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What in the World is a Surf Scoter? (hint: not what. who.)

[…]follows the duck, not the other way around. Almost always, a Surf Scoterย (Melanitta perspicillata) on the beach is a bird in trouble. [If the caller can do so safely, we ask them to pick the bird up, wrap in a towel or jacket and bring them to our facility, Humboldt Wildlife Care Center. If for some reason they can’t, such as no towel, they have dogs with them, or they just don’t think they can do it, we ask for a precise location and organize volunteers to go out and try to capture the ailing bird. Given the size of […]
Read more » What in the World is a Surf Scoter? (hint: not what. who.)

A Young Raven’s Recovery

[…]place, as is the case with Raven: ย “According to Haida legend, the Raven found himself alone one day on Rose Spit beach, on Haida Gwaii {ed. briefly known as the Queen Charlotte Islands}. Suddenly, he saw an extraordinary clamshell at his feet, and protruding from it were a number of small creatures. The Raven coaxed them to leave the shell to join him in his wonderful world. Some were hesitant at first, but eventually, overcome by curiosity, they emerged from the partly open clamshell to become the first Haida.” (more here) Because of this existential debt, whenever it happens that […]

An Orphaned Jay’s Second Chance

[…]Ettersburg, New Harris Store, Weitchpec, Capetown – from the Oregon border to Willits, from Hayfork to the sea. Often we are brought patients from deep in the hills, and we never learn where they actually were found. In June we admitted an uninjured Steller’s Jay (Cyanocitta stelleri) nestling from someplace near Leggett. We have no idea where exactly or how far from the highway she was originally found. We were told that her nest had been destroyed, but not where it had been located. Ordinarily we’d want to try to reunite a healthy nestling with her parents. In this case, […]

Little Brown Bat: from Tiny Baby to Freedom

[…]to help any wild neighbor. All it takes to make it possible is your support. In our busiest season, with our demanding caseload, we need you everyday! Please help us provide what our patients need. If we weren’t here this young bat would’ve been left to die a cold lonely death, on a sidewalk in the middle of bat-nowhere. Thank you for helping us help him! ย Donate HERE photos: Laura Corsiglia and Bird Ally X A great way to help us help wildlife! and have a darn good time doing it too! […]

A Half-Dozen Barn Owls in a Truckload of Hay

[…]now, we are helping them prepare for release by learning to hunt. The lessons tend to come pretty easily for them. You could say that they’re naturals. As soon as they demonstrate that they can support themselves, we know the time for their return the Wild is at hand. These six Barn Owls are getting a second chance at wild freedom. They came so close to being among the many untallied victims of a human world that kills randomly and without recognition simply by operating as it was inended – We grow the hay, we store it, we ship it […]

Celebrating my 22nd Anniversary of Caring for Wild Animals in Need on June 22nd

[…]mine. Jenny Schlieps is her name. We were in the smoking area. I could tell immediately she was a badass, with her army shirt sleeves rolled up tight and an expression that let me know that if she thought you were a fool she might knock you down the stairs. So I struck up a conversation with her. I asked her what she did for work, and she told me she was a wildlife rehabilitator at PAWS. Three months earlier, I had been watchng the coverage on the Northwest Cable News Network of the wreck of the New Carissa, grounded […]
Read more » Celebrating my 22nd Anniversary of Caring for Wild Animals in Need on June 22nd

Masked but not Anonymous

[…]hope that in this time of Sheltering in Place in order to slow the spread of the novel coronavirus that is wreaking havoc around the world, that each of you is safe and healthy. I know that none of us are untouched by the global pandemic, and I also know that many of us will be touched very hard. Nothing like this has happened in anyone’s memory. Certainly we’ve lived through epidemics, bad flu seasons, and worse – the US government’s response to the AIDS crisis in the 80s and early 90s was horrible for those impacted, who lost lives, […]

Thank You 2016 Volunteers!

[…]its aftermath – dishes, laundry and cleaning up poop! And all of this very earthy work is balanced on the other side by the joys and sorrows that are as integralย and as natural a part of helping injured and orphaned wild animals as nutrition, wound treatment, and proper housing. Volunteer wildlife rehabilitators become well-versed in them all. Each year we celebrate the dedication, the strength and the generosity of our volunteer staff. And we invite the public to join us. Not only did we give our volunteers a great night, but with your help we raised over $200! This year’s […]

Red-tailed Hawk Released in Redway

[…]normal body mass and was also critically anemic. Had the bird died during transport from 70 miles away, had the bird died overnight his first day in care, or at any point in the first few days of treatment, it would have been sad, but we wouldn’t have been surprised. Fortunately his attitude was astonishing and the emaciated young fellow lived. He not only lived, but he did so with gusto! As soon we deemed it safe for him to begin eating whole food, he was voracious. First only eating a few mice, soon he was eating two rats a […]

Wild Baby Season is Coming!

[…]they continued to be fed while they learned to fly and eat on the wing. ย  Common Murre (Uria aalge) chicks, separated from their fathers at sea, too young to provide for themselves. Each year we raise any number of these oceanic birds, depending on the how successful the year’s breeding season is… last year we raised 6, the year before, 30. Every year for the last 5 years we’ve provided safe haven and bits of mouse for a Western Screech-owl (Megascops kennicottii) chick found in Fortuna’s Rohner Park Every year we care for severalย Canada Goose (Branta canadensis) goslings who’ve […]