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Ethics in Wildlife Rehabilitation: A Workshop for Wildlife Rehabilitators

[…]shall not be measured by man. In a world older and more complete than ours, they move finished and complete, gifted with the extension of the senses we have lost or never attained, living by voices we shall never hear. They are not brethren, they are not underlings: they are other nations, caught with ourselves in the net of life and time, fellow prisoners of the splendour and travail of the earth.” Henry Beston, The Outermost House What underlies this quotation is the idea that we, humans, are not the gatekeepers of what it means to be a wild being. […]
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Hooked by Unattended Line, Western Gull Heals and is Released

[…]returns to a wild and free life ———————————- Good luck! ——————————— photos: Laura Corsiglia/BAX Reference: Gaston, Anthony J., Seabirds: A Natural History, 2004 Yale University […]
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Wilson’s Snipe Treated and Released

[…]and 988 million birds in the United States alone (second only to the death toll taken by homeless and free-roaming house cats) with nearly half that number resulting from collisions with residences 3 stories and less – people’s houses in other words. While there has been attention given to birds and skyscrapers, the same study found such collisions contribute only 1% to this staggering number. Vehicle collisions kill millions of wild animals each year as well. A study conducted in Canada in 2013 estimated that 13.8 million birds (mostly songbirds and raptors) are killed annually on that country’s primary and […]

A Letter to Humboldt County – Support the Ban on Hounding Bear and Bobcat – no on AB 2205

[…]heritage. Humboldt County has a reputation as the home of sound wildlife management science in California and beyond. Thank you for helping create and maintain that reputation. Sincerely, Monte Merrick Bird Ally X/Humboldt Wildlife Care Center California Council for Wildlife […]
Read more » A Letter to Humboldt County – Support the Ban on Hounding Bear and Bobcat – no on AB 2205

American Wigeon Gets Fancy Splint and It Worked

[…]anti-inflammatory drug, for pain, and the procedure is complete! Able to stand, eat and rest comfortably, the splint performed perfectly. After 14 days of recuperation in our large seabird pool, we removed the splint. The fracture had healed well. We gave the wigeon a couple more days without the splint to make sure that all was well He began flying as soon as he was put back into his pool, but we wanted to be sure that everything was going to work out. A week ago, after 18 days in care, the wigeon was released back to Humboldt Bay near […]
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Tangled Up and Bruised

[…]the injured and orphaned wild neighbors. From Chipmunks to Pelicans, we are ready to help who ever comes through our door! Help us meet our critical November goal of $7000 ]  As soon as Lucinda got to Samoa Beach she found a bird. A Pacific Loon (Gavia pacifica) tangled in a lost scrap of fishing net. Scooping the bird up she brought him into the clinic just as staff was beginning the workday. Some mild teasing about working on her day off was in order, as we moved to admit the entangled loon. On the beach at the moment of rescue […]

The Era of Climate Disruption and Caring for the Wild

[…]cannot let them turn away from a wild animal who is suffering are supported. Preserving our love and commitment to Mother Earth is a crucial part of preserving our societies. We cannot do this alone. We need your help. Please help us reach our critical goal of $5000 by the end of this month. We have rent, water, utilities, patient food, medicine, our two staff’s meager salaries, bills that linger from our hectic and expensive busy summer months… without your support, we’ll disappear. Without HWCC the North Coast will have nothing for wild animals in need. Please, donate […]
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Legislation that Will Impact Wild Animals

[…]real and significant hazard. As has been said many times, feral cats do not die of old age. Feral and free-roaming cats die suffering deaths caused by infection, parasites, traumatic injury and more. We advocate strongly that responsible pet ownership includes keeping cats contained, safe from highways, abuse, feline disease, and spread of other diseases such as rabies and toxoplasmosis, a significant threat to public health for which cats are the primary host. The needs of wild animals, the needs of homeless or stray cats, and public safety must come before well-intended mistakes. AB 2343, as it is written, risks […]

Kicking it up a notch: by BAX Co-director Marie Travers.

[…]on our environment using fewer single-use items like plastic water bottles and utensils recycling and composting creating a list of green products used during spill response (to share with the network and other response organizations)   Our goal is to gradually introduce a greener approach to spill response by researching options and opportunities beforehand so that it’s easy to make eco-friendly choices on the fly during a spill when there is little time for decision making. By setting an example of responsibility in action, we hope the OWCN will inspire and educate not just other spill response organizations, but all […]
Read more » Kicking it up a notch: by BAX Co-director Marie Travers.