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[podcast] New Wild Review vol 1 ep 5 Wildlife Care with the World Upended

[…]disease – 19. As states, counties and municipalities move to slow the spread of the virus, through shelter in place orders and social distancing, essential services, including wildlife rescue and rehabilitation, continue. How does the pandemic effect our work? How will the pandemic effect wildlife? We don’t know. But we can ponder it while we work. If you’re at a facility that is open and admitting patients, check out this World Health Organization document on preparing your workplace to keep yourself and co-workers […]
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Large Aviary at Humboldt Wildlife Care Center Nears Completion

[…]aviaries for every species of bird that we treat. We’ve also added new mammal housing for complete onsite care for all our raccoon, opossum (and this year even coyote) patients!  Sage green, helping preserve our rural ambience! These additions do cost money! We use recycled, re-purposed and donated materials whenever we can but still, your help is greatly appreciated. Our goal of $5000 will cover the cost of the new Large Aviary. You can help us meet that goal by contributing today! Your contribution directly supports the necessary work of rehabilitatiing wildlife injured and orphaned, nearly 100% of the time […]
Read more » Large Aviary at Humboldt Wildlife Care Center Nears Completion

Happy Mother’s Jay!

[…]had wondered if the parents had been killed. The best thing to do would be to return to the site and look for the baby’s family, and if possible, attempt to reunite them with their parents. If no parents were found, the baby would come back to HWCC to be raised as an orphan until they could take care of themselves in the wild. Like most parents, Steller’s Jays don’t abandon their babies. But tragedy can occur in a world full of cars, cats, windows, and natural predators – we treat nearly 200 orphaned songbirds each year! We followed the […]

New Study Shows Very Common Pesticides Disrupt Migratory Birds’ Sense of Direction.

[…]home and the fulsome days of summer – the field the only resource left after the prairies and forests were industrialized by farming – and as soon as you eat you begin to forget your way, where you were going, perhaps even why. If the poison is also causing you to starve, well, you won’t last long – a very dim bright side. In neither case will you make it out of there – make it to your destination, the place where you and your mate get about the business of bringing the next generation of your kind into the […]
Read more » New Study Shows Very Common Pesticides Disrupt Migratory Birds’ Sense of Direction.

Power Outage

[…]concerns during an upcoming windstorm. Power is scheduled to be turned off at midnight tonight, and be off for at least 36 hours. Our phones will not be functional during this time. Please use 707 832 8385 or 707 832 8805, if you need to reach Humboldt Wildlife Care Center while the power is out. We will be open during this time. Please be patient and kind during this outage. Hopefully it will pass without too much […]

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

[…]we rehabilitate. These two Scoters are housed in one of our seabird pools, where they can float comfortably in privacy, regain body mass, receive treatment for parasites and any other condition that they present, and recover. Even though both birds are Surf Scoters they are still easy to tell apart. The bird on the right is an adult male and the bird on the left is an immature male, just beginning to molt into his adult feathers. If they were both mature males, we’d have to put on temporary leg bands in order to keep them straight.  Water is expensive! […]
Read more » What in the World is a Surf Scoter? (hint: not what. who.)

The Luckiest Hawk…

[…]highways… mowed shoulders and medians reveal the little ones’ movements. Light posts and wires afford good perching to watch, wait and swoop down for the meal. Hawks, especially Red-tailed and Red-shouldered, are often seen this way – perched above our freeways. Obviously, such a strategy carries a horrible risk. During 2013, Humboldt Wildlife Care Center/BAX admitted 9 Red-tailed hawks, 2 Red-shouldered hawks and 1 Sharp-shinned hawk that had been hit by cars. None survived. Last Sunday, we took a call from a woman who was driving between Eureka and Arcata on US 101, near the Farm Store. She’d just seen […]

Working for the Wild in Tough Times

[…]got the chance to do just that when the Oiled Wildlife Care Network held its biennial conference for California oiled wildlife caregivers in Eureka. Bird Ally X staff taught multiple workshops on housing, stress reduction, and other aspects of wildlife rehabilitation. Our facility in Bayside became a working lab for the day, with participants from around the state visiting to learn basics of providing housing for the many different species that might be impacted by an oil spill, now that pipelines and rail cars are used more than ever to move oil around the world. In a way, it was […]