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Cruelly Tricked by Glass, Songbird Luckily Lives To Fly Freely Again.

[…]people who found him. Soon he had regained his wits and was trying to fly. In the past, a common recommendation was to give the victim of a window strike a safe place to re-group and if she or he recovered and flew off, well so much the better… Now however we have changed that advice. We recommend that the victim be picked up and brought to our clinic. Brain hemorrhaging is the most common killer of window injured birds. A bird who appears to have recovered and flown off, might be flying off to his death. We give window […]
Read more » Cruelly Tricked by Glass, Songbird Luckily Lives To Fly Freely Again.

Raccoons Make End of Year Deadline: Free in 2017!

[…]both raccoons exhibited a very cautious approach after they came out of their carriers. Studies have shown that wild animals who approach novel situations with caution and even fear, do better at avoiding the dangers of the human-built world. Protecting the wildness of our patients is as important as treating their injuries.  Our last glimpse of these raccoons before they left for the surrounding Wild… and excellent way to close out the year! Caring for raccoons is challenging and rewarding. Raccoons are very intelligent and seek mental stimulation. Keeping them wild and fearful of humans is difficult – they’re smart […]
Read more » Raccoons Make End of Year Deadline: Free in 2017!

Ban on Hounding Bear Upheld! Donnelly’s AB 2205 Dies in Committee

[…]for Republican candidate for governor of California, was killed in the Water, Parks and Wildlife Committee. The bill, had it passed, would have overturned California’s ban on the use of hounds to hunt bear and bobcat. The final vote, 5 ayes, 8 nays and 2 not voting was a solid victory for wildlife advocates in the state. The ban on hounding bear and bobcat, SB 1221, was passed and signed into law in 2012. In the ban’s first year, the number of Black Bear killed, according to self-reporting sport hunters, fell by nearly half – down to just over 1000 […]
Read more » Ban on Hounding Bear Upheld! Donnelly’s AB 2205 Dies in Committee

A young Green Heron fights city hall and wins!

[…]their first sortie from the nest. Green Herons aren’t endangered, but still they are very uncommon patient at HWCC/bax. We’ve treated 6 individuals over the last 8 years. Unlike Great Egrets, Great Blue Herons and Black-crowned Night Herons, Green Herons are, in ornithological jargon, “secretive”. You could spend days at the marsh and never see the family of Green Herons who are just beyond your grasp. Wetlands such as marshes and estuaries are prime habitat for these birds. As wetlands are under increasing attack, so are Green Heron populations in steep decline. Preserving their habitat is key to preserving their […]
Read more » A young Green Heron fights city hall and wins!

Dog Intentionally Poisoned

Nyxo was part of a local wildlife scientist’s family. This scientist is actively studying the impact of rodenticide use on wild animals. Nyxo has been intentionally poisoned and killed with rat poison. No suspects have been found. Please spread this poster. and DON’T USE RAT […]

Recovery and Freeedom! The Pandemic Year: part three

[…]how to do our work with a skeleton crew and with a shoestring budget. We’ve learned how to communicate effectively, how to keep our cool, how to appreciate the beauty and humor of life without seeing each other’s smiles or laughter. And none of this would have been possible without your support. By the end of this month we will have treated more patients at HWCC than any previous year and we’ll still have three months to go. We have no idea how disastrous the rest of the year might be, or if we’ll ever return to what used to […]
Read more » Recovery and Freeedom! The Pandemic Year: part three

Rescued! The Luckiest Unlucky Raccoon Ever!

[…]areas, residential neighborhoods, mountain retreats… Raccoons are truly one of our most common wild neighbors, with whom we share so much, including a habit of misadventure. LIndsey, after releasing the Raccoon she’d helped rescue. Wildlife rehabilitation interns get a pretty remarkable view of the world, not one that many see. Interns, volunteers, staff – all of us spend a lot of our lives looking, or trying hard to look, at the world through the eyes of our patients. We learn to see that the wild is always here, always near. We learn that at our very core of minerals and […]

A New Loon’s Year

[…]that all of our patients endure so that we can mitigate their impact is an important ingredient in respecting them and providing the care they need. So on a cool, cloudy morning we took the Loon down to the edge of Humboldt Bay for release. As soon as he hit the water, he dove, eager to rinse the stench of his caregivers from his beautiful and oceanic young feathers and get back to the business of his life, riding the wave of a second chance. The last box this Loon will know – heading out for release. At the release […]

Bird Ally X Responds to Avian Botulism Outbreak at Tulelake Wildlife Refuge

[…]selected a release site free of botulism, within the vast Klamath Basin National Wildlife Refuge Complex. These birds have come such a long way from the terribly debilitated state in which they were rescued – it’s a thrill to watch them fly, strong and healthy, back to their free and wild lives! At the release site: healthy water, rich with aquatic invertebrates and duckweed, quality foods for ducks and other birds!   UP AND RUNNING: SCENES FROM THE EVOLUTION OF THE DUCK HOSPITAL Wildlife rehabilitation is not just hard work, getting dirty, looking tragedy in the face and getting pooped […]
Read more » Bird Ally X Responds to Avian Botulism Outbreak at Tulelake Wildlife Refuge

A Barn Owl’s Broken Wing Heals

[…]provides support for the powerful downstroke of a beating wing and is not palpable). These bones come together in a mass of complex muscles and ligaments that form a shoulder that is capable of flight. Any of these bones can be fractured and recovery might still be possible, but dislocating bones from this joint, causing soft tissue trauma, ends in a patient who will never fly again. The functioning of this joint must be perfect or flight isn’t possible. Unfortunately, many birds suffer traumatic injuries to this joint when struck by vehicles or by collisions with buildings, usually a window. […]