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The Shadow Chipmunk

[…]miles an hour. As always we need your help! Your support makes all of our work possible. We are completely funded by the generosity of our community! Please help! Thank you! Donate here! Quick as they are, they still can’t always outrun those who also must eat to live. Coyotes, hawks, raccoons, bobcat, all hunt these quickly darting, always aware rodents. Even owls can pose a threat at the shift change each day between our diurnal and nocturnal wild neighbors. Among these challenges, and in this community, the Shadow chipmunk persists and thrives, storing seeds, enjoying berries and mushrooms, taking […]

Mendocino Board of Supervisors – We urge you to cancel the Wildlife Services contract

[…]when an endangered species is killed, when a wild family is disrupted and orphans are left to die, it happens somewhere. It happens on the ground in real time, in a real place, with real repercussions and ramifications. Mendocino is one of these places. I am sure you have been made aware of the notorious cases of wrongdoing on the part of Wildlife Services agents – including the cases of agents who have, in some cases intentionally, killed family dogs. This happens right in Mendocino. The Wildlife Services employee in Mendocino is known by residents as “Dead Dog” due to […]
Read more » Mendocino Board of Supervisors – We urge you to cancel the Wildlife Services contract

(podcast) New Wild Review Vol 1 Ep 2 — Good Morning Heartache, Sit Down – About Despair

[…]of the Wild, Back in January, I posted a story on our facebook page concerning a study of the Common Murre (Uria aalge) die off that occured in the Eastern Pacific Ocean the the Fall/Winter/Spring of 2015/2016. It’s a sad story about the deaths of a million of these remarkable seabirds. Immediately after posting the story I got a message from a friend and fellow animal rescuer in the Los Angeles area: “It all seems so heartbreakingly pointless doesn’t it? We’re busting our asses saving one animal at a time and the whole f*****g planet is on the brink of […]
Read more » (podcast) New Wild Review Vol 1 Ep 2 — Good Morning Heartache, Sit Down – About Despair

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

[…]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 quickly brought into care and received anti-inflammatory medicine and  a safe place to recover. Three days later he was released! (see video below of him back in trees, looking for insects) If a bird strikes your window the first thing you should is move him gently into a box and call us. While […]
Read more » Shocked Yellow-rumped Warbler Thought Everything Was Clear! Didn’t See the Glass!

Standing with Mother Earth

[…]where brutality, where thuggery, and hatred for mother earth are elevated, we will still need compassion for the injured, for the orphaned, and for the marginalized… and no one is more marginalized than wild animals… just drive down any road in your town and see the raccoon dead on the shoulder lying there bloating with not a resource turned her way. Many people in our line of work shared emphatically their sense that this was our last shot at correcting the horrifying course that we’ve been on for decades, even as we likely all knew that we couldn’t stop this […]

A letter to the Humboldt County Board of Supervisors #WildlifeServices

[…]look further please visit the Bird Ally X site and look at this post. http://birdallyx.wordpress.com/2014/06/17/opaque-and-obstinate/ To view the Change.org petition: https://www.change.org/petitions/wildlife-services-stop-slaughtering-millions-of-wild-animals To view the petition to initiate rule-making that was brought by Center for Biological Diversity, Project Coyote, and others: […]
Read more » A letter to the Humboldt County Board of Supervisors #WildlifeServices

Humboldt County Board of Supervisors Puts Contract Renewal With Wildlife Services on Hold

[…]traps and wire snares. These devices maim and trap animals, who then may take several days to die. In 1998 California voters banned several of these methods, including leghold traps. “Humboldt County has a chance to be a leader in California wildlife management by eliminating their contract with Wildlife Services,” said Stephen Wells, executive director of the Animal Legal Defense Fund. “Nonlethal predator control has proven to be more humane, more cost-efficient, and more effective — it’s simply the right thing to do for the county.” “We are glad to see that Humboldt County is pushing the ‘pause’ button on […]
Read more » Humboldt County Board of Supervisors Puts Contract Renewal With Wildlife Services on Hold

Little Brown Bat: from Tiny Baby to Freedom

[…]a privilege to help any wild neighbor. All it takes to make it possible is your support. In our busiest season, with our demanding caseload, we need you everyday! Please help us provide what our patients need. If we weren’t here this young bat would’ve been left to die a cold lonely death, on a sidewalk in the middle of bat-nowhere. Thank you for helping us help him!  Donate HERE photos: Laura Corsiglia and Bird Ally X A great way to help us help wildlife! and have a darn good time doing it too! […]

The baby season that began 3 weeks early.

[…]one feels enormous gratitude, and also very lucky. As it happened, the season just got busier and busier from April 2 on – by the end of the week, were getting very tiny Virginia Opossum babies whose mothers had been killed by cars or dogs. By April 11 we had tiny raccoon babies, who had been taken from their mother when their den was uprooted during some “brush removal” in Del Norte County, 80 miles north of us. With neonatal mammals, the feedings are as close to around the clock as we can manage – an inescapable part of parenting, […]

Tangled Up and Bruised

[…]beating the odds. This Pacific Loon is one of the luckier victims of derelict fishing gear. Most die at sea. Loons that make it to shore are often so debilitated that their chances for recovery are poor. Less than 50% of our patients impacted by  are able to be released. If it wasn’t for your support – none would be. You provide the resources that enable us to take care of less common patients like this Pacific Loon, as well as pay staff members like  Lucinda, who’s dedication and willingness to follow her early morning intuition rescued this bird from […]