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Why do we rehabilitate oiled wildlife?

Why do we rehabilitate oiled wildlife? A very easy question, actually. For the same reason that we rehabilitate any orphaned or injured wild animals. And what is that reason?  If you find someone in jeopardy you try to help. If your best effort doesn’t help you try to discover why. You change your approach. You learn your lessons. You improve your result. It is very simple really. What more needs to be said? The cost of treating injured wild animals doesn’t come from some general fund set aside for issues related to wildlife, pre-established and limited. No. It comes from […]

Phalarope Beats the Odds!

[…]in the middle of the street where she lives. As a wildlife student, she recognized the bird as a Phalarope, a sandpiper-like bird, smaller than a Robin but larger than most Sparrows. ย She also knew that the bird was in trouble. Once admitted for care, we identified the bird as a Red Phalarope (Phalaropus fulicarius). From a distance distinguishing between the different species of Phalarope when they aren’t in breeding plumage can be tricky, but we’ve sadly gotten a lot of recent “in the hand” opportunities to identify these birds. This is the eighth Red Phalarope we’ve admitted this month. […]

A Very Lucky Hawk (cool video!)

[…]quick-thinking, kind-hearted man saw her get hit, saw her lying on the ground at risk of being hit again and pulled her from the roadway. The Sparrow was dead. A staff member from our clinic, Humboldt Wildlife Care Center, met himย at a nearby restaurant – he’d found a brown paper bag to put her in. During her admission examination we found no broken bones or any other major injuries, just a small laceration near her mouth. She was stunned and disoriented. We gave her a mild anti-inflammatory pain reliever and moved her to our raptor aviary. She immediately flew to […]

Thanks to You our Financing has been Achieved!!

[…]making the move! Your help is still needed of course, but we are deeply grateful and kind of blown away by the support you’ve given! Thank you!!! Thank you so much for helping us help wildlife! and if you’d like to support our work and our move to be secure and sustainable please donate here! video editing: Soro […]
Read more » Thanks to You our Financing has been Achieved!!

Red-tailed Hawk Returns to Berry Summit

[…]hit by a car. She pulled over quickly and found the bird, who was stunned, unable to stand, let alone fly. She took the hawk home to Hoopa, and contacted Hoopa Tribal Forestry’s wildlife department. The injured raptor, a juvenile Red-tailed Hawk (Buteo jamaicensis) was brought to us by staff at the tribal Forestry agency. Fortunately, the youngster hadn’t suffered any broken bones. WIthin a couple of days, he was standing and eating. Soon after we moved him outdoors where he made a few tentative flights. Unlike with illnesses, where the patient has suffered a chronic disability for an extended […]

Shocked Yellow-rumped Warbler Thought Everything Was Clear! Didn’t See the Glass!

Last Friday a compassionate young man at his job site off Myrtle Avenue in Eureka found this Yellow -rumped Warbler (Setophaga coronata) on the ground beneath a window. After giving him a safe place to rest realized the bird needed care. How alarming it is to see the passage ahead, the clear sky, the chosen path and believe it so much that you move in that direction without question, only to come to a hard and brutal invisible barrier. Window strikes kill hundreds of millions of birds in the United States each year! This little guy was lucky. He was […]
Read more » Shocked Yellow-rumped Warbler Thought Everything Was Clear! Didn’t See the Glass!

They Call It Giving Tuesday

We call it Tuesday. And who knows what the day will bring – before noon and we’ve already admitted five patients. Late November 2017 and Humboldt Wildlife Care Center has treated more animals in the regular course of our year than ever before. This winter we’ve cared for a steady stream of patients – from Western Grebes to Western Screech-owls – each caught in some terrible snare of civilization; smashed by cars, starved by a sea drowning in industrial refuse. Two of our five Western Grebe patients recover from starvation on our seabird pool. A Pacific Loon who landed in […]

Large Waves Batter Seabirds

[…]Crested Cormorant back to the truck. Late Saturday, January 11, a Pacific storm brought an exceptionally large surf to the Redwood Coast. With waves height reaching nearly 30 feet, people were warned to stay from the beaches and jetties. Since that storm, over the last couple of days BAX/HWCC has been admitting Double Crested Cormorants rescued in Crescent City for care. Sunday and Monday rescue teams drove up from our Arcata location to survey the area. So far, we’ve admitted three cormorants, each very battered, likely by the very large surf that pounded the North coast Saturday night and Sunday […]

A new format in progress…

The Bird Ally X blog is in the process of growing into a fully functional website. While it is expected that the function of the blog will be retained, we do anticipate providing a signifcantly imcreased amount of information, links to services, and more. This blog, at wordpress, is part of that transition. This will allow us to more efffectively meet our mission and our commitment to provide educational and informational materials and literature for our colleagues and our neighbors. You will be able to find current updates on animal care and issues we are concerned as well as news […]

Help us meet our End of Summer goals, get Pelican Dreams on DVD

[…]an hour of extra features! Released in 2014, we are excited to announce that Pelican Dreams, the latest documentary by award-winning filmmaker, Judy Irving (The Wild Parrots of Telegraph Hill) is now on DVD. Centered around the story of “Gigi” – a very young (4 months old!!) female Brown Pelican who landed on the Golden Gate Bridge one afternoon in August 2008, the film follows her rescue and rehabilitation. Brought to International Bird Rescue in Fairfield, California the story is helped along by “Gigi’s” primary caregiver (BAX/Humboldt Wildlife Care Center’s co-director, Monte Merrick). As the Pelican’s primary caregiver, the film […]
Read more » Help us meet our End of Summer goals, get Pelican Dreams on DVD