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The Shadow Chipmunk

[…]But it doesn’t matter where you land in the various spectrums, your time here is your own and freedom demands that you make it count! One quick little animal who occupies a relatively small range in the West – which thankfully includes much of California’s Redwood coast – is Tamias senex, or as this small member of the squirrel family is more commonly known, the Shadow chipmunk, or Allen’s chipmunk, and in the Wiyot language, Salás. The area shaded green represents the known range of Tamias senex, the Shadow chipmunk, in California. Found in our state, as well as Nevada and Oregon, […]

Our New Mugs Have Landed

[…]of this year!). We’re asking $10 for each mug. Thank you for your support over the years, and for helping us improve the quality of care available for wildlife in Humboldt, in California and around the world. It’s serious work and we couldn’t do it without you! And if you can, please donate here! Thank […]

Last American Wigeons from Klamath Basin Botulism Outbreak Released!

[…]your help. If you want to donate now, click here ] After a week in our pool, each duck was ready for freedom. Fortunately, at the nearby Arcata Marsh, there are hundreds of overwintering Wigeons with plentiful food available. It’s possible these three wigeons would have made it to Humboldt Bay this Winter anyway. In any case, after a brush with death by botulism, a lifesaving trip through our rapidly manifested “Duck Hospital” set up near the Lava Beds, followed by some time spent in our pools, gaining weight, improving feather condition, restoring red blood cells, and gaining strength, these […]
Read more » Last American Wigeons from Klamath Basin Botulism Outbreak Released!

Wild at Heart

[…]wild. Here at the center of the Redwood Coast, on the edge of our great Western Sea, under the sky and standing on ground that has seen thousands of  years joy and sorrow, beauty and tragedy – suffered the losses of forests, of people, of species, of stability, here we are, now, alive, breathing, dreaming, and  striving to help those for whom there would be nothing if we weren’t here. We are one of the small hearts you’ll find at the center of everything.   PLEASE HELP. Your contribution goes directly toward our […]

Gray Fox Rescued!

[…]a mild pain reliever and antibiotics. She’s very thin. Right now she’s resting more comfortably with an easy to digest diet of fish, eggs and canned cat food. She’s not out of the woods yet, but thanks to the quick and good action of Pocket Trash, she is out of the trailer park and out of the cup. And thanks to you, we are here, 7 days a week, 365 days a year, to provide care for injured and orphaned wild animals. Your support gives people who’ve found an animal in serious trouble, like this fox, a place that can […]

Mendocino Board of Supervisors – We urge you to cancel the Wildlife Services contract

[…]strike at the problem not the symptom. Frankly the reasons to terminate the contract are obvious and easily explored. The contract is not in the interest of the community you were elected to serve. Your constituency is perhaps broader than your predecessors who entered into this contract may have understood. The ecological systems, the people who live and work within them, our wild neighbors all have a right to peaceful co-existence and transparency when, for public safety reasons, lethal options must be used. Your responsibility to all who call our region home demands that you sever the contract with the […]
Read more » Mendocino Board of Supervisors – We urge you to cancel the Wildlife Services contract

Feathers Badly Singed in Fire, Osprey Fitted For Second Chance.

[…]repeated on the other side. We stopped after replacing five feathers on the right side. Being handled for any length of time is very stressful for wild animals. We gave the Osprey a 20 minute break. Also it was time for our baby opossums to be fed and we needed the room! We came back and repeated the process, but on the left side. After finishing the five feathers on the left, the Osprey got another break. Each wing had taken approximately 30 minutes. The feather imping team could use the break too. The task isn’t technically difficult, but the […]
Read more » Feathers Badly Singed in Fire, Osprey Fitted For Second Chance.

In Wildness is the Preservation of Raccoons, In Raccoons is the Preservation of the Wild

[…]Podcasts | Email | RSSRaccoon (Procyon lotor) babies have a lot to learn. As adults, Raccoons hunt and forage for a wide range of food, from songbird eggs to berries to the salmon a bear leaves behind. Raccoons hunt small rodents, crunch on snails, and nibble the mushrooms on the forest floor. Raccoons are brave, resilient, adaptable and notoriously intelligent. Orphaned Raccoons in their housing, prepare for the wide and wild world. To help them recognize the real world when they see it, we’ve provided them an artificial river of concrete. We call it the Los Angeles river. No substitute […]
Read more » In Wildness is the Preservation of Raccoons, In Raccoons is the Preservation of the Wild

The baby season that began 3 weeks early.

[…]Necessity or Dumb Luck is no god. That’s where each of us comes in. Elbow grease. Commitment. Community support. By the end of April we finished putting up a waterfowl aviary and adjacent smaller duckling pond, our first since moving to Manila in March of 2023. Maybe what I mean by Dumb Luck is the aspect of our work that requires us to believe that what is necessary will be done, because it must be done. In hindsight, after the accomplishment, one feels enormous gratitude, and also very lucky. As it happened, the season just got busier and busier from […]

When Wildlife Needs a Bath

[…]far less toxic. After trying several brands advertised as natural, we found Seventh Generation® Free and Clear to be the most effective at removing the fish oil. This soap was far less irritating to the person using it as well. The detergent most commonly used on oiled wildlife can be very harsh to work with over an extended period of time and some people have a very adverse reaction to it, developing rashes, or experiencing burning sensations in their eyes and other unpleasant side effects. As an excellent, unexpected bonus, Seventh Generation® rinsed out of feathers in half the time […]