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A Hawk Discovers You Can Go Home Again

[…]Click here to donate now!] The bird happened to be a Red-shouldered Hawk (Buteo lineatus), an easily recognized member of our community. These magnificent small hawks can be seen along almost any rural road, working over almost any open field, perched in nearby trees, hunting for primarily rodents along the edges of almost everything. Each year we typically raise at least one of these hawks, and sometimes more. This hawk was on the larger side so we imagined that she was female. Without knowing the location of the nest, there was little chance for us to return this wayward nestling […]

Standing with Mother Earth

[…]Dr Martin Luther King Jr said nearly 50 years ago – this country is “the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today.” This election was the voice of that America’s violence. It’s not our voice. Now we’ve got to stand with those who protect the water, protect the air, protect the wild, protect the people. We can honor life. We can tune the life within us to the life outside us. We can join the grandmothers, the water protectors – we can #StandwithStandingRock We can support those who provide the care that the victims of the onslaught of violence […]

Mendocino Board of Supervisors – We urge you to cancel the Wildlife Services contract

[…]at the problem not the symptom. Frankly the reasons to terminate the contract are obvious and easily explored. The contract is not in the interest of the community you were elected to serve. Your constituency is perhaps broader than your predecessors who entered into this contract may have understood. The ecological systems, the people who live and work within them, our wild neighbors all have a right to peaceful co-existence and transparency when, for public safety reasons, lethal options must be used. Your responsibility to all who call our region home demands that you sever the contract with the agency […]
Read more » Mendocino Board of Supervisors – We urge you to cancel the Wildlife Services contract

What Tool Saves the Most Wild Lives? (hint: you may be reading this on it right now…)

[…]trapping and killing, shooting, poisoning – all manner of inhumane solutions can be found easily. Peaceful and humane resolution of conflicts between people and the Wild, however is strictly the name of our game. Every Spring, our volunteers have a chance to practice the delicate art of advocating for and protecting our wild neighbors, and keeping wild families together. Bird Ally X produces several workshops for our staff and volunteers, as well as wildlife rehabilitators from around the state and nation. Our phone workshop is one of our most critical trainings. While the direct care we provide is important, good […]
Read more » What Tool Saves the Most Wild Lives? (hint: you may be reading this on it right now…)

When the Den Goes to Oakland: Three Chipmunk Babies’ Long Detour

[…]Eel Rivers, do they live along the coast. They needed to come home. Arrangements for travel were easily made and soon they were back in Humboldt County. Soon after arrival at HWCC, their eyes began to open. Over the course of five weeks, HWCC/bax staff and volunteers took care of these three little members of squirrel family. As they aged, gradually they were weaned from a milk replacer onto a natural diet. At first they required several feedings throughout the day, with staff trekking back to clinic long past dark to do late night feedings, and arriving earlier than usual […]
Read more » When the Den Goes to Oakland: Three Chipmunk Babies’ Long Detour

Aquatic Birds in Care

Every year, as our busy wild baby season comes to a close, aquatic birds, who breed elsewhere, come back to the Pacific Coast to overwinter. The famed Aleutian Cackling Geese, Brant, Grebes, Loons, seaducks, dabbling ducks, all use our relatively mild winters with historically food-rich waters to while away the hibernal months. At Humboldt Wildlife Care Center, the arrival of wintering aquatic birds means a dramatic change in our caseload. Already this Autumn we have provided care for dozens of adult and juvenile aquatic birds. For adult birds, this season is a time of comparative ease, without the responsibilities of […]

Northern Fulmars, seabirds of mystery

[…]oceans are playing an increasing role) in which hundreds of these birds were beached from Baja to British Columbia… sadly very few birds were released. Most facilities did not have proper pools and lacked experience. Along the coast, most birds died. Evaluating feather condition and ablity to stay dry in water, or waterproofing… At the facility where I was the care manager, we realized that our diet, established to provide high calories without fat, so that oils wouldn’t contaminate the pool, was not merely not helping, but was actively harming the birds, who were dying, several a day. We switched […]

Protect Gray Wolves under California Endangered Species Act

[…]on the front line of wildlife protection teach us that rescuing endangered species is much more easily accomplished using tools that speak to each of us. The language of endangerment cuts across all cultures and perspectives. When we say that a species requires special protection, we either mean it or we donโ€™t. We are either welcoming the wolf home to California, or we are not. If we are, then we must provide the welcome that will make a real difference, not just in the Fish and Game Code, but in the understanding of the people who must yield something so […]
Read more » Protect Gray Wolves under California Endangered Species Act

Why did the Opossum cross the road? (spoiler alert: because someone thoughtlessly built it there.)

[…]it seems obvious that many of the Opossums who are hit by vehicles, since they are large and easily seen in headlights (their name, “Opossum”, is an Algonquin word, purported to mean “white animal” or “white dog”), are hit intentionally. Opossums, according to the internet, are very useful animals. That they eat a large number of ticks seems to be the chief reason to let them be… That a fellow traveler on this one green and blue Earth needs to have utility to human civilization in order that they be spared the worst our kind has to offer is perhaps […]
Read more » Why did the Opossum cross the road? (spoiler alert: because someone thoughtlessly built it there.)

From the Vault: How Does It Feel When a Bird Dies.

[…]was the last question of the morning. Fourth and fifth graders, theyโ€™d sat attentively while I examined a juvenile Black-crowned Night Heron. Theyโ€™d groaned while I debrided the seal bite wound on the chest of a Brown Pelican. I told them about the care each bird would receive and what the antibiotics that were administered were intended to fight and how we would ensure that all of the birdsโ€™ nutritional needs were met. Through all of our interactions the birds and I were separated from the children by a glass wall, headphones and a public address system. Behind me a […]
Read more » From the Vault: How Does It Feel When a Bird Dies.