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[…]flight from his nest landed her on Eureka’s waterfront. Too young to know better, she was easily picked up by a well-intended person and brought to us. After a day of observation to insure she was in good health, we returned her to her family. ย When we performed this Peregrine falcon’s initial examination, he (presumed male due to smaller stature) was in good health with the exception of a fractured right ulna. As fractures go, this is one of best he could have gotten. Whether bird, human, other mammal, even dinosaur, vertebrates with limbs have ulnas – it’s one […]
[…]at meeting our mission. We are excited and optimistic for this opportunity to expand our capacity to meet the needs of injured and orphaned wildlife on California’s North Coast and beyond and to practice and teach proven best practices and foster advances in wildlife rehabilitation. As the region’s only permitted all-species wildlife rehabilitation clinic, we serve an enormous geographical area, covering nearly 20,000 square miles. Extending from northern Mendocino County to Curry County, Oregon, and east as far as Weaverville in Trinity County, our responsibility to provide care for injured and orphaned wildlife is weighty. This region is more than […]
[…]Wildlife Care Center, and the 440 birds admitted during the botulism outbreak at the Lower Klamath Refuge north of Shasta, we provided direct care for 1600 wild animals. We provided this care on approximately $110,000. (Thank you to everyone who donated!) While it is certainly the case that some patients cost more in care than others, still, this means that we spent an average of $68.75 per patient. Think about that. On less than 70 dollars per patient, we successfully treated and released hundreds of our wild neighbors. Believe it or not, this remarkable success is also a failure. We […]
[…]object in error, may be frustrating to those who want to advance on some project, or inject the latest fad into farmed fish, but it is the proponent’s obligation to prove those positives as false – it is not the public nor the agencies charged with protecting the public’s health, well-being, and rights, mission, let alone obligation, to protect companies and governing bodies from the demands of due diligence. At least the same respect is owed to the autonomous lives of our wild neighbors. We must consider them as sentient and with the same rights of existence as our own. […]
[…]to fly. So a fledgling (a young bird just learning to fly) on the ground may be in trouble. Upon examination, the 3 gram youngster had no apparent injuries and seemed in good health. That afternoon we attempted to return the wayward fledgling to his or her family, but an afternoon wind had kicked up and it became difficult to hear any adult hummingbird activity. This little one would need parents to survive, so the bird was brought back to our clinic for the night. We help many orphaned young birds make it to independence, healthy and ready for the […]
[…]at risk. As our human community grapples with the health and economic challenges of COVID19, donations have fallen sharply even as our admissions of wild animals in need is up nearly 20% over last year! WE NEED YOUR HELP BADLY! 2020 began in turmoil. First of all, as wildlife centered caregivers, the fires in Australia, with their incalculable toll on wild animals was difficult to watch without understanding that climate chaos threatened all that we hold closest to our hearts, all that gives life on our beautiful green Earth meaning. Second of all, our fundraising in 2019 did not keep […]
[…]animal to the wild! You can help keep wild families together! You can help keep our facility functional and clean! Volunteers are needed for all tasks. After putting our volunteer program on hold in March of 2020, we’ve been slowly rebuilding it, adding volunteers to our shifts as the pandemic has allowed, and now we are ready to add more. Volunteers are a crucial element in the field of wildlife rehabilitation. All wildlife rehab facilitities operate on shoestring budgets and without the necessary help from volunteers, we’d never last. The pandemic has been brutal on staff and we are very […]
[…]from Myrtle Avenue last Friday (the 13th) pulled up to our door, wildlife rehabilitator Lucinda Adamson was hoping for the best, but prepared for the worst. Lucinda greeted the rescuer and went out with him to his truck. Inside the covered bed, the falcon had gotten loose and was trying to fly. “The rescuer called on his way to say the bird must have only been stunned,” Lucinda recalled, “he asked me, ‘should I just let him out?’ – I said no bring the bird in… might as well check him out.” Lucinda had to get the falcon from the […]
[…]Ally X; Environmental Protection Information Center North Group, Redwood Chapter, Sierra Club; Klamath Forest Alliance; Friends of the Eel River ________________________________________________________________________________________________________ July 18, 2014 Humboldt County Supervisors 825 5th St., Room 111 Eureka, CA 95501 Re: Support for Terminating Humboldt Countyโs Contract with APHIS-Wildlife Services Dear Supervisors Bohn, Fennel, Bass, Lovelace, and Sundberg, The undersigned organizations write to express our support for the June 30, 2014 request from the Animal Legal Defense Fund (ALDF), the Center for Biological Diversity, and other groups to terminate Humboldt Countyโs contract with the U.S. Department of Agricultureโs APHIS- Wildlife Services (Wildlife Services) and bring […]
[…]askew. We’ve recently admitted a young orphaned fawn from the Bridgeville area – the latest in the season that we’ve admitted such a young deer. Crow fledglings can still be seen as well. We’ve treated less than half the raccoons as last year, but three times the songbirds. While the future is as uncertain as ever, now we mustย accommodate new rhythms, which means new planning for our capacities, from staffing to housing to the balance in our bank account. We are in a new normal, as they say. No matter where in the world we work, wildlife rehabilitators are […]