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Red-tailed Hawk Released in Redway

[…]back to Redway. Once the transport box was open, he launched toward the forest, the sky, and his free and wild life. Your support allows us to care for these victims of industrial civilization. The modern world is filled with traps that wild animals, present on Mother Earth for millions of years, can’t recognize. With your help, we are able to provide skilled staff and appropriate facilities to nurse wild animals like this young hawk back to health, and give them another chance. Please contribute what you can. Thank you for being a part of this life saving work! (photos: […]

Skunk’s Got White Stripes

[…]now she is driven. The force of Spring renewal is powerful thing, sending her across fields and forests and very unfortunately, across roads too. Three days ago, we admitted our first adult female skunk of 2018, who’d likely been hit by a car. Paralyzed and barely conscious, a quick, humane end was the only appropriate care. We rarely admit a skunk who’s been hit by a car simply because they rarely live through the impact. Instead, each January we see a sudden increase in skunks, dead and left to rot by the sides of our roads, from US 101 to […]

Unified, to better serve Wildlife

[…]of protecting wild animals from injury and keeping their families together is to advocate for and practice place-based, energy-aware wildlife care. BAX/HWCC, with your support, is able to provide leadership and innovation as we accept the challenge of making true progress for our relationship with our wild neighbors, especially as viewed by the generations that will follow ours. Together we match extensive professional wildlife care experience – from around our state, our country and our world – with the rooted knowledge and deep affection long time residents of our region have for our home. Bringing familiarity with “state of the […]

Everyday People – the Awesome Staff of Humboldt Wildlife Care Center/bird ally x

[…]trained the wildlife rehabilitators of the future. Watching our staff in action from my sick bed and through my radiation and chemotherapy and through my recovery has been one of the most profound things I’ve ever seen. The daily phone calls with staff I had while I was in the hospital in June and July were a joy to participate in, as we discussed the caseload. I dont know if they’ll ever know how critical their excellent handling of the season was to my recovery. By competently taking care of business, our staff not only met our mission in difficult […]
Read more » Everyday People – the Awesome Staff of Humboldt Wildlife Care Center/bird ally x

We Stand With Standing Rock Against the Dakota Access Pipeline

[…]journalists at the scene have been arrested and charged. Bird Ally X stands with the courageous and committed protectors of Standing Rock. As wildlife rehabilitators, we are on the frontline of the incessant war that industrial civilization wages against the Wild. We see, each and every day of our lives, the suffering, injury and death that is recklessly and thoughtlessly caused by the machinery of the Anthropocene – Falcons hit by cars, Gulls tangled in derelict fishing gear, Raccoon shot and trapped and their babies orphaned. We see it all: from the Swainson’s Thrush torn apart by a carelessly kept house cat […]
Read more » We Stand With Standing Rock Against the Dakota Access Pipeline

Aleutians Falling Down Like Hail (in other words, we’re admitting a lot of Cackling Geese!)

[…]recovery are as common as life and just as wondrous. Being housed with others of their kind is a comfort to animals in care who prefer flocks. Each on of these geese is helping the others recover. It’s a wonderful feeling to step into the aviary with breakfast and see that someone is now string enough to fly. It’s just a matter of time now. Only the stress of captivity could cause anything to go wrong at this point. With heat support, fluid therapy, medicines, food, and an environment built to encourage recovery, a time comes when we evaluate for […]
Read more » Aleutians Falling Down Like Hail (in other words, we’re admitting a lot of Cackling Geese!)

It Was Ten Years Ago Today!

[…]fully realizing HWCC/bax as a teaching wildlife hospital, and helping to bring a greater level of compassion to bear on our wild neighbors, and thereby reduce the need for our services. It’s a dream. It’s a dream you can help make real. Please donate today and let’s help make certain that the next ten years brings us closer to our goal. PLEASE DONATE […]

A Barn Owl’s Broken Wing Heals

[…]to her wild freedom in the real world. Wildlife rehabilitation is at least as old as human compassion, but as a profession it’s been less than 50 years that rehabilitators have been using trainings, regulations, and professional associations to improve available care for injured and orphaned wildlife all over the country. Innovations like the splint that gave this owl her second chance are made because of support generously donated. These innovations and improvements are passed on to other caregivers and are taught to the next generation of rehabilitators using the resources that your support provides. This Barn Owl is hunting […]

Kicking it up a notch: by BAX Co-director Marie Travers.

[…]where the OWCN exists, where there is infrastructure for giving animals the best achievable care and passionate people trained to make it happen, and where there are laws mandating the clean up of oiled wildlife. We are so incredibly fortunate to live in a place where there is such an exceptional response system. Really. There is nothing like it in the world. While every spill is different, one thing is true of all of the spills I’ve worked; There is a massive “secondary spill” created by all of the waste generated by the cleanup. According to The International Tanker Owners […]
Read more » Kicking it up a notch: by BAX Co-director Marie Travers.

A letter to the Humboldt County Board of Supervisors #WildlifeServices

[…]insistence that oiled Canada geese be shot rather than rescued. Fortunately, more intelligent and compassionate arguments prevailed. If they hadn’t this would have been the first time in US history that victims of an oil spill had been killed rather than rehabilitated – a violation of federal laws (e.g., Migratory Bird Treaty Act, Oil Pollution Act of 1990). Sadly, we don’t need to leave Humboldt County to find examples of WS’s shadowy cruelty. In May, Humboldt Wildlife Care Center(HWCC) received a call from a member of the public who was angry and distressed about baby raccoons who had been left […]
Read more » A letter to the Humboldt County Board of Supervisors #WildlifeServices