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When Wildlife Needs a Bath

[…]waste in various ways all around the North Coast. (Read more about the causes and what has been accomplished to prevent this problem here and here and here) The Northcoast Fish Waste response had several positive outcomes: first we released 80% of our patients – 4 out of 5 impacted Pelicans were returned to their wild lives! Second, as seen at the links provided above, major improvements to public fishing infrastructure radically reduced the potential for injury to Pelicans and other wild animals. Third, we were able to use and demonstrate that more environmentally conscious soaps can be used to […]

Hermit Warbler Nestling Falls to Ground in the Arcata Community Forest

[…]down for more photos) As we’ve been mentioning at every opportunity, this is wild baby season. Wild animals all around us are busy raising their young. Step outside at any moment and watch Barn Swallows swoop and glide across fields, marsh, and highways (yikes!!) in their constant aerial search for the insects that are about to become this year’s model swallow. Skunk babies might be seen playing in the front yard, freshly emerged from their den – yes, they were there the whole time, right beneath your feet, under the shed, growing, nursing and today – ta da! – exploring […]
Read more » Hermit Warbler Nestling Falls to Ground in the Arcata Community Forest

Our annual Season’s Greeting, coming to your mailbox soon!

[…]the back of our own hands or the wild red blood cells who swim in our veins. We can find the wild easily among the litter and chaos of any city street, where a family of Sparrows might be raising their babies, as was the case with the family of White crowned Sparrows on this card. A fledgling bird separated from her family was found one morning in old town Eureka by a shopkeeper during a street festival. Unsure of what to do, they called us. The day was frantic with festival goers and we had no way of searching […]
Read more » Our annual Season’s Greeting, coming to your mailbox soon!

Ticks, Tock! Gray Fox Beats Clock!

[…]housing. We provided her with an appropriate diet and left her alone. Within a day she was running easily and scaling the walls when staff went in to clean or feed. After a week we were certain that she was recovered. She’d gained 500 grams in 6 days! Her coordination was complete. She was fully capable. We took her back to the Samoa peninsula and released her back to her wild and free life. Back in her glory after several days in care. There are simply some things a healthy fox can do that we can’t… Quickly removing her from […]

Young Raven thinks, “Outside the box!”

During the last week of August, on an evening walk along Clam Beach, a McKinleyville resident saw a dark clump of seaweed at the surf line. As he got closer, he thought, “No, those are feathers.” And then at last, “those feathers are breathing!” The young Raven (Corvus corax) was thoroughly soaked, immobilized by hypothermia (very low body temperature). Fortunately, since it was late in the day, Lynda Stockton, who runs the stranding hotline for the North Coast Marine Mammal Center in Crescent City was nearby. Lynda, also of McKinleyville, regularly walks the beaches of Humboldt County, checking on stranded […]

Preparing for the Possibility of Pelicans: 2013

[…]infrastructure to handle fish waste on the North Coast is a threat to Brown Pelicans that we can easily solve. Moreover, fish waste is not only a regional problem but one that impacts pelicans and other coastal wildlife throughout California – and everywhere. Here on the North Coast we have the opportunity to build a model for effective measures that will stop these contaminations. While laws already protect Pelicans and all seabirds, as well as the marine environment, according to a local wildlife biologist, “law enforcement will never see fish waste as deleterious.” Pelican with tuna head lodged in throat, […]
Read more » Preparing for the Possibility of Pelicans: 2013

2018, Challenging, Unpredictable, Heartbreaking, Rewarding…

[…]SOME OF THIS YEAR’S FAWNS AND RACCOONS BEING RELEASED? click here and here. WANT TO MAKE A DONATION NOW WITHOUT SCROLLING ALL THE WAY DOWN? click here Itโ€™s not hard to see that our society has put its faith and effort behind expansion of villages, towns, nations, trading routes, mechanization, the lot of it; – all of which has been, intentionally or not, a war on the wild. As a whole, our society sides with the road, we side with efforts to tame, the efforts to neutralize the wild and wildness. In short, we betray our home. Our society has […]
Read more » 2018, Challenging, Unpredictable, Heartbreaking, Rewarding…

Young Hawk Survives Dog Attack!

[…]red blood cells, has obvious signs. Pale mucous membranes and general lethargy are two of the most easily seen. Red blood cells primary task is to carry oxygen, critical fuel, to all parts of the body. For a wild animal, living in the non-buffered reality of Nature, lethargy caused by any illness will interfere withย necessary, life-sustaining activities, like hunting and eating or evading danger. Anemia is cured by red blood cell production. Like all bodies, the hawk’s body needs food to replace lost cells. Anemic lethargy creates a negative feedback loop with death and dissolution as the only end. Red-tailed […]

CODE RED – We Need Your Support!

[…]Ally X is a collective of wildlife care-providers committed to raising the standard of care available for sick or injured aquatic birds and all wildlife. Bird Ally X works to help wild birds and all wildlife in their efforts to survive the hazards of civilization through: the direct action of caring for wild animals in distress supporting other rehabilitation groups through workshops and consultation generation and proliferation of educational and informational materials and literature, for our colleagues and our neighbors Bird Ally X will build, strengthen and further develop the resources available to ensure that excellent care is provided by […]

The baby season that began 3 weeks early.

[…]to that, we talked about things that we would prioritize to complete in the next few weeks in preparation for the season before all of our time would be taken up by patient care. The season had other plans. Three days later, April 2, our first hatchling ducks started to come in. I often tell staff that the two gods I pray to are Necessity and Dumb Luck. I love them both. Necessity tells me what’s next and Dumb Luck helps make it happen sometimes, maybe, you can hope. Necessity said next up is a duckling pond for baby ducks […]