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Five Orphaned Raccoons Return to the Wild (photos!)

[…]a healthy fear of humans, who, let’s face it, have a poor track record with all things wild and free. Raccoon orphans typically start coming in to Humboldt Wildlife Care Center/bax in early May… and 16 weeks later, in early September, those who were first admitted are ready for release. Weight checks on raccoons who are nearing release can be challenging! Here HWCC rehabilitator Lucinda Adamson holds  a young raccoon gently but firmly while intern Tabytha Sheeley (facing away) assists with identification. Once weaned, all of our orphaned raccoons are moved to a 14 day weight check. The reduction in […]
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Brown Pelican Snared In Fishing Line Healed? Why, yes!

[…]of each patient we give them temporary colored leg bands. This young pelican was given a yellow band, and written on the band, the word YES. Her code for the duration of her care? Y for yellow followed by YES, or Y-YES! It took nearly a month for her wounds to heal and her weight to climb back into a healthy range. When she finally was ready to go, man did she! Check out her release photos below. And remember, it was your support that gave her a second chance! Thank you! Donate All photographs Laura […]
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Why are there so few birds captured?

[…]They kill fish. They kill otters. They kill whales. But birds are killed in oil spills by the thousands, and hundreds of thousands. When a container ship hit the Bay Bridge in San Francisco, November of 2007,  58,000 gallons of bunker fuel spilled into San Francisco Bay.  Within days close to 1100 birds, Surf Scoters, Greater and Lesser Scaup, Western, Clark’s, Eared and Horned Grebes, Bufflehead, Common Murres, even a few Brown Pelicans, and more were captured alive. 2500 were collected dead. It can be extrapolated that thousands more were killed and never found. How many thousands is not clear, […]

A Very Lucky Hawk (cool video!)

On November 28, on US 101 where it winds through the gas stations and fast food joints of Eureka California, a Sharp-shinned Hawk (Accipiter striatus) was in hot pursuit of a Sparrow. She caught the Sparrow but was hit by a car in the heavy traffic. A quick-thinking, kind-hearted man saw her get hit, saw her lying on the ground at risk of being hit again and pulled her from the roadway. The Sparrow was dead. A staff member from our clinic, Humboldt Wildlife Care Center, met him at a nearby restaurant – he’d found a brown paper bag to put […]

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 […]

Fire Wildlife Services! Local Organizations’ Letter to Humboldt County

[…]rest of the nation can emulate. Humboldt County citizens are known for their environmental ethics and forward-thinking ideas. The time has come to end the outdated practices employed by Wildlife Services here, and to come together as a community to realize a better solution that protects our public trust resources and values. Sincerely, Monte Merrick Bird Ally X PO Box 1020 Arcata, CA 95518 mm@birdallyx.net Natalynne DeLapp Environmental Protection Information Center 145 G Street, Suite A Arcata, CA 95521 natalynne@wildcalifornia.org Diane Fairchild Beck, Conservation Chair North Group, Redwood Chapter, Sierra Club PO Box 238 Arcata, CA 95518 dfbeck@northcoast.com Kimberly Baker […]
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Fox Sparrow Released in Sunny Brae

[…]of days in our Songbird Aviary, so that we could evaluate the sparrow’s flight, all was well and the bird was ready for release. We took the lucky bird back to the neighborhood where s/he was found. As soon as the box was opened the sparrow darted to the nearest blackberry bramble and back to the life s/he’d known before it was interrupted by the invisible wall of glass. If you find an injured wild animal, please call our hotline 707-822-8839. After hours? Simply follow the directions on our message and we’ll get back to you first thing in the […]

Help Us Help Our Wild Neighbors

[…]to Donate Now… every little bit helps… big bits help too! Thank you for your support and for your love of wildlife! The real reward of our labor – releasing healthy fully recovered patients, such as this Great Egret (Ardea alba) we treated this summer, back to their free and wild […]

Publications

[…]by BAX and made possible by a grant from the Kure Stuyvesant Trust, this poster is available for FREE while supplies last. Available either on paper or on vinyl for durable outdoor use. Shipping and handling to be paid by the orderer. Request a poster – Scroll down the Shop page. You can also pick one up at Humboldt Wildlife Care […]

Young Raven thinks, “Outside the box!”

[…]low body temperature). Fortunately, since it was late in the day, Lynda Stockton, who runs the stranding hotline for the North Coast Marine Mammal Center in Crescent City was nearby. Lynda, also of McKinleyville, regularly walks the beaches of Humboldt County, checking on stranded Seals and Sea lions that have been called in by the public. In her beach work, Lynda often finds struggling seabirds, bringing them to Humboldt Wildlife Care Center when she does. Lynda took the bird back to her house for the evening. She told us, “he was totally down, unresponsive, soaking wet, only breathing.” Lynda kept […]