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A Hawk Discovers You Can Go Home Again

[…]based on proximity to Petrolia and suitability of habitat – the presence of trees, open land, and the Mattole River made this a good site. Release! Our patient in flight, over the home she was meant to have. Here is a very short video that really shows the explosive speed of this young hawk… The story doesn’t stop here. Within a few minutes from release, the young former patient postioned herself on the highest tree in the area and began calling. Within a few more minutes, an adult Red-shouldered Hawk arrived on the scene. Perched and calling, soon two other Red-shouldered Hawks, […]

Re-united! Fledgling Hummingbird Back Home Again!

[…]to our clinic for the night. We help many orphaned young birds make it to independence, healthy and ready for the wild, raising them from hatchling to juvenile, but it is obviously true that all wild animals do better with their own parents, in a community of their kind. Aviaries are good in a pinch, but in no way do they replace the real world! So whenever possible, we re-unite uninjured, healthy orphans with their families, or at least foster them to a wild family who will do a good job as surrogate parents – hawks, geese, corvids, deer will […]
Read more » Re-united! Fledgling Hummingbird Back Home Again!

Code Red; The Pandemic Year: part two.

[…]Common Murres and Rhinoceros Auklets, over a dozen Black-tailed Deer fawns, we’ve cared for and released two dozen orphaned Mallard ducklings and nearly a dozen Canada Goslings – many House Finches, White crowned Sparrows, Violet Green Swallows, – we’ve provided care and housing to more baby Robins this year than the last 8 years combined! With our masks on and hearts engaged we’ve helped nearly 30 homeowners and renters peacefully resolve a wildlife conflict, keeping wild families together. Our staff is well-trained, dedicated, and willing to make sacrifices. The long hours are part of the job, as are the joys […]

Want to help us help our wild neighbors in need?

[…]our core team of volunteers. Some of the tasks that volunteers help with: 1. Cleaning: First and foremost, from the newest, most inexperienced volunteer to the director of our facility, a major task for all of us is cleaning. Laundry, dishes, sweeping, mopping, sanitizing – these are mission critical in a hospital setting and your experience in your own life will serve here! If you’re new to this kind of maintenance, we can help you and you dont have to get a job in the food service industry to learn it (as many of us did, like me!). We also […]
Read more » Want to help us help our wild neighbors in need?

Fire Wildlife Services! Local Organizations’ Letter to Humboldt County

[…]rest of the nation can emulate. Humboldt County citizens are known for their environmental ethics and forward-thinking ideas. The time has come to end the outdated practices employed by Wildlife Services here, and to come together as a community to realize a better solution that protects our public trust resources and values. Sincerely, Monte Merrick Bird Ally X PO Box 1020 Arcata, CA 95518 mm@birdallyx.net Natalynne DeLapp Environmental Protection Information Center 145 G Street, Suite A Arcata, CA 95521 natalynne@wildcalifornia.org Diane Fairchild Beck, Conservation Chair North Group, Redwood Chapter, Sierra Club PO Box 238 Arcata, CA 95518 dfbeck@northcoast.com Kimberly Baker […]
Read more » Fire Wildlife Services! Local Organizations’ Letter to Humboldt County

To Date, the Busiest Year in HWCC History (the times they are a-changin’)

[…]an odd place is a normal nesting area for these birds, the closeness to the road was more than the compassionate rescuer could take. Unable to find their parents, we raised them until they could be fostered to a flock of adults of their species near our facility. A nest of Acorn Woodpeckers, above as featherless hatchlings and then as their colors begin to show. Now they are mostly self-feeding and are close to being releasable. Our two songbird aviaries have never been busier. Right now four Acorn Woodpeckers, found as featherless hatchlings in Hoopa, are nearly ready to release […]
Read more » To Date, the Busiest Year in HWCC History (the times they are a-changin’)

Celebrating my 22nd Anniversary of Caring for Wild Animals in Need on June 22nd

[…]might knock you down the stairs. So I struck up a conversation with her. I asked her what she did for work, and she told me she was a wildlife rehabilitator at PAWS. Three months earlier, I had been watchng the coverage on the Northwest Cable News Network of the wreck of the New Carissa, grounded on the beach in Coos Bay, Oregon. The ship had run aground and the hull was breached and the bunker fuel, one of the lowest grade products of petroleum, had covered the beach. The situation was bad, and I was riveted to the coverage […]
Read more » Celebrating my 22nd Anniversary of Caring for Wild Animals in Need on June 22nd

Mule Deer Fawns Released! (Pictures!!)

[…]hunting and full of choice deer habitat is remote but not that far from our clinic. A nearby pond, forest and meadow, and the presence of a deer herd make this a great spot for our youngsters to begin their second chance at wild freedom! It’s a great moment when the crate’s door is opened and your patient immediately puts distance between you and her! Once safely away, a newly released fawn stops to consider the change of scenery. Another fawn bolts for the cover of the trees. Another fawn turns to assess the danger her caregivers pose… Six fawns […]

Mercy, Mercy, Mercy, Baby Skunks!

[…]8 weeks, these distant cousins to the otters (and even more distant to ourselves) will learn to forage for insects, find prey, and recognize the foods that will sustain them in adulthood. We’ll measure their progress and keep a distance between to protect their wildness and preserve their healthy fear of human beings. We’ll need your help. What follows are photographs from their first day in care. Now they are housed outdoors, in privacy. We’ll post more photographs as we can get opportunity during health checks over the coming weeks. Right now, they are gaining weight and using their new […]