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Fieldbrook Hawk Gets Another Chance

[…]a few trips to the area, we finally located the grounded bird, an adult Red-tailed Hawk (Buteo jamaicensis), unable to fly. Emaciated, weak, and with an injured right eye, we began the slow process of recovery with fluids, warmth, nutrition and a safe place to rest. Emaciation is a relatively simple condition to treat. The hawk’s eye however was of greater concern. Although the bird seemed able to see, even with the injury, good eyesight is a necessity for release. Once the hawk was well enough to be housed outdoors in our specially built raptor aviary (the Merry Maloney Raptor […]

Rescued! The Luckiest Unlucky Raccoon Ever!

[…]for an evaluation. At this point we hope that he will be in good health, able to be released right away. The raccoon was uninjured. We offered him some snacks and observed him for a few hours to make sure that he was able to properly use his limbs and was fully capable to return to his free life. Very near to the warehouse where he was rescued there was a suitable release site. Raccoons live everywhere that we do. Industrial areas, residential neighborhoods, mountain retreats… Raccoons are truly one of our most common wild neighbors, with whom we share […]

A Wild Mother’s Day of Reunion.

[…]brought a very young Barred Owl (Strix varia) down to the ground in Sequoia Park. Someone walking among the tall Redwoods saw the young, fluffy bird and gave Humboldt Wildlife Care Center/bax a call. Clinic staff went to the scene, and found a young “brancher” (a term birders use to describe a young bird after they first leave the nest but before they can fly) who’d lost their footing. Staff decided to bring the owl into our clinic for a quick exam. With no injuries and in good health, we made plans to return the owl to their family the […]

Did an open dumpster marinate this gull?

[…]is certainly true that such people exist. We treat far too may animals who were injured by intentional acts of cruelty. But this case, a gull found near the restaurants of Old Town Eureka, the smell of rancid meat, and feathers the color of tomato sauce stains, we finally determined that the bird must have been “dumpster-diving” and gotten into somebody’s very old and discarded supper. For wildlife, restaurant grease traps and dumpsters are a source of food that can have a terrible cost. If this gull hadn’t been rescued, as weather got colder, his lack of waterproof feathers would […]

Cormorants in the Crosshairs

[…]western salmonids – the family of fish that includes salmon and Steelhead.2 Dams, as one can easily imagine, are an impassable barrier to the thousands of small streams these fish require for spawning. As an example, before European or American colonists arrived in the Pacific Northwest, it is estimated that 3 million Sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka) entered this watershed through the mouth of the Columbia river each year. In 2014, just over 600,000 Sockeye returned, which was the largest run since 1938, when the Bonneville Dam was built.3 The fourth largest river in North America by volume, the relatively steep […]

d-CON Producer Sues California to Fight Controls on Super-toxic Rat Poisons

[…]Joaquin kit fox photo courtesy USFWS. More photos of species affected by rodenticides are available for media use. โ€œItโ€™s disgusting that d-CON continues to challenge common-sense controls for protecting wildlife, children and pets,โ€ said Jonathan Evans, toxics and endangered species campaign director at the Center for Biological Diversity. โ€œItโ€™s time to put public safety before corporate profits.โ€ The regulations from the California Department of Pesticide Regulation target products sold to the general public in retail outlets and limits super-toxic rodenticide use beyond 50 feet of manmade structures. These super-toxic poisons โ€” called second-generation anticoagulant rodenticides โ€” will still be available […]
Read more » d-CON Producer Sues California to Fight Controls on Super-toxic Rat Poisons

Gray Fox Rescued!

[…]like a veterinary cone isn’t ordinary. The folks who brought her in had been camped in a vacant lot behind a local trailer park. One of them, a young man who said his name was Pocket Trash, was able to catch her as she ran. He told how he’d nearly had her, but she got away, and how he strategized his next move, putting himself where she was headed, and how once caught, she calmed down and allowed herself to be carried, limply, asย  they made their way to our clinic. It was quite a story, but a familiar one […]

Steller’s Jays Find Their Freedom After Rocky Start

Earlier this season, at the beginning of June, we received aย call from a zoo near Redding with a complicated story. Complicated stories often have unpleasant endings, so we proceeded with some trepidation and concern.ย They’d been contacted by a person in northwest Trinity County, far from any wild animal care resources, who had raisedย four nestling Steller’s Jaysย (Cyanocitta stelleri) from soon after they’d hatched. In deeply rural or near-wilderness areas, people who find injured and orphaned wild animals, far from a licensed rehabilitator or completely unaware that wildlife rehabilitators even exist – will oftenย take on the unofficial role of caregiver. We see […]
Read more » Steller’s Jays Find Their Freedom After Rocky Start

Five Orphaned Raccoons Return to the Wild (photos!)

[…]on our website! http://birdallyx.net/tag/northern-raccoon/ ) In order to reduce the potentially fatal stress of captivity (no one likes their freedom taken!) as well as ensure that each youngster maintains her wild spirit, at this point, we handle them very infrequently. This also ensures that all keep a healthy fear of humans, who, let’s face it, have a poor track record with all things wild and free. Raccoon orphans typically start coming in to Humboldt Wildlife Care Center/bax in early May… and 16 weeks later, in early September, those who were first admitted are ready for release. Weight checks on raccoons […]
Read more » Five Orphaned Raccoons Return to the Wild (photos!)

We Stand With Standing Rock Against the Dakota Access Pipeline

Since August, news of the people of Standing Rock, North Dakota, a Lakota community (read Standing Rock statement here), who are working to protect their water supply, their livelihoods, their ancestral lands, their scared sites and the integrity of Mother Earth against a pipeline that is being built through their territory without their approval has spread aroundย the world. ย Thousands of people have come, some from thousands of miles away, including Ecuador and Northern Europe, to stand with Standing Rock and join the water protectors. (read Standing Rock statement here) In the course of peacefully defending Mother Earth, protectors have been […]
Read more » We Stand With Standing Rock Against the Dakota Access Pipeline