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Our annual Season’s Greeting, coming to your mailbox soon!

[…]wild universe and here on Earth we see the seasons. So regularly ordinary is it to be flung wild and free through a cosmos we’ll never fully grasp, that we might walk past a miracle here, a breathtaking moment of love and poetry there. It’s a simple observable fact that the wild is boundless and there is no void. Each toehold, every crumb has someone to perch there, someone to feed. If we seek the wild we need look no further than the back of our own hands or the wild red blood cells who swim in our veins. We […]
Read more » Our annual Season’s Greeting, coming to your mailbox soon!

The Babies Have Landed!

[…]a strong possibility we can help achieve a positive outcome for you and for the wild family. Your support is what makes our work possible. Without you, we would be unable to care for these babies, and meet the diverse needs of the wide array of native wild animals who live among us. Thank you for your contribution. You […]

Protect Gray Wolves under California Endangered Species Act

[…]the phone rings. Each time, we must advocate for wild animals, for the laws that protect them, and for the best possible outcome, which includes greater understanding and appreciation for the natural world that sustains us. The best possible outcome includes greater respect for wildlife and wild space. These experiences 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 […]
Read more » Protect Gray Wolves under California Endangered Species Act

Happy Mother’s Jay!

[…]had wondered if the parents had been killed. The best thing to do would be to return to the site and look for the baby’s family, and if possible, attempt to reunite them with their parents. If no parents were found, the baby would come back to HWCC to be raised as an orphan until they could take care of themselves in the wild. Like most parents, Steller’s Jays don’t abandon their babies. But tragedy can occur in a world full of cars, cats, windows, and natural predators – we treat nearly 200 orphaned songbirds each year! We followed the […]

Big Release Day!

[…]served. After several days in care she was flying in our gull aviary. After 3 weeks she was ready for freedom! We met our August goal of $7000! Thank you!! Our goal for September is to build on that, pay summer bills and prepare for winter. You can help! Please click here to DONATE NOW! Thank you! Released with the adult was a juvenile gull who we admitted several weeks ago. His parents had the misfortune of nesting on the deck of a sail boat in the San Francisco Bay area. When the boat sailed for Humboldt midsummer, they brought this baby […]

Unified, to better serve Wildlife

[…]of protecting wild animals from injury and keeping their families together is to advocate for and practice place-based, energy-aware wildlife care. BAX/HWCC, with your support, is able to provide leadership and innovation as we accept the challenge of making true progress for our relationship with our wild neighbors, especially as viewed by the generations that will follow ours. Together we match extensive professional wildlife care experience – from around our state, our country and our world – with the rooted knowledge and deep affection long time residents of our region have for our home. Bringing familiarity with “state of the […]

Volunteers Train to Peacefully Solve Wildlife Conflicts

[…]perhaps thousands more each year, but our small facility on the edge of Humboldt Bay acts as our lab and ongoing classroom to develop and teach effective ways of caring for our wild neighbors and promoting co-existence with the Wild. Your support makes this work possible! Thank you! Want to help? Please donate today! […]
Read more » Volunteers Train to Peacefully Solve Wildlife Conflicts

The welcoming committee was slightly outlandish.

[…]the chicks from the colony out to sea and good foraging areas. The ocean is a big place, though, and for any number of reasons, a chick can become separated from her or his parent. Without a father, the only hope these young birds have is to wash up on a beach and be found. After a week in care, still sporting the nestling fuzz Weighing in at 159 grams on his/her first day in care, a heatlamp and food were offered, as well as a quiet place to become accustomed to this sudden turn of events. For the time […]
Read more » The welcoming committee was slightly outlandish.

2019 Was a Wild Ride

[…]our work in the next year and decade. We need you. Our wild neighbors need you. Today, tomorrow and for all the foreseeable future. Help keep us here. Help us help our wild neighbors. On the last day of the year-end giving season, please support our work. DONATE On the morning of New Year’s Eve, 2019 – the last day of the year and decade – Humboldt Wildlife Care Center/bird ally x has admitted 1332 wild patients this year. Barring any late day emergency, we likely will finish the year somewhere near this number. By about a 100 patients over […]

One Western Grebe Improves Care For All

[…]had an injury just inside her cloaca, or ‘vent’, so it is possible that she was very uncomfortable when eliminating solid waste. In any case, we had to provide her nutrition via a feeding tube, a technique known as ‘gavage’ feeding – basically putting a fish slurry (a blend of smelt, vitamins, and a nutritionally enhanced liquid similar to a protein drink) directly into the patient’s stomach. Gavage feeding is necessary when a patient isn’t able to self-feed. Her weight during this period gradually rose. Our schedule for feeding balanced the needs of the patient to not see our scary […]