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Thank You 2016 Volunteers!

[…]opened by past BAX intern and current biologist working on watershed restoration, Lauryl McFarland, who performed a delightful and poignant song accompanying herself on ukele. EPIC forest advocate, Rob DiPerna performed a few songs! Rob has a fantastic voice and a real love for music’s capacity to engage the issues of our times! Rob has performed at our show 3 years in a row now! Thank you Rob!  Aerial Dancer Jessica Rubin takes to the skies! Leslie Castellano in flight! The Neighbors – King Crimson and Jonathan Richman blast into a furious exploration of Thelonious Monk’s approach to composition. (not […]

Bald Eagle’s Suffering Ends

[…]BAX co-director, Laura Corsiglia took the bird on his journey south. Shannon Riggs performs a complete examination of the young Eagle. Restraining an Eagle is always challenging work. Just holding that much wild freedom, even in such a mournful condition, is a rarefied experience. It’s a lot to grasp. Dr. Riggs prepares the sedated Eagle for radiographs. A photograph of the x-ray…   Even though we weren’t surprised, the results of the exam were devastating: a badly healed humerus, shortened by the injury and improper alignment; a nearly fused and immobilized left elbow; left radius and ulna suffered multiple fractures and […]

Rescued Gray Fox Recovering Well

[…]rats, birds, some insects and vegetables – and well on her way to being released back to her free and wild life. Here’s 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 […]

After the Babes of Summer Have Gone

[…]of to keep wild families together. Still, each year we admit more babies each year than the year before, and 2018 was no different. In fact we broke records this year for wild orphans treated. And we are close to surviving the challenging pace! [Help us pay our remaining 2018 bills – please, on this #GivingTuesday, donate to HWCC/bax and help us finish the year and prepare for 2019! Donate HERE] Last week, we released the last of the babies we’ve been caring for at HWCC since the Summer – two late season raccoons (Procyon lotor) and a Black-tailed Deer […]

The Case of the Houda Point Screech-owl …

[…]examines the owl’s legs while BAX rehabilitation assistant and board member Lucinda Adamson handles for her. After 3 weeks in care, the owl was visibly more alert and energetic This Screech-owl, however was not likely to have been hit by a car. After a few days in care, with varying ability to stand, his legs began to swell. Both legs had multiple small puncture wounds. With antibiotics and anti-inflammatory drugs added to his daily care, he soon improved. While we’ll never know for sure what caused his injury, we speculate that it was a conflict with another predator, perhaps a […]

Mid-summer at HWCC; the Pandemic Year. part one.

[…]first in a series of quick posts to catch up the news of our mission. Here we are, past mid-July, and our pandemic year is only intensifying. It’s been a while since I’ve been able to take the time to write about our work. We rarely have time for more than a brief social media post to keep our supporters aware of how things are going. Our volunteer program remains in hiatus – to protect them, but also to protect our clinic and our mission. Our small wildlife hospital on Humboldt Bay is the only thing of its kind across […]
Read more » Mid-summer at HWCC; the Pandemic Year. part one.

Rescued! The Luckiest Unlucky Raccoon Ever!

[…]seen, and raccoons are just the ones to point it out. Freed from a certain death, thanks to the compassion and the actions of the people who found him, our lucky unlucky Raccoon patient disappeared back into the wilds of Eureka’s first ward, just a few blocks from where he’d been found. Your support makes rescues like these possible. Not all of our patients are cut out of steel traps, but each of them faced a certain death, caused in nearly every single case by some human invention, were it not for the generous donations you make, that keep our […]

Did Your Pot Kill A Hawk?

[…]Wildlife Care Center supports this effort wholeheartedly. So we drove down to set up an information table at the show and spoke briefly regarding the impact of rat poisons on local wild animals, including the orphans that result when parents are killed! While we don’t endorse the idea of using any poison, second generation anti-coagulants (such as D-Con, etc.) are particularly nasty. We’ll have more on rat poisons soon. Did Your Pot Kill a Hawk? expect to see this in the coming months! Bird Ally X poster promoting rodenticide-free […]

A new format in progress…

[…]This will allow us to more efffectively meet our mission and our commitment to provide educational and informational materials and literature for our colleagues and our neighbors. You will be able to find current updates on animal care and issues we are concerned as well as news from around the digital community that relates to our mission on our facebook page. Our blogger page is still up if you’d like to donate. Also you can still find information for Humboldt Wildlife Care Center, our largest project. See you in the […]

Nearly 200 Birds in Care Contaminated by Fish Waste; Discharge Pipes at Fish Cleaning Stations to Blame

[…]of hundreds of Brown Pelicans and untold numbers of gulls, primarily Heermann’s Gulls, who often forage and hunt with Brown Pelicans. These birds are being doused in fish waste as they forage for scraps beneath the outflow of these polluting pipes. Fish waste and fish oil disrupt the feather structure that allows a seabird to remain dry and warm when entering the cold waters of the North Pacific. Without rescue they die.   Multiple incidents of such contaminations have been documented with photographs and video by Bird Ally X rescue crews in Crescent City and Shelter Cove. California Department of […]
Read more » Nearly 200 Birds in Care Contaminated by Fish Waste; Discharge Pipes at Fish Cleaning Stations to Blame