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Mendocino County Suspends Contract with Rogue Federal Wildlife-Killing Program

[…]The countyโ€™s decision came after the coalition, and a Mendocino resident, filed a lawsuit against the county in November for violating the California Environmental Quality Act. As a result of that agreement, the coalition has agreed to dismiss its lawsuit. Mendocino Countyโ€™s previous $142,356 contract authorized the U.S. Department of Agricultureโ€™s Wildlife Services program to kill hundreds of coyotes, as well as bears, bobcats, foxes and other animals in the county every year, without assessing the ecological damage or considering alternatives. Todayโ€™s agreement was set in motion in July 2014, when the coalition, which includes Animal Legal Defense Fund, Animal […]
Read more » Mendocino County Suspends Contract with Rogue Federal Wildlife-Killing Program

BAX Staff Activated by Oiled Wildlife Care Network

[…]spotted two Ruddy Ducks that appeared to be contaminated by diesel. By Monday afternoon BAX staff along with other responders from CDFW and the Oiled Wildlife Care Network (OWCN) were in the field searching for any wild animals impacted by the spill. Lucinda Adamson, BAX/HWCC wildlife rehabilitator at the Big Lagoon spill last week.ย  (photo: Bird Ally X) BAX responder, Elissa Blair surveys Big Lagoon early in the morning searching for oiled wildlife.ย ย  (photo: Bird Ally X) By late Wednesday, no live oiled animals had been found. One dead Ruddy Duck (Oxyura jamaicensis) was found that was later confirmed to […]
Read more » BAX Staff Activated by Oiled Wildlife Care Network

Can You Help?

[…]BAX/Humboldt Wildlife Care Center raises a certain amount of money. Without this money we could accomplish nothing. Our supporters make a big difference everyday in the lives of injured and orphaned wild animals. Food for our pateints. Medical supplies. Patient housing. Water. Electric. Gas for rescues across our huge geographical area Small stipends for our most critical staff. These are the direct costs of helping individual wild animals and wild families. We also advocate for wild animals in an effort to shift public policy toward peaceful co-existence with our wild kin. Producing workshops and educational materials for wildlife rehabilitators is […]

Working for the Wild in Tough Times

[…]rages, displacing tens of thousands of people. And since the Tubbs Fire that tore through Santa Rosa and across wine country October of 2017, it’s beginning to look like the new world order. We have concern for our friends and colleagues who are directly in harm’s way. If you live near a wildlife rehabilitator impacted by these fires, winds and power outages, please help them out… A central piece of the mission of Bird Ally X is to help provide continuity of care that is available for our wild neighbors in times of trouble. A common way we’ve expressed this, […]

Season’s Greetings, 2018!

Dear Friends and Supporters! Season’s greetings once again! Another year of challenges, growth, griefs and joys! Bird Ally X/Humboldt Wildlife Care Center staff and resources were deeply challenged by record numbers of patients, our busiest summer, very late season babies, and emergency care of birds hit by botulism in the Tulelake National Wildlife Refuge. As climate change and other disasters alter what we thought was immutable, we find our knowledge and comprehension of the world no longer seems to fill in the map. While our maps are suddenly full of blank spaces, the world has no voids. Each nook and […]

Five days left to comment! Let CA Department of Pesticide Regulation know you care that rodenticides are reaching nearly every wild animal in our state!

[…]in the populations of many different wild species, from threatened birds of prey to Bobcats. Latest results show over 90% of wild animals test positive for rodenticide exposure! The California Department of Pesticide Regulation (DPR) has begun the process of re-evaluating these terrible poisons for further action to address their mounting prevalence in the environment. The deadline for public comments has been extended to January 16, 2019. Our friends at Raptors Are the Solution (RATS) has this suggestion for commenting on the DPR action ” Please send a short email to Rodenticide.Comments@cdpr.ca.gov expressing your support for DPRโ€™s proposed decision and […]
Read more » Five days left to comment! Let CA Department of Pesticide Regulation know you care that rodenticides are reaching nearly every wild animal in our state!

The Luckiest Hawk…

[…]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 a […]

Horned Grebe Click Bait!

[…]to wildlife… After two weeks in care, the grebe was ready to get back in the ocean. Lucinda Adamson and a couple of our beloved volunteers, Matt and Jeannie Gunn, took him to the Samoa Peninsula. Humboldt Bay is a bird’s world and this bird was eager to rejoin it! (see pictures below!) Your support made this bird’s rescue possible. Aquatic species require specialized that cannot be accomplished without skill and specialized equipment. If you haven’t contributed, please consider making a donation or sharing our stories with your neighbors and friends. As always, thank you for your love of wild […]

After the Babes of Summer Have Gone

Each Spring we wonder if we’ll survive the challenges of our looming season of caring for hundreds of orphaned wild animals. Each Spring we do what we can to reduce the number of trapped or killed wild mothers, stop needless nest destruction and anything else we think 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, […]

Young Common Murres in Care

[…]rich water) are excellent for seabirds, many of whom we rarely meet. Even the Common Murre (Uria aalge), a species with a breeding population well over a million in the Northeast Pacific ocean, is not so commonly seen after all, except by ocean-going anglers and others aboard vessels. Common Murres spend their lives on the open ocean coming to land only during the nesting season, when they lay eggs and raise their young on sea stacks and rocky cliffs – Devil’s Slide just south of San Francisco, the Marin Headlands, on sea stacks and rocky cliffs all the way to […]