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Bored and socially distant? Hie you to the nearest body of water and start picking up discarded and derelict fishing gear! The life you save will probably be Wild.

[…]be coordinating the trip back north so the gull can return to his home on Humboldt Bay, free and ready again for the wild challenges. Everywhere that people go, fishing hooks and line are sure to follow. With our non-essential business on stand-still in many places, wouldn’t this be a good time to assign yourself some essential work? Namely, helping to clean this junk out of our local environs. It’s literally everywhere. If you go to beach, the river, a lake, a bay, a slough – carry a trash bag with you and pick up what others have left behind. […]
Read more » Bored and socially distant? Hie you to the nearest body of water and start picking up discarded and derelict fishing gear! The life you save will probably be Wild.

Gray Fox is Free!

[…]for her, and a dedicated staff, she was able to be treated successfully and returned to her wild and free life. Although the causes are the same for most of our patients, not all are so lucky. Most aren’t. Thanks to your support, we are able to be here 7 days a week, every day of the year. Dedicated volunteers, very limited paid staff, and our Bayside clinic – we don’t have much by way of resources, but we make the most of what we’ve got! Your donation goes a very long way in keeping us going and making sure […]

Rare Opportunity (and the only option we have to continue our work)

[…]There is nothing that being able to afford working without compensation qualifies a person for, and many potentially gifted caregivers cuold be denied opportunity because they don’t have the resources to sustain working without pay. I’d like to change that and widen the reach we have by deepening the pool we draw from. Right now, in California Black Bear cub and Mountain Lion kitten rehabilitation is done only by a few organizations, (if at all in the case of Mountain Lion kittens). Every Black Bear cub admitted from Humboldt, Trinity, Del Norte, Sikiyou, Shasta, or Mendocino Counties is sent to […]
Read more » Rare Opportunity (and the only option we have to continue our work)

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 […]
Read more » Raccoons Make End of Year Deadline: Free in 2017!

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 […]
Read more » Barn Owls displaced, first by hay, then by fire, fly free at last!

Wildlife Services. “Opaque and Obstinate”

[…]River Enbridge pipeline spill response (photo: USFWSMidwest(1)) Christmas Eve 2009, WS agents shot and killed at least 60 birds out of thousands who were attracted to a school of fish in San Franicisco Bay at the end of one of Oakland Airport’s runways. These birds included Comorants, Gulls and even Brown Pelicans who had been taken from the Federal Endangered Species list only a week before the shooting. Carcasses and wounded birds alike were left behind by the agents. Witnesses managed to bring five wounded birds into care. Sadly, none survived.(2) This was an entirely natural situation where a very […]
Read more » Wildlife Services. “Opaque and Obstinate”

Frustration and Politics Hurting Wildlife Rescue Effort

[…]allegations from wildlife rescue workers in the field that BP and the Unified Command were hampering their efforts.  The wildlife response is owned by BP.  As mandated by the Oil Pollution Act of 1990, BP is required to rehabilitate and restore natural resources damaged by their spill. Texas-based Wildlife Response Services, LLC (WRS), contracted by the oil giant though O’Brien’s (a private company on retainer to BP) to oversee the rescue and rehabilitation effort in this catastrophe. Rhonda Murgatroyd, the director of WRS, brought in veteran spill response organization, Tri-State Bird Rescue of Delaware – Tri-State, in turn, brought in […]
Read more » Frustration and Politics Hurting Wildlife Rescue Effort

Our Letter to the California Fish and Game Commission concerning implementation of the Bobcat Protection Act of 2013

[…]Act is intended to protect Bobcats, not Bobcat trappers. Thank you for considering these points and for engaging in the hard work of implementing the will of Californians. Sincerely, Monte Merrick co-director/co-founder Bird Ally X Humboldt Wildlife Care Center ++++++ Want to add your voice to the call for a ban on Bobcat trapping? Check out Project Coyote‘s list of things you can […]
Read more » Our Letter to the California Fish and Game Commission concerning implementation of the Bobcat Protection Act of 2013

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 […]
Read more » Natural history, daily work, and frequent sightings are the keys to quality care.

Black Rain, Toxic Rain.

[…]is that oil and dispersants in the Gulf of Mexico are brought ashore by rain, poisoning farmland and causing disease in plants and animals – at the outer limits of this idea we hear of the entire eastern seaboard rendered foul. Somewhat more credible is a report aired on a Memphis television news program from June 6 that details strange disfigurements of area crops, although this report does not attribute the mystery ailment to any known cause. No follow up could be found. Two days ago, June 30, the Christian Science Monitor ran a piece, Oily rain and cracks in […]