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Mercy, Mercy, Mercy, Baby Skunks!

[…]8 weeks, these distant cousins to the otters (and even more distant to ourselves) will learn to forage for insects, find prey, and recognize the foods that will sustain them in adulthood. We’ll measure their progress and keep a distance between to protect their wildness and preserve their healthy fear of human beings. We’ll need your help. What follows are photographs from their first day in care. Now they are housed outdoors, in privacy. We’ll post more photographs as we can get opportunity during health checks over the coming weeks. Right now, they are gaining weight and using their new […]

Alert! Humboldt County Board of Supervisors to Consider Wildlife Services contract July 22

[…]Agency,” at their July 1 meeting, will re-open the discussion this Tuesday, July 22. (For more information, look here and here) As regular readers of Bird Ally X know, USDA Wildlife Services has a long and ignoble history, dating back to the late days of the 19th century and westward expansion. From extermination of Gray Wolves to the senseless killing of baby Raccoons, no matter where we look, Wildlife Services is bad news for wild animals. If you live in Humboldt County, please telephone your District Supervisor and ask that she or he votes to sever the contract with Wildlife […]
Read more » Alert! Humboldt County Board of Supervisors to Consider Wildlife Services contract July 22

Great Horned Owl Spends the Night Stuck in a Wet Garbage Can, Released After Care.

[…]Great Horned Owl. Thank you for making our work possible. If you want to help please donate! video and photos: Laura […]
Read more » Great Horned Owl Spends the Night Stuck in a Wet Garbage Can, Released After Care.

2020 was a year…

[…]kits to Great Blue Heron chicks blown from their high nest in a freak Summer storm, from caring for 3000 ducks and shorebirds driven to near death by botulism in the Lower Klamath Refuge to cleaning 14 fawn bottles three times a day until all the fawns are weaned and released, staff was ready, pandemic protocols in place, to do the job we’ve always done – helping our wild neighbors in need. All of us at HWCC/bax thank you deeply for all that you did to help us durvive this year. We wish you a much better 2021, and a […]

A Peregrine Falcon we called Carson

[…]were re-directed into captivity by an unfortunate event in our hearts. Your support for our work, and for our staff, especially those who worked closely with Carson and are grieving his loss, is appreciated more than we can ever say. Thank […]

Young Pileated Woodpecker Rejoins Her Family

[…]this year’s expenses more than we ever have. Your donation will go directly to the treatment and care for all our patients. It will also help us begin the repairs we need to make so that we’ll be ready for whatever this coming winter, and then next year bring our way. Thank you for being there for us in the past. We need you now and in the future too! Please donate today. Thank you! all photos Laura Corsiglia/bird ally […]

A Wild Mother’s Day of Reunion.

[…]dry up and blow away like one hit wonders from the 70s! Your support keeps us open, prepared, and available to help all of our wild neighbors when their proximity to civilization leads to trouble. Thank you for helping make sure that our mission is kept on track and our work is supported. Thank you for donating and thank you for your love of the wild. DONATE HERE photos: Laura […]

Much maligned, but so refined, an elegant Skunk is released.

[…]was stable enough to be housed outdoors. After a few weeks, he was fit and ready to return to his free and wild life. We released him into the same area he was found. As you can see in the following phone pics, he made short work of dashing for cover… And then he was gone…. Your support makes our work providing care for our wild neighbors who’ve become orphaned or injured due to our built world possible! Without you, neither this skunk, nor the other 15 skunks we’ve treated in 2016, nor the other 900 wild animals, as well […]
Read more » Much maligned, but so refined, an elegant Skunk is released.

Young Common Murres in Care

For Northern California and the Pacific Northwest, natural conditions (i.e., deep, cold nutrient 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 3 Pillars of Wildlife Rehabilitation

[…]is a complex field, where a seemingly endless amount of information must be mastered in order to become a competent and skilled wildlife rehabilitator. Wildlife rehabilitators need to learn how to care for hundreds of species, each with their own unique requirements. It is natural to feel overwhelmed as a new wildlife rehabilitator. However, you don’t need to know everything in order to have a good foundational knowledge of wildlife rehabilitation practices. In order to provide basic, quality care to patients, wildlife rehabilitators must understand three key concepts: warmth, hydration, and stress. Warmth Maintaining an appropriate body temperature is critical […]