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They Shoot Coots, Don’t They?

[…]case numbers, their care givers and their constraints and return, healthy and strong, to their free and wild lives. We have no real way of knowing, but it has been estimated that for every animal killed by hunters, two or more are wounded and not recovered. While it matters to those few who we are able help, there is much work to be done if we are to minimize or eliminate this kind of suffering. Meanwhile, our facility, capable of treating everyone we admit, from songbirds to aquatic birds to land mammals to raptors is open every day for those […]

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

[…] Still, 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 […]
Read more » Why did the Opossum cross the road? (spoiler alert: because someone thoughtlessly built it there.)

Highway Nearly Claims This Turkey Vulture!

[…]by the side of the road. Happily, there are some people in this world with wide open eyes and compassion in their hearts. Two weeks ago, a young man from Hoopa, Damien Scott, was traveling Highway 299 when he saw this Turkey Vulture* (Cathartes aura) struggling in the road, near Blue Lake. Damien is no stranger to wildlife in trouble. For the last several years his mother, Kim, has worked with Humboldt Wildlife Care Center, helping us with wildlife in need in the Hoopa and Willow Creek area. Damien was a young teenager when Kim started working with us. Now […]

A Mid-Summer Day’s Reality

[…]our wild patients where found. A lot has already happened this year. We’ve admitted, cared for and released over two dozen Mallards, several baby songbirds, and over forty young Opossums. And right now we have over 70 wild animals in care. Mallard ducklings released in June 2018 Our Spring fundraiser in May reached 50% of our goal of $25,000. Thank you to everyone who contributed! While we missed our mark by a wide margin, nevertheless we did raise over $12,000 which we immediately converted to raccoon milk replacer, eggs, vegetables, electricity, water, rent and more. We’re asking again. We’re going […]

Fledgling Marbled Murrelet Reaches the Sea Unconventionally

[…]This is a natural challenge that all Marbled Murrelet chicks have faced for millions of years and for which they are very well suited. [Want to help ensure that Humboldt Wildlife Care Center is always open and ready to care for our wild neighbors in trouble? You can click here now to make a donation today! Thank you!] However new challenges in the last 150 years have had a terrible impact both on the coastal Redwoods and their nesting seabirds. Approximately five per cent of the Redwood forest that was thriving here in the mid 19th century remains. What is […]
Read more » Fledgling Marbled Murrelet Reaches the Sea Unconventionally

Ticks, Tock! Gray Fox Beats Clock!

[…]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 the net: her displeasure is loud and clear.  With a burst she is going… going…   and at last gone from our sight, back to her private freedom. At the time this fox was reported to us, she was in a countdown to death. Unable to move, vulnerable, and with a worsening condition, […]

Masked but not Anonymous

[…]hundreds of raccoon, skunk, swallow, and sparrow families stay together, – learning, growing and becoming part of our natural community. Spring and Mother Earth’s northern renewal are here – they won’t stop for our crisis, and human society, even as most of us are staying home, will continue to injure wild animals, through passive, chronic problems like pollution, habitat loss and general environmental degradation as well as acute and aggressive agents, such as cars, abuse, and other violent conflicts from which no wild animal is safe. Our work is never going to be unnecessary, at least not in our lifetimes. […]

2018, Challenging, Unpredictable, Heartbreaking, Rewarding…

[…]struggle to overcome her. As if there might be a place there, beyond the Wild, where we might stand. And there is: extinction. Every morning this year, Humboldt Wildlife Care Center/bax opened its doors, turned on its lights, became alive with the activity of staff and volunteers launching in to the day’s tasks caring for our patients and responding to phone calls regarding wild animals in need. We sent out teams to rescue hawks from the bank of the Mad River, or a hummingbird trapped inside a storefront. We opened our clinic to what may come – traumatically injured owls […]
Read more » 2018, Challenging, Unpredictable, Heartbreaking, Rewarding…

Catching up: the Deepwater Horizon…

[…]along the northern Gulf shore: Fort Jackson, Louisiana; Gulfport, Mississippi; Theodore, Alabama; and Pensacola, Florida. Today (22 May) we’ve learned that a Key West facility is also underway. So far, four birds have been released, apparently driven to the Atlantic coast of Florida, to be out of harm’s way. While Brown Pelicans and Northern Gannets constitute the majority of birds in care so far, there have also been Laughing Gulls, Turnstones, Royal Terns and Herons. As of now only five birds have died in care or been euthanized due to the severity of their conditions. Because the gushing well is […]