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Why We Rehabiltate Brown Pelicans

[…]and Crescent City. The harbor districts with jurisdiction over these cleaning tables had been made aware of this problem the previous year. Yet nothing was done in the intervening months before the Young of the Year Pelicans arrived this summer. Federal law prohibits harming Brown pelicans and other wildlife. State law prohibits discharging any substance harmful to fish, plants, birds or mammals into any State water. The discharge pipe at Shelter Cove, an Area of Special Biological Significance, and the cleaning station outflow in Crescent City have contaminated hundreds of pelicans and killed many more.   Fish oil and petroleum are […]

Legislation that Will Impact Wild Animals

[…]X opposes this bill. Hunting Black Bear, or any animals, with hounds is cruel, serves no wildlife management goal, is disruptive to other native, non-targeted wild animals, and is cruel to the hounds as well. (Read our letter here) 14 other states have also banned hounding bear, including Montana nearly 100 years ago! AB 2205 will be heard in the Assembly Committee on Water, Parks, and Wildlife Tuesday, April 29. Follow the provided links to that committee to find if your representative is a member. Let him or her know that hounding bear is a relic of a bygone era. […]

Two gulls together.

[…]our August fundraising drive is over! But itโ€™s not too late to help push us over $5000. Your donation goes directly to the Rescue and Rehabilitation of the North Coastโ€™s injured and orphaned wild animals as well as humane solutions to keep wild families together and the use non-lethal methods to resolve human/wildlife conflicts. Thank you for donating today! As they come out of the box, a brown/gray juvenile Western Gull meets beach sand for the first time while a white adult scrambles toward freedom. The young bird was found on a rock off the coast of Crescent City. Typically, […]

“If this is true, all our troubles are over.” – William D’Arcy 1908

[…]the dream of William Knox D’Arcy, extraordinarily wealthy gold mine owner in England who managed to obtain exclusive oil exploration rights to most of Persia) Tomorrow, 26 May 2010, BP engineers and technicians and laborers and shareholders will try to stop the oil that has been flowing for more than month from a blown out a well a mile beneath the sea. The plan is to shoot a cementing mud down into the well (- a maneuver that BP is calling Top Kill. There doesn’t appear to be any reason for anyone else to call it that, although many do.) […]
Read more » “If this is true, all our troubles are over.” – William D’Arcy 1908

The Shadow Chipmunk

[…]range of Tamias senex, the Shadow chipmunk, in California. Found in our state, as well as Nevada and Oregon, the only area this chipmunk’s range reaches the ocean is here in northern Humboldt and southern Del Norte counties, between the Eel and the Klamath rivers. North of the Klamath we find Tamias siskiyou or, the Siskiyou chipmunk and south of the Eel is Tamias ochrogenys, or the Yellow-cheeked chipmunk. Mostly arboreal, nesting in trees as far as 70 feet off the ground, the social Shadow chipmunk typically lives from four to eight years. Weighing less than 100 grams, the females […]

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

Dear Friends and Supporters, For this post, I’d like to take a more personal approach so that we can acknowledge, thank and just generally celebrate the incredible staff of Humboldt Wildlife Care Center/bax. So while our staff is definitely a part of the neighborhood – everyday people, you might say, they are anything but ordinary people. Our staff are everyday heroes. Many of you may already know that I was diagnosed with a cancerous tumor in the middle of May, right at the start of our busy wild baby season. Every year we know that our lives will turn hectic […]
Read more » Everyday People – the Awesome Staff of Humboldt Wildlife Care Center/bird ally x

North Coast Fish Waste Response (updated)

[…]his old haunts at Shelter Cove from abo Things are starting to quiet down, now that fishing season has quieted down as well. As we reported in our last update, the situation is Crescent City is largely resolved. Lids on fish waste bins, coupled with educational signwork brought an end to contaminations. Working with the harbormaster, Rich Young, was a positive and productive experience. These simple solutions were quickly implemented. We captured a total of 32 birds in Crescent City – thirty Brown Pelicans (BRPE) and two Western Gulls (WEGU). Due to severe injury, three of the pelicans were humanely […]

Hot Sparks of Life* – Four Squirrels Go Home

[…]the Pacific Northwest. Has any human, or human’s pet, met with their approval? No. Although easily seen in broad daylight, another of Muir’s observations remains true:ย “He is, without exception, the wildest animal I ever saw, –a fiery, sputtering little bolt of life.” However, when something disturbs their den site, all the wildness in the world can’t save squirrels who are too young to survive on their own. In the case of the four young Douglas Squirrels who we admitted in early August at Humboldt Wildlife Care Center, a kind man found them scattered and struggling around the base of a […]
Read more » Hot Sparks of Life* – Four Squirrels Go Home

Fledgling Marbled Murrelet Reaches the Sea Unconventionally

[…]Murreletsย (Brachyramphus marmoratus). Tourists in Prairie Creek State Park, an important area for these seabirds who nest high in the strong limbs of old-growth Redwoods, had found who they believed was a Marbled Murrelet fledgling in the middle of Newton B. Druryย Scenic Parkway, which wends through the park’s ancient groves. Lynn was going to bring the young seabird to our clinic as soon as she had him in her care. Marbled Murrelets are one of the most unusual seabirds. They make nesting in trees seem strange! While most seabirds nest on rocky cliffs and islands, in the portion of their Pacific […]
Read more » Fledgling Marbled Murrelet Reaches the Sea Unconventionally

Happy Mother’s Jay!

[…]may be the wrong thing, and that if you don’t know, you shouldn’t act, we can easily turn this reasoning around. In many cases we might not know enough to not act. To decide to do nothing might have consigned this wild animal to a needless death. The kind-hearted people who brought us the baby Jay were not able to tell that the baby wasn’t alone. They observed for a considerable time but didn’t see anything to allay their fears. This is perfectly fine! They aren’t professionals. They did the right thing. They called our clinic and told us what […]