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Freedom’s Greetings

[…]raccoons. Lacking a mother, their education falls on us. So we prepare our young patients to forage for appropriate, natural food, become familiar with natural features, even find fish in a stream in our simulated river that runs through our raccoon housing! Fruit is found on trees, insects in logs, fish in streams – this knowledge plus a healthy fear of human beings is our recipe for raccoon success.  In some ways, we are in the same boat as our raccoon patients, struggling to live right, facing a separation from Mother Earth that we didn’t ask for yet need to […]

Orphaned Raccoons Live Stream with Brook(e)! PHOTOS!

[…]with neighborhood raccoons or humanely evict raccoon families from raccoon dens in crawl spaces and attics. Because of this success, we’ve admitted less than 20 raccoon babies this year. (to read about our other years, and learn more about our raccoon program check out all of our stories tagged Northern Raccoon) The following photos our from our first group of raccoons released this year, after four months in care, learning as much about the wild world as they can in care. In these photos, taken by Laura Corsiglia, one our staff, Brooke Brown, releases three raccoons, two sisters and a […]
Read more » Orphaned Raccoons Live Stream with Brook(e)! PHOTOS!

Barn Swallows! Cliff Swallows! Violet-Greens!

[…]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 to feed them is like a restorative vacation in the middle of the incredible caseload of Summer. Most of them are out there now, meeting their intended destiny. And the reason we had the aviary, had the food, and had the facility to provide their care is because of your support. Thank you for making our work possible! DONATE HERE video shot and edited by Laura […]
Read more » Barn Swallows! Cliff Swallows! Violet-Greens!

When the door is open, freedom is restored.

[…]created, providing appropriate treatment, and releasing those who fully recover back to their wild and free lives is how we spend every single day of the year at HWCC/bax. But not without your support. We are in the middle of crucial fundraiser right now to help recover the costs of our incredibly busy year. We need to raise $10,000 by the end of October, in order to pay our rent and other critical bills! As of the 15th we aren’t even halfway there, which is cuaseing us some concern! Please help if you can! Donate today! Every little bit helps! […]

Fieldbrook Hawk Gets Another Chance

[…]dreaming, preparing for another year, another chance to raise more young, another day to be alive, free and wild. Your support is how and why. Thank you! All photos: Bird Ally […]

What Tool Saves the Most Wild Lives? (hint: you may be reading this on it right now…)

[…]of our game. Every Spring, our volunteers have a chance to practice the delicate art of advocating for and protecting our wild neighbors, and keeping wild families together. Bird Ally X produces several workshops for our staff and volunteers, as well as wildlife rehabilitators from around the state and nation. Our phone workshop is one of our most critical trainings. While the direct care we provide is important, good work done on the phone can prevent many of the injuries and deaths before care is needed. As the old saying goes, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of […]
Read more » What Tool Saves the Most Wild Lives? (hint: you may be reading this on it right now…)

A Young Bald Eagle, A Difficult Case, A Slim Chance.

[…]care we could provide was to end their suffering, but we don’t often take our supporters and community members through that process. It’s our task and we perform it as we need to, without regret, because it is a simple fact of wildlife rehabilitation that most  of our work consists of ending the suffering of animals still alive but battered, sometimes beyond recognition, let alone repair. Also, we don’t often share the stories of animals who are still in care. The primary reason is that for wild animals, captivity itself is life threatening. The stress of being in a caregiver’s […]
Read more » A Young Bald Eagle, A Difficult Case, A Slim Chance.

Gearing Up For Spring

[…]only the expenses of February, March and April, but we’ll enter May with the resources on hand and the facility prepared to begin meeting the following months, our busiest time, Half of the animals we treat in any year are admitted in June, July, and August. Your support this Spring will give us a strong place to stand as we enter the most difficult part of our year. Our community’s support is how we meet the challenge of treating hundreds of wild neighbors each year, helping resolve thousands of wildlife conflicts peacefully and prepare the next generation of wildlife caregivers. […]

The welcoming committee was slightly outlandish.

[…]the chicks from the colony out to sea and good foraging areas. The ocean is a big place, though, and for any number of reasons, a chick can become separated from her or his parent. Without a father, the only hope these young birds have is to wash up on a beach and be found. After a week in care, still sporting the nestling fuzz Weighing in at 159 grams on his/her first day in care, a heatlamp and food were offered, as well as a quiet place to become accustomed to this sudden turn of events. For the time […]
Read more » The welcoming committee was slightly outlandish.

Did an open dumpster marinate this gull?

[…]warm, sudsy bath. With our extensive oil spill experience, and the infrastructure we built at HWCC for the 2011 and 2012 fish-oiled Brown Pelican response, we were able to clear up his troubles quickly. BAX/HWCC staff Lucinda Adamson and Elissa Blair wash Western Gull. It didn’t take long to get his bath water dirty! Now that’s a clean tail. Rinsing the soap out – the magical moment when clean water appears to make feathers dry! Internal code, and some happy talk! (all above photos: Carol Andersen/BAX) A few days after his bath, his feathers were waterproof and he was flying […]