that form on the agricultural bottom lands all around the Bay. Every year Arcata Marsh is home to hundreds of these birds. On his release day, that’s where we took him. As you can see he made short work of putting some great distance between us. In care in our waterfowl aviary, still favoring his right leg. Typical diet for Coots includes fish and aquatic invertebrates. To the release site! And gone… The work of rescuing injured and […]

A Personal Letter from one of our Co-founders – Why We Need You.

[…]is natural for me – as natural as rising early every summer morning and crossing the Arcata bottoms on my way to Humboldt Wildlife Care Center, our clinic in Bayside, to prep food for a couple dozen orphaned raccoons, offer mealworms to nestling songbirds, and return calls from people who’ve found an injured wild animal, or help them resolve a conflict with an animal who has wandered across one of our arbitrary and unnatural lines we’ve drawn between our world and theirs. [You can clickย here to Donate Now] My comfort zone includes some pretty awful things – broken wings, a […]
Read more » A Personal Letter from one of our Co-founders – Why We Need You.

In Wildness is the Preservation of Raccoons, In Raccoons is the Preservation of the Wild

[…]crunch on snails, and nibble the mushrooms on the forest floor. Raccoons are brave, resilient, adaptable and notoriously intelligent. Orphaned Raccoons in their housing, prepare for the wide and wild world. To help them recognize the real world when they see it, we’ve provided them an artificial river of concrete. We call it the Los Angeles river. No substitute for an ecosystem, but at least they know to look for fish in moving water. Raccoons have lived in North America for millions of years. This familiar wild neighbor has nearly as many names as there are indigenous languages. We use […]
Read more » In Wildness is the Preservation of Raccoons, In Raccoons is the Preservation of the Wild

It Was Ten Years Ago Today!

[…]soon in flight. Besides the workshop, which we’ve since presented many times across California and the USA, our primary mission was to share the skills and tools necessary to provide effective and ethical aquatic wild bird care. Later we would amend our mission to include all wild animals. The six of us who produced the original workshop, Shannon Riggs, DVM, January Bill, Marie Travers, Vann Masvidal, Laura Corsiglia, and myself, met as colleagues in oiled wildlife response. In fact we first worked together as a whole on the November 2007 oil spill in San Francisco Bay caused when the Cosco […]

Bufflehead, one of the smallest ducks, named after the mighty mammal of the Plains!

[…]without this experience. Our clinic had already closed and the young man and the bird were an hour away with no way to get here. We would have to ask a volunteer to drive down to Rio Dell the next morning. We gave him instructions on how to keep the bird safe overnight – to place the bird in a box with a towel at the bottom and a lid that closes, to not give food or water, and to keep the injured and frightened animal away from any people or pets and our noises – an unused room is […]
Read more » Bufflehead, one of the smallest ducks, named after the mighty mammal of the Plains!

A Summer Like No Other! So Many Mammals!

[…]While it’s perfectly normal right now, in the height of our Spring and Summer wild baby season, that we’re very busy with a huge demand on our resources, what’s strange is the number of baby mammals we’ve admitted. Typically our patient caseload is 75% birds, and 25% mammals, with only a few reptilesย such as snakes, lizards and turtlesย admitted for care, year in and year out. This year though we’ve seen a large increase in orphaned baby mammals. Instead of 25%, we are at 39% mammals for 2017 to date! In part this is because we’ve started to accept more wild […]

One Western Grebe Improves Care For All

[…]Grebes are frequent patients, we generally have good results treating their most common ailments, parasites such as tapeworm, emaciation, and loss of waterproofing due to contamination. In most ways, the Grebe that came in last month was an ordinary patient. Found on the beach in Trinidad, small abrasions under her lower bill had bled and soiledย her neck feathers, which caused her feathers to lose their waterproofing. But that wasn’t her primary problem. Her biggest problem was that she is a juvenile who’d been facing her first winter of independence. This year’s exceptionally stormyย season got the better of her. Emaciated, dehydrated, […]

The Marsh Hawk

[…]Harriers nest on the ground, in clumps of vegetation, such as grass and vines. Marsh hawks are easily identified by their distinctive white feathers on their lower back, the disc of feathers that surround their faces, which help them hear the small mammals they hunt,ย  and their low swooping flights over marsh, dune and field. After four weeks in care, growing, learning to fly, and beginning to learn to hunt, these two birds were just released back at the Fay Slough Wildlife Area, where adult and juvenile Harriers were seen. These two joined them, perhaps even finding their parents, which […]

Black Rain, Toxic Rain.

[…]or false-flag operations meant to achieve an obscure political aim, a few stories cannot be so easily dismissed. In fact, one of the stories that had been haunting the web suggested that the well casing was compromised below the seafloor, rendering impossible any attempt to stop the flow from above. As we discovered after a month of the above-ground press’ relative silence and BP’s active denial, the well is indeed severely damaged, a fact that has been known since at least the failure of “top kill” in late May.  a Hard Rain’s a-gonna FallAnother persistent though as yet unconfirmed story […]