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Gray Fox is Free!

[…]volunteer staffperson, Stephanie Owens, restrains our patient. Her job is to protect both patient and examiner. 6 pounds of fury can bite pretty hard! Hard to believe how quickly her condition improved. Her ears are nearly perfect now. Compare with the next photo of her on admission day! Raw, flattened by who knows how long in that cup, and infested with fly larvae (maggots) we were worried her ears would not heal well enough for her to hunt again. Thankfully she made a full recovery! (photo: BAX/Heather Freitas) At the release site, close to where she was rescued. Freedom’s just […]

Natural history, daily work, and frequent sightings are the keys to quality care.

[…]shall not be measured by man. In a world older and more complete than ours they move finished and complete, gifted with extensions of the senses we have lost or never attained, living by voices we shall never hear. They are not brethren, they are not underlings; they are other nations, caught with ourselves in the net of life and time, fellow beings of the splendour and travail of the earth.” —Henry Beston, The Outermost House, 1928 Using my own experiences as a rehabilitator, as an oil spill responder, and speaking of my own affections and aspirations, I will both […]
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Wildlife Services. “Opaque and Obstinate”

[…]began, “The raccoon you trapped had babies and now they’re dead. My mother needs them removed.” For a second, I wondered if we had done this. Like many wildlife care organizations, we try to help people humanely resolve wildlife conflicts, sometimes, if necessary, encouraging wild mothers to pack up their babies and leave. Usually we counsel people to tolerate the animals’ presence until the babies are ready to leave the den, and then close up whatever access allowed the situation to begin with. And we don’t use traps. It couldn’t have been us. We quickly sorted out the case of […]
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Raccoons Make End of Year Deadline: Free in 2017!

[…]every two weeks, striking a balance between our need to monitor their progress and their need for privacy and the protection of their wild hearts. By mid-December, we knew that their next check-up would be on New Year’s Eve and we knew that they were likely to be ready to go at that time. When the day arrived, both raccoons passed their release evaluation and were taken to a very nice spot for a young raccoon to enter the Wild, a place remote from human houses, in a healthy ecosystem with a lot of excellent food. Evaluation for release includes […]
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Barn Owls displaced, first by hay, then by fire, fly free at last!

[…]and more than anything else, the aviary was clearly the biggest problem they had. It was time for freedom. As anyone within five hours of Humboldt Bay probably knows, Siskiyou, Eastern Humboldt, and Trinity counties have been suffering from wild fires since early Summer. Unfortunately for these owls, the place on Earth where they came into the word is under a fire threat. So we found a location that incorporated some of the characteristics of home, and hoped for the best, in a world that is becoming a patchwork, with all of us leaping from slippery rock to rock, trying […]
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Ethics in Wildlife Rehabilitation: A Workshop for Wildlife Rehabilitators

[…]to do so? How can wildlife be cared for in a way that is moral, and how do our own moral compasses affect the way that we care for these wild being? We will be exploring these questions and more in this written workshop. To begin, a quote from Henry Beston’s The Outermost House: “We need another, and a wiser, and perhaps a more mystical concept of animals. Remote from universal nature and living by complicated artifice, man in civilization surveys the creature through the glass of his knowledge and sees thereby a feather magnified and the whole image in […]
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The Era of Climate Disruption and Caring for the Wild

[…]plentiful are preserved as they become scarce. We’ll have to ensure that those who’s compassion cannot let them turn away from a wild animal who is suffering are supported. Preserving our love and commitment to Mother Earth is a crucial part of preserving our societies. We cannot do this alone. We need your help. Please help us reach our critical goal of $5000 by the end of this month. We have rent, water, utilities, patient food, medicine, our two staff’s meager salaries, bills that linger from our hectic and expensive busy summer months… without your support, we’ll disappear. Without HWCC […]
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Hooked by Unattended Line, Western Gull Heals and is Released

[…]returns to a wild and free life ———————————- Good luck! ——————————— photos: Laura Corsiglia/BAX Reference: Gaston, Anthony J., Seabirds: A Natural History, 2004 Yale University […]
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Pine Siskins, starvation and salmonella

[…]9 have been released, 7 came in DOA, 22 died in the first 24 hours in care, 3 died after a day had passed, and 13 were humanely euthanized due to the severity of their infection, or wounds caused by window strikes or house cats. Of course there was some overlap between sick Siskins and cat caught Siskins, due to the sick ones being more vulnerable. HWCC did not join in the chorus of those recommending that bird feeders be taken down, on the simple reasoning that starvation was driving this concentration of birds, and that reducing available food would […]