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Nearly 200 Birds in Care Contaminated by Fish Waste; Discharge Pipes at Fish Cleaning Stations to Blame

[…]here on the North coast of California, Brown Pelicans and other birds face a different and more easily identified threat. Discharge pipes at fish cleaning stations in Shelter Cove and Crescent City are responsible for the contamination of hundreds of Brown Pelicans and untold numbers of gulls, primarily Heermannโ€™s Gulls, who often forage and hunt with Brown Pelicans. These birds are being doused in fish waste as they forage for scraps beneath the outflow of these polluting pipes. Fish waste and fish oil disrupt the feather structure that allows a seabird to remain dry and warm when entering the cold […]
Read more » Nearly 200 Birds in Care Contaminated by Fish Waste; Discharge Pipes at Fish Cleaning Stations to Blame

Highway Nearly Claims This Turkey Vulture!

[…]ignorance talking. She’s a magnificent bird. Her hock laceration, although serious, was easily treated. The gurgling sound in her breath was soon revealed to be a small amount of blood. No doubt she’d been hit by a vehicle, somehow escaping without a single broken bone. Food, rest, wound treatment and time were all she would need. After two weeks, the Vulture was ready to go home. When a bird is flying this well inside the aviary, you can really begin to feel optimistic about her prognosis! Out of the carrier and into a second chance at wild freedom! No more […]

Help Us Help Our Wild Neighbors

[…]wild animal to resolve, a question.ย [Please help us close the gap forย October! We are over $3000 away from our goal of $7000 this month! Your support is the only thing that will get us there! Donate here, if you can] A young Peregrine Falcon is given rehydrating fluids after an initial exam. Pools must be maintained. The floor needs to be mopped. Supplies purchased. Bills paid. New volunteers need to be trained. Staff and interns meet to discuss our work and learn. Caring for wild patients requires many skills. We prepare and deliver workshops and books as part ofย our mission […]

One morning on the 101, two sibling Hawks cause more than a few to take notice.

[…]received close to 30 calls about the hawk! Soon our team was back. They’d caught the hawk easily. She’d been standing very close to traffic on the side of the highway beneath the eucalyptus trees. A juvenile whose tail was far from being red, she had no injuries that we could find. We set her up with a safe place and some mice as a meal. Immediately, she ate them. Meanwhile, the calls kept coming! Apparently another hawk was near the same location, but in the median and closer to the bridge. Another staff member went to check the second […]
Read more » One morning on the 101, two sibling Hawks cause more than a few to take notice.

After Being Ensnared by Derelict Fishing Gear, a Young Gull’s Second Chance.

[…]only.” HWCC/bax staff rehabilitator, Stephanie Owens at the scene of the rescue. Our latest wildlife rescuing recruit, Damian, ferries the gull back to the mainland. Part of what was removed – a ‘cute’ little device with it’s ghost fishing days now behind it. The young Western Gull (Larus occidentalis) was in fairly good shape. Neither the fishing line nor the hooks had caused any significant injury. Constriction wounds caused by tightly wound fishing line, not mention the damage hooks can do, especially when swallowed, can make these cases especially heartbreaking. The gull did have several deep cuts, or lacerations, on […]
Read more » After Being Ensnared by Derelict Fishing Gear, a Young Gull’s Second Chance.

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

[…]most of us know that Earth Day was inspired in part by the massive blowout of an offshore oil platform six miles off the California coast in the Santa Barbara Channel in 1969. Over 3,600 seabirds and countless marine mammals and fish were killed as three to four million gallons of crude oil was released, blackening 35 miles of shoreline and covering 800 square miles of ocean. Almost fifty years later, the Santa Barbara Oil Spill remains the largest oil spill in California and the third largest oil spill in US history, behind the Deepwater Horizon and Exxon Valdez. The […]
Read more » Kicking it up a notch: by BAX Co-director Marie Travers.

Osprey in Care – the Fish Hawks

[…]fish beneath the sky expose their dreams to fly. The Osprey (Pandion haliaetus), the Fish hawk, an easily observed raptor who plunge-dives feet first from the sky to catch fish, lifting themselves and their prey straight back into the sky. A familiar sight: one of these large, long-winged birds carrying a trout or a perch, or any other of the over 80 species of fish that make up nearly all of their diet.(1) We don’t often see these birds in care. When we do, often we are only able to help them out of this world due to the severity […]

Skunk’s Got White Stripes

[…]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 the small two lane black tops that criss-cross the agricultural industry of the bottom lands. Samoa Blvd, from Arcata through Manila and south to North […]

Raccoons Orphaned by Trapping in Care Now

[…]a couple dollars paying for that company to trap the Raccoon. The Raccoon, eager to find food, is easily trapped (maybe not on the first try though, maybe first some other animal is trapped and loses his or her life too). The pest control company takes the Raccoon away (to be killed) and soon after, a day, two days, three days, Humboldt Wildlife Care Center gets a call: Raccoon babies can be heard behind a wall, next to the tub, in the attic – somewhere, making their small chattering sounds, hungry, cold and dying. We take those orphans into care. […]

The Eagle, as they say, has Landed! (but took off again right away!)

A Beechcraft Bonanza is not as stylish or formidable as a Bald Eagle, but still it was with a certain amount of panache that the two-tone brown, trim and speedy plane touched down on the runway of the California Redwood Coast- Humboldt County Airport the early afternoon of August 7. Since the aircraft was bearing precious cargo in the form of one very important Humbodt County resident, a male Bald Eagle who resides with us here on Humboldt Bay, quoting Neil Armstrong to mark the occasion of his happy return home was only natural, perhaps even required: The Eagle Has […]
Read more » The Eagle, as they say, has Landed! (but took off again right away!)