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โ€œItโ€™s impossible to know if heโ€™ll survive, but at least we gave him a fighting chance.โ€

[…]and a satellite tracking buoy monitored by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), authorized staff with the Georgia Department of Natural Resources and Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission assessed the entanglement and threw a device called a cutting grapple across the trailing rope. Seconds later, the thick rope parted. But responders could not remove all of the rope because the whale avoided the boats and because the rope is likely entangled in its baleen โ€“ the filter-feeding structures inside the mouths of baleen whales. The hope is the whale known to researchers as No. 4057 will shed the […]
Read more » โ€œItโ€™s impossible to know if heโ€™ll survive, but at least we gave him a fighting chance.โ€

Rescued Gray Fox Recovering Well

[…]a short clip taken immediately before performing last week’s weekly check-up exam. Thank you for your support. Your donation goes directly to the care of all our patients, from this Fox whose luck has turned around, to the dozen Common Murres in care and the two dozen orphaned racccons. Want to help? Click on the donate button! Every little bit helps! Thank […]

2019 Was a Wild Ride

[…]Help keep us here. Help us help our wild neighbors. On the last day of the year-end giving season, please support our work. DONATE On the morning of New Year’s Eve, 2019 – the last day of the year and decade – Humboldt Wildlife Care Center/bird ally x has admitted 1332 wild patients this year. Barring any late day emergency, we likely will finish the year somewhere near this number. By about a 100 patients over 2012, the year we treated 250 fish waste impacted Brown Pelicans, 2019 is the busiest year ever in our 40 year history, and we […]

Barn Swallows! Cliff Swallows! Violet-Greens!

[…]rustica), Cliff swallows (Petrochelidon pyrrhonota), and Violet-green swallows (Tachycineta thalassina). Of the swallows admitted, 24 were nestlings (still in the nest, not fully feathered) or fledglings (fully feathered but still need a parent and may have just left the nest or may have fallen out too soon). Of those 24, two are currently in care and 20 thrived and made it back to wild freedom! Providing care for all of our patients is a joy and a privilege. Swallows can’t help it that their elegance and grace and delightful personalities are so terrific! For me, personally, stepping into the aviary […]
Read more » Barn Swallows! Cliff Swallows! Violet-Greens!

Petition to USDA-Wildlife Services Receiving Broad Support!

[…]North Coast. As of this post, the petition has gathered nearly 45,000 signatures in only 5 days, easily demonstrating that Wildlife Services practices are out of step with not only science, the laws that protect endangered species, migratory birds, and all animals from unnnecessary suffering at human hands, but also the core values of Americans from all walks of life, from hunters to vegans. Bird Ally X supports this petition. We ask you to do the same. Help demand that USDA brings accountability and transparency to USDA-APHIS Wildlife Services program. Or shut it down. Read more about Wildlife Services […]
Read more » Petition to USDA-Wildlife Services Receiving Broad Support!

Happy Holidays from Bird Ally X!

[…]that Bird Ally X and all of our projects, including Humboldt Wildlife Care Center could be swept away in the tsunami of economic damage suffered bay our community as well as the overarching concern for human not wildlife health. By July, after three months of skeleton staff pandemic protocols, HWCC was running on fumes. Our resources were dwindling rapidly as our caseload rocketed. With no volunteers helping us, our small but mighty crew took care of 25% more wild patients between May and August than in 2019, our busiest year to date. In all of California north of Santa Rosa […]

Letting Nature Take ‘Its’ Course.

[…]what it always means is that the best outcome can be achieved by doing nothing – that left alone, the inevitable outcome is the preferred outcome. As wildlife rehabilitators, we hear this expression every day. Two months ago, a man called from somewhere out Highway 36 – he’d found a fawn by the side of the road with a dead doe, presumably the fawn’s mother, most likely hit by a vehicle. The caller had already talked to a local government agent to find help. “The ranger said it would be better to let nature take it’s course,” he said, “but […]

How the media is missing the real drama of the Oil Spill – by Bill McKibben of 350.org

How the media is missing the real drama of the Oil Spill — Please Share (We can be our own media!) When a well started spewing oil off Santa Barbara in 1969, it spurred the first Earth Day, which in turn launched the environmental movement and a fundamental questioning of the balance between humans and the rest of nature. It turned out, in other words, to be a real Moment. It makes one wonder if there really shouldn’t be a little more depth to the endless coverage of the Deepwater Horizon blowout in the Gulf. (Which, just to be semantic […]
Read more » How the media is missing the real drama of the Oil Spill – by Bill McKibben of 350.org

Short-tailed Albatrosses hatch chick on Hawaiian Archipelago

[…]endangered Short-tailed Albatrosses has successfully hatched a single chick on an island in the Hawaiian archipelago, marking the first time the species has ever been known to breed outside of Japan, American Bird Conservancy reports. The hatchling broke through its shell on Eastern Island, one of three small, flat coral islands that comprise Midway Atoll National Wildlife Refuge over 1,300 miles northwest of Honolulu. A second nest, located on Kure Atoll, a 213-acre coral island located about 55 miles from Midway, produced two eggs which failed to hatch. That nest was being incubated jointly by two females, and so the […]
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After a Long Swim, Great Egret Regains the Sky

[…]near the Adorni Center, when she watched a Great Egret come swimming across the channel that separates the shoreline there from Woodley Island. The ordinarily elegant and beautiful white bird clambored out of the water up onto the riprap and hunkered down, apparently exhausted. Catching the Egret wasn’t that hard. A bedraggled big white bird sitting on rocks is easy to spot, and their exhaustion left them unable to flee when approached. Once captured, it was obvious that this was a juvenile Egret, – this year’s model, who’d probably come into this world just two islands over on Tuluwat, which […]
Read more » After a Long Swim, Great Egret Regains the Sky