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Killing Contests Soon to Go

[…]to attempt to kill the most, the biggest, the most rare – by whatever metric – to kill for competition; – to slaughter for a reward. A short list of the species targeted by killing contests includes, pigeons, raccoons, doves, bobcat, prairie dog, woodchuck, deer, turkey, crow, wolf and of course, the least protected or respected mammal native to North America, coyote. Killing Coyote Coyote ‘calling’ contests, in which teams of hunters often using battery powered coyote callers attract coyotes so that they can be shot, are held nearly everywhere. At the time of this writing there is a contest […]

Hungry Hawks (and a Falcon)

[…]stay open, with our staff and housing ready to meet whatever comes our way. These are trying times for many, and it’s no less true for our wild neighbors. We need to be here for them when they need us. Only your support will make that happen. Please donate today. Thank you for your love of the wild!! DONATE […]

Rescued, Raised and Released – Woodpecker Babies Home Again!

[…]was an honor that our staff won’t ever forget. Successfully returning them to their free and wild lives, which had very nearly been cut quite short, is the happiest outcome we could have imagined. Your support made this success story possible. Right now we have nearly 100 young wild animals in care. Your help providing their care, in the form of financial support, in the form of sharing our work, and as a volunteer in our clinic or as driver across our vast territory is appreciated more than we can say. Thank you! All photos: Laura Corsiglia/Bird Ally […]
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Orphaned Common Murre Chicks and Our Busiest Season Yet!

[…]be weaned. Opossums grow up fast! In just a few more weeks she’ll be released to her wild and free life! Osprey uses new feathers to fly in our aviary. It won’t be long before we make the trek back to Lewiston Lake, where this intense, plunge diving raptor was found after losing his feather to a power line fire. Common Murre (Uria aalge) with a head wound recuperates in our newest seabird pool. Soon “he” will be joined by our three orphaned Murres. Common Murres are often generous with their concern for murre chicks not their own. Three orphaned […]
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Humboldt Wildlife Care Center and the novel Coronavirus

[…]In other words, though we are only in the early stages of this pandemic, it is quite serious, and communities around the world are doing what they can to stop the exponential spread of this virus, including staff at Humboldt Wildlife Care Center. This is soon to be the time of year when the bounty of nature is expressed in wild babies. This is our busiest season, when our mission to help injured and orphaned wild animals is in most demand. We cannot forsake them. We will remain open. Precautions we are taking are simple. We’ve temporarily asked our volunteers […]
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Belted Kingfisher Says Every Day is Earth Day

[…]called, a long, suffering death awaited her, all due to fishing line lost into the wild and forgotten. During her exam, the kingfisher was clearly dehydrated, as her “squinty-eyes” attest. We quickly placed a net below her to support her weight while we snipped the line. No apparent injuries were seen – the line wrapped her left wing’s primary feathers, but no bones were broken, nor was any skin. She was exhausted and dehydrated. She was still willing to fight. We brought her back to our clinic. After a complete exam – she was in relatively good shape, a healthy […]
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In an Infinite Universe, Size is Irrelevant (but you still need to find your mom and dad)

[…]the flower and fruit of co-existence with – and embrace of – our wild neighbors, and therefore our own survival, is contained in the act of re-uniting a wild baby with her parents. Thank you for supporting our work. To contribute to our August fundraiser (our goal is only $5000!) please donate here. Thank you! Scroll down through the pictures of this bird’s return to her family. Taking the young hummingbird, smaller than a human thumb, from the box. Initially on this blackberry leaf, we waited, but no adults came near. And then she flew deeper into the thicket, out […]
Read more » In an Infinite Universe, Size is Irrelevant (but you still need to find your mom and dad)

Providing Critical Education for our Volunteers and Staff

[…]Humboldt Wildlife Care Center, provides a perfect setting for developing our workshops, trainings and labs – improving available care for wild patients is a critical part of Bird Ally X mission. If you are a permitted wildlife rehabilitator we can bring this workshop to your facility. Contact us though this website for more information. And if you’ve supported our work, thank you! You make it possible! And if you want to help, donate today! Thank you! (all photos: Laura […]
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Barn Owl Hit By Car and Left for Dead Treated at Humboldt Wildlife Care Center (VIDEO)

[…]more than double the size of each of the 9 smallest states in the union. (scroll down for release photos and video!) When we got the call that an owl was found on the side of the road in Smith River, about 100 miles north, right at the state line, we set into motion a dedicated group of volunteers to start the relay to bring the injured bird south to our clinic in Bayside.We routinely admit patients from all over the North Coast. Volunteers in Del Norte County met volunteers from Humboldt in Orick, between Patrick’s Point and Klamath, to […]
Read more » Barn Owl Hit By Car and Left for Dead Treated at Humboldt Wildlife Care Center (VIDEO)

A Long Road to the Sky, a Nestling Northern Spotted Owl Makes it Home.

[…]watershed. We strive to protect and respect their wild nature and offer them all the solace and comforts of their wild home that we can. Our young owl patient nearly always chose this location to roost. Moments before his last exam. After three weeks of only eating what he found for himself, we are preparing for his release back to the area where he was originally found, early last summer, 2017. Staff attempts to net the young bird for his release evaluation. Fight/flight mechanism mean more when you can actually fly! Six weeks after this owl returned to his home […]
Read more » A Long Road to the Sky, a Nestling Northern Spotted Owl Makes it Home.