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Great Horned Owl Trapped in Duck Coop…

[…]duck coop on their property near the stateline with Oregon said that they’d seen the bird harassing one of their ducks. The next day they found her trapped inside the coop, covered in mud, with a recently eaten duck nearby. How the Great Horned Owl (Bubo virginianus) got in the coop is a mystery. The duck was a big Muscovy, a large breed that would have been a very unusual prey species for a Great Horned Owl. While these are fairly large owlsย – a typical Muscovy is still nearly twice as big. Catching food isn’t supposed to be a fight […]

Storm-tossed Gull Finds Freedom on Christmas Day

Every day, whether weekday, weekend, or important national or cultural holiday, is still a day in the modern world for our wild neighbors – and that’s why Humboldt Wildlife Care Center is open every day of the year. This morning, besides for the regular care our patients receive – bedding changes, food, medicine, regular exams – we admitted a new patient, a Pine Siskin (Spinus pinus) who had been caught by the family cat, and we cleared this Glaucous-winged Gull (Larus glaucescens) for release! Over the past two weeks of wild weather, our wildlife clinic’s list of patients has leaned […]
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Motherless Mallards Find Their Freedom!

After six weeks in care, our first wild orphans of the year, these three Mallards (Anas platyrhynchos), finished their time with us this weekend and were released back to their free and wild lives. Found in a back yard in McKinleyville, these youngsters were only 30 grams when we admitted them in the middle of April. Now over 700 grams and with their flight feathers nearly grown in, we released to one of our area’s local “duck nurseries”, a marshy location that is a smorgasbord of appropriate Mallard diet. Here they’ll finish their apprenticeships on their way to becoming successful […]

Baby Season!

Coyote pup receives physical examination upon admission. AS spring rolls into summer at BAX/HWCC, we are deep in the heart of our busiest season –  our small facility is filling quickly with young animals without parents to care for them. All were made orphans during an unfortunate conflict with the man-made world: mothers shot, mothers hit by cars, mothers and babies caught by house cats, some babies picked up by and taken away from their parents by well-intended thoโ€™ misguided โ€œrescuersโ€… โ€จโ€จ Since last summer weโ€™ve made four additions to our patient housing – an aviary for ravens, hawks and […]

Wild Fires Threaten Wild Lives.

[…]were refugees from the flames. Some of these patients have recovered well, but weโ€™ve been made aware of more wild animals that may have been rescued from the fire but are unable to be brought into care at HWCC/bax due to limited resources, road closures, and evacuation orders. HWCC/bax will accept any and all wildlife impacted by the fires. Our facility and staff are ready. Even wild animals with injuries beyond our capacity to treat locally but which have a good prognosis with the proper care can be stabilized here at HWCC and transported to our colleagues in other parts […]

Why are there so few birds captured?

     Two days ago the US Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) released the latest toll of the wildlife victims from the ongoing oil spill caused by the wreck of the Deepwater Horizon. (see below for post earlier today) So far, 66 live birds have been captured. 478 dead birds have been collected between Louisiana and the Florida Panhandle. The update from USFWS does not break these numbers down by species, but as of 22 May, Brown Pelicans and Northern Gannets constituted the majority of birds.     Also reported, 16 live sea turtles have been captured, although only 3 of these were […]

How to Survive Being Hit by a Car; a Robin’s Story

[…]are killed on US roads and highways every day – close to 400 million (over 200 million birds alone) of our wild neighbors killed by cars and trucks each year. At Humboldt Wildlife Care Center, BAX over 10% of our patients are known to have been hit by a car. As any casual observer can attest, the number of wild animals seen by the side of the road is overwhelmingly huge. So far this year, we’ve admitted just over 90 patients, 14 of whom were known to have been struck by a vehicle. Of those 14, only two were able […]
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[…]over 250 young Brown Pelicans caught in point source pollution from fish cleaning tables all along Californiaโ€™s Redwood Coast. These rescues, plus hundreds more were possible because of your generous support. In 2012, Bird Ally X published the groundbreaking An Introduction to Aquatic Bird Rehabilitation, the first manual of its kind. Wildlife rehabilitators from around the world have responded enthusiastically. For 2013 we will publish a manual on washing birds contaminated by various types of pollution. Our work teaching rehabilitation of aquatic birds, as well as our work caring for injured and orphaned wildlife would not be complete without efforts […]

Freedom’s Greetings

[…]it in your mailbox soon if you’re on our snail mail list! Freedom’s Greeting! Season’s Greetings, Friend of Wildlife! What a tumultuous year 2016 has been! Yet from a contentious US election to increasingly alarming news regarding our shared environment, through it all, weโ€™ve been here, providing care for our regionโ€™s injured and orphaned wild animals, helping people peacefully resolve conflicts with wild animals, and our Wildlife Ambassador program has gone to grade schools and social clubs promoting co-existence with our wild neighbors. In 2016, Bird Ally X put on workshops teaching important skills to the next generation ofย  wildlife […]

Ringtail: Rescued, Raised, Released!

[…]cat and even Civet cat) is not a cat, although they do have many cat-like qualities, from appearance to behaviors. In fact, Ringtails are members of the family Procyonidae, a group that includes coatimundis, kinkajous and the much more familiar Raccoon. Yet the comparisons to other animals are even built into their scientific name – the latin binomial Bassariscus astutus, literally means, sly little fox! When this sly little raccoon cousin was admitted, her eyes were open and her teeth were just starting to come in. She was still quite young – maybe 8 weeks old. We immediately started her […]