American Bittern Recovers in Care (awesome video!)

Found lying face down along a trail on the Humboldt Bay Wildlife Refuge, this American Bittern (Botaurus lentiginosus), the secretive cryptically colored cousin to the haughty Herons and elegant Egrets was in rough shape when brought to Humboldt Wildlife Care Center in Bayside. With feathers torn out, puncture wounds, and damaged air sacs (for a quick video tour of avian repsiration, evolved for flight click here ) we were pretty certain the bird had been mauled by a dog.

Fortunately, the Bittern suffered no broken bones. Unfortunately, these birds are very private, and time in captivity is highly stressful for them (it is for all wild animals, but this species especially so.) They often won’t eat. For the first week, we had to “assist feed” our patient, carefully sliding whole fish down their throat. Once the Bittern was stable and able to be moved to a purpose-built outdoor waterfowl aviary, we added live fish to the marsh-like pool and tall reeds for comfort. Immediately, they began to eat all of the live fish we could get. Their condition rapidly improved.

Intern Val Rodriguez prepares to administer oral hydration while Nora Chatmon, long time volunteer and intern, as well as newest member of our Board of Directors, instructs and assists.

After 18 days in care, the Bittern was ready to go home. Two volunteers (this was only a few days before we changed everything for social-dostancing purposes, including suspending our volunteer program) and our newest staff person, Desiree Vang, took the Bittern back to the Wildlife Refuge for release.

Now just a couple of weeks later, everything at our clinic and in our community and in the world has changed due to Coronavirus Disease 19. Our volunteer and intern programs have been suspended at our facility until social distancing and “shelter in place” orders are lifted. We are at the very start of our hectic wild baby season and how this will be impacted we’ve yet to discover. But even with a skeleton crew and reduced resources, we are still here, still open, and in need of your support more than ever… Please contribute something… all donations big and small make a huge difference for our wild neighbors. Thank you for helping us during these difficult times.

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Our annual Season’s Greeting, coming to your mailbox soon!

Dear Friends and Supporters,

As the winter skies return and we reflect on the past year, remembering our successes and our sorrows, we are reminded again of our singular and precious existence on this tilted world, slinging us through the wild universe and here on Earth we see the seasons. So regularly ordinary is it to be flung wild and free through a cosmos we’ll never fully grasp, that we might walk past a miracle here, a breathtaking moment of love and poetry there.

It’s a simple observable fact that the wild is boundless and there is no void. Each toehold, every crumb has someone to perch there, someone to feed. If we seek the wild we need look no further than the back of our own hands or the wild red blood cells who swim in our veins.

We can find the wild easily among the litter and chaos of any city street, where a family of Sparrows might be raising their babies, as was the case with the family of White crowned Sparrows on this card.

A fledgling bird separated from her family was found one morning in old town Eureka by a shopkeeper during a street festival. Unsure of what to do, they called us. The day was frantic with festival goers and we had no way of searching for the young bird’s family. So we took her back to our clinic, gave her an exam, made sure she was well hydrated. We offered her some food. The next day, an ordinary busy weekday, but without the festival crowd, we found her family and they found her.

The dunes, marshes and river bottoms of the Humboldt Bay Area have always been perfect habitat for White-crowned Sparrows, and though city-life has encroached on their world, still they make a good go of it in the nasturtium and shrubbery of our landscaping, a place we might be unlikely to call wild, the source of all good things.

Yet here we are – no matter how devastated, no matter how disrupted, no matter how desperate – we live as the Sparrows do, struggling and surviving, living by a wild code, whether we see it or not – as moved by universal forces as this wild family.

Thank you for making our work possible in 2019. We wish you a happy holiday season, and a fulfilling new year.

Thank you for your love of the Wild

All of us at Bird Ally X/Humboldt Wildlife Care Center

If you’d like to support our work at this time, please DONATE HERE
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Short Winter Days Increase Traffic Hazards for Wildlife

Every year, as we turn the clocks back in Autumn, the evening commute for many takes place at dusk or in the dark. Unfortunately this creates a terrible hazard for nocturnal wild neighbors who are just beginning their workday.

Owls especially, it seems, are the victims of highways filled with cars after the sun goes down. Each Autumn our caseload has a sudden drastic increase in Owls hit by vehicles.

Two patients we’ve recently treated, a Barred Owl (Strix varia) and Northern Saw-whet Owl (Aegolius acadicus) were both hit by cars at the end of the day. Fortunately neither suffered life-ending injuries. They each came in dazed, confused and unable to stand or fly, but soon were recovering and back on their feet, and then back on the wing.

Hit by a car in Crescent City, this Barred Owl was bleeding from mouth and ears when first admitted. After several days in care, she was flying again, strong and agile.
Back home.

In the early evenings of Autumn, it’s common for a misty fog to lay low across the river bottoms and lowlands, complicating visibility in waning daylight, with oncoming headlights making things worse. Yet the bottoms are prime hunting ground for all manner of nocturnal wild animals, from Owls to Raccoons and Skunks and Opossums.

It’s simply good manners to slow down and be vigilant, as we would in any neighborhood where pedestrian (or wing-borne) travelers are predictably present, crossing the highways as they must.

Northern Saw-whet Owl flies freely once more afer being hit by a car between Crescent City and Klamath.
Right after leaving the box, the tiny owl stopped to look around…
And then off into the forest…

Every late Autumn and Winter we admit scores of wild neighbors who’ve been hit by vehicles. How many more are hit, killed, and never found we may never know… You can help reduce these numbers by keeping our wild neighbors in mind when driving. You can help support their care by supporting our work, keeping our doors open and our facility ready to care for Owls and others who are struck by vehicles, as well as all the wild patients we treat year-round.

Thank you for your love of the wild!

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all photos: Laura Corsiglia/bax

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Working for the Wild in Tough Times

Right now, at Humboldt Wildlife Care Center we are between two PG&E public safety power shutdowns. At the moment the power is on, the wi-fi is working, and our freezer is cold. 200 miles south, a terrible fire rages, displacing tens of thousands of people. And since the Tubbs Fire that tore through Santa Rosa and across wine country October of 2017, it’s beginning to look like the new world order.

We have concern for our friends and colleagues who are directly in harm’s way. If you live near a wildlife rehabilitator impacted by these fires, winds and power outages, please help them out…

A central piece of the mission of Bird Ally X is to help provide continuity of care that is available for our wild neighbors in times of trouble. A common way we’ve expressed this, in dramatic and frightening terms, is that even should humanity be reduced to a “ragtag” group of wandering shell-shocked refugees of the collapse of the Age of Oil, someone among them will find an injured Robin, or a contaminated Seabird and they will want to help. No matter how dire our circumstances, there will always be people trying help innocent wild victims of human calamity. And they’ll need good information – information that demonstrates how to provide quality care on a very tight budget in difficult circumstances.

When BAX assumed responsibility for Humboldt Wildlife Care Center in 2011, besides the opportunity to serve the injured and orphaned wildlife of the Redwood Coast, we saw it as an opportunity to demonstrate ways and means to accomplish excellence with limited resources. And in fact, just last week, we got the chance to do just that when the Oiled Wildlife Care Network held its biennial conference for California oiled wildlife caregivers in Eureka.

Bird Ally X staff taught multiple workshops on housing, stress reduction, and other aspects of wildlife rehabilitation. Our facility in Bayside became a working lab for the day, with participants from around the state visiting to learn basics of providing housing for the many different species that might be impacted by an oil spill, now that pipelines and rail cars are used more than ever to move oil around the world. In a way, it was a maiden voyage for our wildlife hospital lab. We brought students on board and showed them how we fly it.

Of course, our intern program, working mostly with local college students, has been accomplishing the same goal for the last 7 years, with dozens of participants. All of our staff at Humboldt Wildlife Care Center were once interns.

Preparing for this future by training young people as warrior-nurses has been a long-held mission. It’s a joy to be able to realize it as best we can. We’ve known that hard times lay in our future. Those of us on the front lines of the injuries to the Wild that civilization causes have been able to see it for years, – in the ever increasing frequency of starving seabirds, the species we hardly see any more, the changes to the rhythms of life.

Now, we’re surrounded. Some of us quite terribly so in fires that erupt by the hour, it seems, and many of the rest of us left literally in the dark. Tough times are here. Will they get tougher? Absolutely, no doubt.

So, now we are looking, as are so many others, for ways to take our care center off-grid. We cannot run a wildlife hospital relying on power that may not be there for the next few days several times a month. We must change our way of thinking about energy, about how to accomplish the same goals with a radically different usage.

Humboldt Wildlife Care Center has remained open through the power shutdowns, admitting patients, treating patients and releasing patients. The smallness of our wealth against the largeness of our goals has sharpened our survival skills. As we enter these times together, we will be here, taking care of wild animals in need, and learning on the job and teaching others how to survive in a world like we’ve never before seen.

A orphaned fawn’s release, 2019
an abstract graphic of the sun and a red-throated loon with the words thank you for being a part of this life saving work
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Natural history, daily work, and frequent sightings are the keys to quality care.

This text is adapted from a talk given by BAX co-director Monte Merrick at the 2007 Effects of Oil on Wildlife Conference.

“We need another and a wiser and perhaps a more mystical concept of animals. Remote from universal nature, and living by complicate artifice, man in civilization surveys the creature through the glass of his knowledge and sees thereby a feather magnified andthe whole image in distortion. We patronize them for their incompleteness, for their tragic fate of having taken a form so far below ourselves. And therein we err, and greatly err. For the animal shall not be measured by man. In a world older and more complete than ours they move finished and complete, gifted with extensions 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 beings of the splendour and travail of the earth.”
—Henry Beston, The Outermost House, 1928


Using my own experiences as a rehabilitator, as an oil spill responder, and speaking of my own affections and aspirations, I will both plea that experience in day-to-day wildlife rehabilitation is indispensable if we are to provide the “best achievable care” during an oil spill, and that rehabilitators and our patients are served immeasurably by intimate and immediate witness of the various species for which we care in their autonomous and wild lives. I will start with a short glance at the idea of husbandry.

Husbandry, as I found in a brief Google search, may be defined any number of ways. From the perspective of raising livestock and crops, to the care and maintenance of captive animals, to general stewardship of resources, whether those are household finances or the system of natural parks. Generally, however, good husbandry means that what is in our care shall thrive. In wildlife rehabilitation, and specifically in a spill situation, husbandry can mean keeping alive three hundred baby Brown Pelicans through the process of getting them clean, or 20,000 African Penguins, or forty-three Mallards and Canada Geese.

Good husbandry needs no defense. A clean environment, an appropriate diet, and housing that acknowledges the needs of the species being housed, with as many of the inherent stressors of both injury and recovery as reduced as possible, are critical to the rehabilitation and eventual release of our patients. While not my point, I think it is very hard to overstate the importance of husbandry in this process. Good husbandry is nearly identical to good wildlife rehabilitation; we must always refine our methods, always be ready to accommodate our latest observations, and always look for new ways to increase the quality of the care that we provide during oil spills and other catastrophic events that impact wildlife so adversely.

Husbandry of wildlife brings its own questions, both of theory and practice—and we learn, of course, from our patients in these matters. We capture and we care for them because we believe that we must, though the theory remains unproved. We capture and we try to keep them alive when the ways of the world had agreed they were dead, as dead as the many more we never get to treat. To keep them alive until they are strong enough to wash, strong enough to decide that they will live after all—and it is always the hardest to lay to rest the victims whose fierce gaze is only strengthened by their ordeals though their bodies are utterly broken.

To rehabilitate an oiled bird is something we decide to do before we know how to do it. We learn on the job. Some of us started learning on the job twenty or even forty years ago, some of us are just beginning.

One of the joys of caring for injured wildlife is the kinship it has to those things that are very old and very common—cooking, child-rearing, hunting, art, craft. These human engagements, although varied, are similar in that all are simple and accessible and require a lifetime to master.

Any of us can follow the protocols that have been established through what is now decades of trial and error in the effort to rehabilitate oiled wildlife. We have a body of knowledge to lean on, documented and accessible. But who it is that can really make that body of knowledge come to life is the rehabilitator who brings a set of experiences, especially those coveted moments of inspiration, in which sudden and permanent learning occur.

Ask any rehabilitator and they will tell you that these moments happen daily. Each day we are schooled in what a sick or injured seabird needs.
Surely a Western Grebe and a Common Loon have similar lives and therefore quite similar needs— neither can tolerate a long period of time off their water home—keel and hock and foot lesions will develop quickly as we all know—but what does it mean when a Common Loon stops evading the net? Anyone who has treated a few loons will know at least this: it isn’t anything good.

What we learn as rehabilitators is incredibly specific—to the species, and to the individual. Think of a Common Loon, say, a big one, in breeding plumage, who nearly takes off your finger in one lunging bite and you know that this bird needs only a few days and out she’ll go—yet a gull might do the same, flapping his left wing while his right wing is shredded. Consider how all cormorants will bite but a Brant’s Cormorant who seems more aggressive than usual probably has a fish hook somewhere in his guts,—just as a Western Grebe who cries in his hospital pool all day should be radiographed or palpated for a GI impaction. These are the things you learn when you do this work daily. What any particular bird needs is learned, and in a manner that endures, from daily care for birds in general.

And there is no limit to the intricacies one might learn.

Each day hundreds if not thousands of people around the world are engaged in the work of nursing wildlife back to health. In the day to day care of the animals routinely injured or sickened by their contact with the machinery of humanity we learn to care for the large numbers of wildlife affected during a oil spill. And as the oceans deteriorate, and more species become threatened with decline and extinction, and saving as many individuals as we can becomes the world’s work, wildlife rehabilitators will be there, with skills and knowledge to help ensure that the victims of the altered environment are given the best possible care.

Like many rehabilitators, I came into this work with a desire to help wildlife which had been whetted by some reading. I was anxious to be of use, and hungry for something elemental, un-mediated—what we may call reality. I became a volunteer before I became a true student of natural history. I held baby house sparrows and fed them baby bird slurry long before I understood the life of a sparrow who is no orphan, if I ever have.

I became one of the relatively small number of people in this world who knows a Mallard’s tongue the way a child knows a cat’s. It was another year before I saw truly wild Mallards living in open seclusion, on a pond high in the Cascades, and began to understand how the integrity a sick duck presents in care is but a shadow of their true nature. If I hadn’t become a volunteer at a local wildlife rehabilitation center I may have not seen them at all.

Every Steller’s Jay I see today is the gift of the first cat-mauled jay whose bandage I changed—every nest I’ve searched for depends from the first baby bird basket I cleaned. And this is true for every species—even those who are with us each day—robins and crows, gulls and pigeons. An interest in animals, which is so common, leads us to wildlife rehabilitation and that leads us back to the literature of nature, which leads us to nature itself.

Natural history can lead us everywhere. The short history of the Common Murre that is found in the guide book will tell us where we might find him or her, and at what time of year, what sort of plumage we might expect either to wear—maybe how their voice might sound were we to try to transcribe the song into words. Another text may explain discovered facts about how alcids breed, and where they feed, and what any of us have seen—and so on, until at last we are driven from our house to the field, from the book to the sea.

And here I plead that we plunge into this sea. What is true about the world, about life, about our lives is manifest in the lives of our patients. We are in the unparalleled position of holding wildness in our hands and restoring its autonomy. We muck around in oil a foot deep, pulling dead loons, mergansers, otters, muskrats from its clutches—we see wings blasted at the shoulder and ravens shot from the skies by children who are ignorant of their meaning and their worth. What I am trying to say is that the reasons for getting out to where our patients are at home are manifold—we learn who they truly are—we restore our own sensibilities—we give our affections a chance to grow—we preserve what we love, we protect who we cherish. It is not enough to know that Northern Fulmars are pelagic birds who breed in the Arctic—although we may still provide good care for them with little more knowledge than this—but what kind of care might be possible after seeing these birds asleep on the slopes and the crests of thirty-foot waves in the Bering Sea.

The first Magnificent Frigatebird I ever saw was in a pet carrier retrieved from the airport. The aptly- named bird had been found far off course in British Columbia and sent by jet to the clinic where I had worked in Los Angeles. He was juvenile and very thin. I fed him fish and marveled at how merely spreading his nine feet span of wing sent him aloft. The next one I saw was on the Gulf of Mexico, floating far above me, far above the achingly blue sea. They seemed more like a dream. Now the first one’s effortless lift from the perch in the large aviary made beautiful sense. I began to understand what the patient longed to do. Now I would be a better husband to that bird.

We may teach or be taught to scatter a few leaves in the bottom of a Spotted Towhee’s cage—a good thing to do—but what happens when we see for the first time, and each time after, one of these creaking birds rattling around beneath a blackberry vine, kicking up dead alder leaves, searching for insects is immeasurable—a true sympathy begins. Now we can begin to imagine what will make the towhee more at ease while recuperating. Now we are more able to reduce stress.

A few years ago I had occasion to be on the central California coast—I camped overnight at Big Sur. The campground is primitive but accessible. As easy to use as a motel—but with the sky, the surf, the fog, the trees, the birds, the easy camaraderie of fellow campers, and a wood fire as the finest amenities and all so affordably priced—I paid seven dollars for the privilege.

On my way to the beach, a pair of Swainson’s Thrushes flew in circles through a thicket of young trees, singing their spiraling flute of song and calling their liquid drops in a bucket. The guide book calls them drab little birds but I prefer to think of them as subtle. It had been two years since I’d last heard this song, and I’d never before seen them with such clarity, unaided. Always they’d give just a glimpse here, a flash of tail there. But these two put on a show—calling their hearts out and chasing each other through the branches—a regular song and dance number.

Just past these trees the trail splits—one branch to the beach the other to the headlands. I took the headland trail. Out at its point, the ocean is perhaps seventy-five feet below. An orphaned piece of the land sits about one-hundred and fifty feet out. On this sea stack, facing the setting sun and the onshore wind, were thirty or so adult Western Gulls. Their plumage was pristine in the slanted light. They looked like a million bucks. Rats with wings, they are called—but out here they are truly home—a broken-off chip of continent, stained with generations of droppings—and they are beautiful and they are perfect, perfectly matched to this place in the sea and the sky.

And as I watched them cavort in the wind, pivot on a wingtip like the universe around Polaris, suddenly a gull chick, grey and speckled and until this moment neatly hid by his plumage and the rocks, stretched his young wings and stood facing the wind—the air sliding through his feathers not yet ready to bear him up—but he faced the wind and lifted his wings and his dream of flight was no pipe dream. He watched his parent swoop and dive and everything stretched out before this young bird. Just now becoming acquainted with the wind, it would be a lifelong romance and here was the very start.

I watched for another hour, eventually counting ten chicks, some maybe a week old others nearly ready to fledge. I wanted to stay to see them off. I wanted to put a small stove and rocking chair there on the edge of this bluff and make coffee and sit and do nothing more than see what happened next out on the rock of the gull. I looked about some more—on the same rock, in the cavities etched into its steep sides, were a handful of nesting Brant’s Cormorants, with a few nestlings. An osprey made several trips to sea and back, on each return a fish realizing its old dreams of flight clutched in its talons. Single file, fifteen Brown Pelicans brushed soundlessly past me as they banked toward the surf. Bank Swallows and Cliff Swallows were acrobats flying up and down the face of the bluff. Loosened feathers raced in the wind and it was and it is a bird’s world. The sun got fat and red and then sank.

Reluctantly I took my heavy body—solid and without feathers—ungainly and oafish—back down the trail to my sleeping bag.

Two days later I was back at the clinic where I work. We had a Western Gull who’d been covered in cooking oil. When I’d last seen him he had yet to be washed, but now he was clean and standing and looking much better. But still, against the birds I’d just seen teaching and learning to fly, I could see that his fierce and wild nature was dimmed. He stood in the aviary, facing east, eyes half closed, warming himself in the morning sun. He’d begun to preen his feathers back to shape; his body was responding to the medicine – soon he would begin to fly again, perching higher, nearer to the sky. Soon catching him would be possible only because he was captive.

This is the gift that all of our patients give to us—they bring us into a world that we forget is ours and teach us to see by its lights. People outside of this field often wonder if our patients ever express anything like gratitude. Of course they do not, I say. And besides, we are the ones who are indebted. 

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Lower Klamath Refuge Botulism Response Wraps Up

The avian botulism response on the Lower Klamth Refuge is at an end, thanks to the recent subfreezing overnight temperatures and rain in the region that eliminated the conditions in which the bacteria thrives.

233 aquatic birds were rescued, consisting primarily of freshwater ducks such as Mallards, Northern Shovelers, Northern Pintails and others, with 168 recovering and being released.

Northern Shovelers and other ducks in care at the USFWS/BAX avian hospital on the Lower Klamath Basin Refuge.

Support for the effort came from many sources, the US Fish and Wildlife Service, CAL- OR Waterfowl Association, long time BAX volunteers and donors, Sonoma County Wildlife Rescue, Wildlife Emergency Services, and staffing support from Humboldt Wildlife Care Center, the wildlife hospital operated by BAX as both an important part of wildlife care available in Northern California and a teaching facility introducing the next generation of wildlife care givers to our profession.

January Bill and Marie Travers, who co-led this response have done another fantastic job of providing quality care for the innocent victims of human meddling, such as the water wars of the west have caused with chronic misuse of this precious resource that we all need to survive.

Thank you to everyone who donated to support BAX in our mission, wherever it takes us, providing direct care for wildlife in need as well as education and support to both colleagues and communities, wherever it is needed.

Everyday we are here for our wildlife neighbors. Everyday we need your support. Thank you!!

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It Was Ten Years Ago Today!

September 22 2009 several friends sat down at the end of the workday at a seabird hospital to work on an outline for a workshop we’d be presenting at a wildlife rehabilitation conference the following Spring: An Introduction to Aquatic Bird Rehabilitation. At the end of our meeting, we stuck around to talk about a crazy idea – an idea hatched on the shores of Lummi Island Washington and fledged at the edge of the Suisun Marsh, home to 10 percent of the remaining wetlands of California.

The idea was for a collective of wildlife caregivers, who could help other caregivers deal with difficult times and cases, both through directly aiding them, as well as producing reference material, a library of helpful advice.

Dr Shannon Riggs, BAX co-founder visits Humboldt Wildlife Care Center. Staff and interns look forward to Shannon’s visits eagerly. She is an excellent teacher and our time with her is too rare!

To me, the idea was slightly embarrassing to propose since it sounded almost cartoon-ish – wildlife rehabilitators’ Super Friends – and the fact that our proposed name didn’t help alleviate that impression also had caused some reticence. But as is so often the case, a foolhardy courage prevailed and Bird Ally X was soon in flight.

Besides the workshop, which we’ve since presented many times across California and the USA, our primary mission was to share the skills and tools necessary to provide effective and ethical aquatic wild bird care. Later we would amend our mission to include all wild animals.

BAX co-founders, from right, January Bill, Laura Corsiglia, Marie Travers, on site at the Lower Klamath Basin refuge, 2018.

The six of us who produced the original workshop, Shannon Riggs, DVM, January Bill, Marie Travers, Vann Masvidal, Laura Corsiglia, and myself, met as colleagues in oiled wildlife response. In fact we first worked together as a whole on the November 2007 oil spill in San Francisco Bay caused when the Cosco Busan collided with the Bay Bridge in heavy fog, leaking well over 50,000 gallons of bunker fuel into the water. Approximately 1500 aquatic birds were rescued and brought into care by the Oiled Wildlife Care Network, and treated at the San Francisco Bay Oiled Wildlife Care and Education Center, in Fairfield.

Previous to this event each of us had extensive wildlife rehabilitation experience, on other oil spills and at other facilities, working with a variety of species, from songbirds to raccoons, from cougars to hawks. Most of us had worked in less privileged circumstances than we did as oil spill responders due to the lack resources available to the average wildlife rehabilitation facility. Working in oil response provided us the opportunity to develop skills, techniques, and protocols when working with large numbers of aquatic birds that we knew most wildlife rehabilitators simply couldn’t access.

BAX co-founder Vann Masvidal conducts a workshop on wound management at an annual wildlife rehabilitation conference.

Treating 1500 birds at one time will sharpen your skills quite quickly; repeatedly working in such an environment over the course of years will make you a leader in the field. All of us felt a need to share those skills and de-centralize them. There is far more coast, far more interior land, than the few specialized wildlife hospitals for aquatic birds could ever cover. To ensure that aquatic birds have quality care available when in need requires that we spread the benefits of our own experience and training.

While working at the Oiled Wildlife Care Network in the Bay Area, we routinely received sick and injured aquatic birds from as far away as Humboldt County, which did not yet have the facility or available skilled staff to provide care for aquatic birds. At the San Francisco facility we even once helped 140 seabirds caught in a harmful algal bloom off the coast of Astoria, Oregon. Clearly it would be better for the animals in need, if care was closer than 300-500 miles away.

The first Bird Ally X publication, An Introduction to Aquatic Bird Rehabilitation, began as a handout for our workshop participants in 2010. By 2012, our little “handout” had become a 152 page textbook. An Introduction to Aquatic Bird Rehabilitation is now in its second edition with over 1500 copies sold.

An aquatic bird care workshop that we could deliver at conferences and on-site at various facilities was our first step toward meeting our mission, complemented by our first publication, An Introduction to Aquatic Bird Care.

In August 2011, we met our first major challenge when we learned that juvenile Brown Pelicans were suffering from contamination by oily fish waste around Humboldt and Del Norte counties. We partnered with Humboldt Wildlife Care Center (HWCC) in Bayside to have a facility to provide care for approximately 50 young Brown pelicans. Over the next few years, we managed the rehabilitation program at HWCC, building its capacity to provide care for more of the wild animals who make their living and home on the North Coast.

HWCC/bax Assistant Rehab Manager Lucinda Adamson doesn’t mind a little rain when resotring a patient’s wild freedom.
Wildlife care intern Nora Chatmon (left) prepares to tube-feed a starving Common Murre (Uria Aalge) desperate for calories, while staff rehabilitator Stephanie Owens holds the patient.

In 2014, seeing the opportunity to have an excellent facility that also doubles as a working lab for developing protocols and training future wildlife care providers, BAX took complete responsibility for HWCC, now HWCC/bax. To date nearly 60 interns, predominantly life science students at the nearby Humboldt State University, have passed through our program, with many going on to successful careers in wildlife rehabilitation and other wildlife related work.

As our co-founders no longer work together each day in the same facility, we meet up as often as time permits. Laura and I are here in Humboldt, where I’m the director of HWCC, and Laura continues her role as publications coordinator and art director. January Bill is now in Klamath Falls, Oregon, which puts her in a perfect position to bring excellent protocols and practices to the chronic avian botulism problem on the Lower Klamath Basin Refuge, rescuing and rehabilitating over 700 water birds in the last two years. Marie Travers works closely with January on the avian botulism problem and on their joint work focusing on patient stress in wildlife care. Marie continues her work as an oil spill responder as well.

HWCC/bax Volunteer Coordinator Ruth Mock speaks for the Opossums.

Shannon Riggs and Vann Masvidal each work with Pacific Wildlife Care in Morro Bay, where they treat thousands of animals each year, many of them seabirds, and they continue to be the backbone of our board of directors.

At Humboldt Wildlife Care Center we’ve added excellent people to our crew. Lucinda Adamson, who was an intern during our second fish waste Pelican crisis in 2012 is now the Assistant Wildlife Rehabilitation Manager. Stephanie Owens, who began as a volunteer in 2014 is now a staff rehabilitator. Ruth Mock is volunteer coordinator.

Recent additions to our permanent gang, who recently completed internships, Brooke Brown who works with our humane solutions program for co-existing with our wild neighbors, and Desiree Vang, another recently graduated intern who is helping us with our membership data and other administrative tasks. Both continue to work in animal care in the clinic as well.

Lucinda Adamson and recent intern graduate Desiree Vang perform an admission exam on an American Crow (Corvus brachyrhynchos).
Happy Recent internship graduate, Brooke Brown in the moment of joy immediately after seeing a healthy patient fly away.

Bird Ally X has a mission that will never be completed, because there will always be more to discover and more to teach. Moreover, it seems obvious that centralized solutions to global problems are a luxury that we won’t be able to afford much longer. Sooner more likely than later, our safety nets will be tested and it’s safe to assume that the well-being of individual wild animals will be ‘de-prioritized’ at the institutional level. But we know that it will be a concern to individual humans that individual animals receive proper treatment when in need.

As its ultimate mission, BAX must help ensure that those people, however burdened, however underfunded, however remote, have access to the best possible techniques to provide care for as many species as they can. Based on today’s degraded environment, we imagine the potential of ecological catastrophe and the damaging impact our foundering industrial society might have on our wild neighbors and we prepare to meet the needs of those who will provide their care.

When the Oiled Wildlife Care Network holds a training in region 1, nearly all participants are BAX staff, interns and volunteers!
Tabytha Sheeley, an HWCC/bax intern now employed at Pacific Wildlife Care in Morro Bay.

Whether it’s the hundreds of ducks on the Lower Klamath or the 1200+ wild animals we treat in Humboldt each year, not only are we there for those innocent lives, but we are there are also for the knowledge we can gain to be passed on to our colleagues and future colleagues; – that can be shared with our fellow lovers of the wild – that can be taught to children about the sentience and self-ownership of all that is wild and free – about our own wild freedom that pulses with every beat of our hearts.

Ten years is a long time, yet it is barely a beginning! We’ve met many challenges to get where we are, but we have so many more to overcome. Your support has made our accomplishments (and survival!) possible. With your continued support we will meet our continuing goals, such as fully realizing HWCC/bax as a teaching wildlife hospital, and helping to bring a greater level of compassion to bear on our wild neighbors, and thereby reduce the need for our services.

It’s a dream. It’s a dream you can help make real. Please donate today and let’s help make certain that the next ten years brings us closer to our goal.

PLEASE DONATE TODAY!


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144 Botulism Patients Released! Lower Klamath Response Update.

With nearly 200 aquatic birds rescued in the avian botulism outbreak on the Lower Klamath Wildlife Refuge, to date 144 have been released. Currently there are 19 birds still in care at the BAX/USFWS field hospital. Since temperatures are supposed to dip below freezing this week, it is believed that the outbreak will soon be over. Your support covering our costs and providing treatment for those birds still in care is greatly appreciated. Please help us care for these and all of our patients! Thank you!

Mallards and others recover in pools that allow them to go in and out of water as they desire – an important step as they heal!

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Orphaned Raccoons Live Stream with Brook(e)! PHOTOS!

Each year we provide care and educational opportunities to several orphaned Northern Raccoon babies (Procyon lotor) – anywhere from a dozen to three dozen of the young, highly inquisitive, intelligent, and iconic mammals, depending on how well our outreach protecting denning mothers works.

This year we had great success helping people peacefully co-exist with neighborhood raccoons or humanely evict raccoon families from raccoon dens in crawl spaces and attics. Because of this success, we’ve admitted less than 20 raccoon babies this year. (to read about our other years, and learn more about our raccoon program check out all of our stories tagged Northern Raccoon)

The following photos our from our first group of raccoons released this year, after four months in care, learning as much about the wild world as they can in care. In these photos, taken by Laura Corsiglia, one our staff, Brooke Brown, releases three raccoons, two sisters and a male who was housed with them. It’s always a joy to see these bright young minds when they are first released into the blaze of reality.

HWCC staffperson, Brooke Brown opens the crates, letting our young patients greet the wild with no barriers between them since they lost their mothers months ago as tiny babies.
Exploring the real Earth.
These two sisters stick together through thick and thin, brave, resolute and with boundless curiosity
The rocks, rivers and forests of our region are the birthright of our patients
A portrait of a highly sophisticated Earthling.
The two sisters cross the river and climb the opposite tangled bank into their private freedom…
The male soon follows them….
“It is interesting to contemplate a tangled bank, clothed with many plants of many kinds, with birds singing on the bushes, with various insects flitting about, and with worms crawling through the damp earth, and to reflect that these elaborately constructed forms, so different from each other, and dependent upon each other in so complex a manner, have all been produced by laws acting around us…”
    –Charles Darwin, The Origin of Species

Your support makes our work protecting the young of the wild possible. Please help us keep our doors open and our wild neighbors in need with the care they deserve. Thank you.

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Is there a point when a gull’s life loses importance?

A young Western Gull (Larus occidentalis) chick, fallen from the platform above the bay where her parents had built their nest, stands on the rocky shore 70 feet from home. She walks along the edge of the water and rocks, stepping through a copious amount of dog shit, visible to the customers eating on the nearby seafood restaurant’s deck. Her parents circle above her calling a threat to any who would harm their baby, but their threats don’t carry much weight. This chick is in a tight spot. Like so many of us.

There is simply no way to avoid the fact that nestling gulls are absurdly adorable.

Nearly every day we have the opportunity to wonder if our actions are in step with our times. Easily, we can imagine that our efforts don’t strike at the heart of the matter. Children are in cages on our borders. Am I making a difference? I’m busy, but am I busy with the right things? Racist crimes are rising. For the first time in recorded history, there is no sea ice touching land in all of Alaska. The last thing I did today at work was give milk replacer to six tiny orphaned opossums, a late-season litter. None of them weigh more than 60 grams.

I think a lot of us must ask that question of ourselves daily. Why do we rescue and treat wild animals in the first place? It’s an easy answer: we see the need and the need must be filled. Yet, the world is burning. The temperature is rising. A whole living world is in jeopardy while psychotic gunmen are let loose in the commons. There’s no shortage of unfilled and unfillable need.

And yet, there is the gull chick at the water’s edge.

Among the hardest places to work, where things can go the most wrong, where simple rescues are made into treacherous crossings, are artificial breakwaters, made of granite rocks, tossed into the surf so that people can make more land. They call it riprap, as if these rocks were carved by the hand of Mother Earth herself and set just so in each mountain stream and along each industrial port so that our poets might have something to ponder. No. They’re ugly. And slimy. And each rock is almost stable. And if you slip and fall, you are going to get hurt. The only question is if you’ll still be able to walk on your twisted ankle. And if you successfully capture the gull chick, you go back across the rocks holding an injured and terrified patient as well.

Her wariness intact, the growing gull is losing her baby feathers.

I carried a long-handled net and worked my way along the edge of the riprap. At a certain point I had to climb up, or the chick would see me. I set the net down and slid it as quietly as I could up the rocks, climbing behind it until I was at the top of the rock. Staying low, I spotted the gull chick about fifteen feet below me.

She was standing on a small rock. She was looking this way and then looking that way. I was still considering the idea that her parents had this situation under control, that I could leave her there at the water’s edge and her parents would feed her, defend her and teach her to fly.

Her feathers, just a couple weeks old, were starting to break. Her stance seemed a little unsteady. In the binoculars I could see that her eyes were a little sunken, that she was dehydrated. And the obvious sign of feces from dogs, feral cats, no doubt skunks, foxes and raccoons too… This chick didn’t stand a chance. I decided to capture her.

Proving she can evade a net while being captured for a routine exam by one of our invaluable interns.
A closer view…

She was fifteen feet away and the net has a ten foot handle. I just needed to scooch a little closer. I just needed to get the net in position without the chick seeing me do it. I’ve never known a gull who couldn’t calculate the reach of a net in a moment’s glance.

Fortunately a paddle boarder with a boom box and a dog on board paddled by, giving me plenty of distracting cover to make the last few feet down the rock and push the basket of the net into a good position to quickly capture the gull.

The chick’s parents were in an uproar circling and crying out their frustration, wrath and fear. The boombox was playing the Dead’s Franklin Tower and I swung the net, surprising the chick and swooping her up. I folded the net’s opening over so that she couldn’t escape and ginger-quickly made my way across the piled rock as a lone adult pelican glided across the surface of the bay, his wingtips nearly touching his reflection’s. (It’s been a long time since we’ve treated a Brown Pelican.)

A small blood sample yields a lot of information about the general health of our patient

Struggling to keep knowledge alive in the face of calamity isn’t some new fad. We can’t turn the corner without stepping over the bones of those who were forced by conditions to put some small good thing, a shared language, an important heirloom, a lesson that was learned at great cost, into some kind of basket in hopes it would make it past a barrier – whether death or disaster. We make time capsules containing the best of what we have hoping it will be of use to our grandchildren, to help them know how things are, how they were, and what to not do, at least.

Who can’t sense the danger of an imminent break in continuity? When California Brown Pelicans were driven nearly to extinction in the late 1960s, their population had plummeted from millions when gold was found at Sutter’s place, to 5000 pairs in 120 years later. Think of the storehouse of pelican knowledge that died with those millions of pieces of the great pelican all. And think of the impoverishment of the babies who will soon grotesquely outnumber the grandparents. A pelican might live 40 years! Think of how long it would take for a population to regain its balance with the right number of 40 year olds, of thirty year olds, of teens, of chicks.

Pelicans had been thriving in their current form for over thirty million years. Ice ages had come and gone in that time and still millions of pelicans soared up and down the ever changing coast of this continent, but 120 years of industrial civilization was nearly the end of the species.

Terrible ends of eras that had lasted so long they’d seemed immutable are part and parcel of our daily life.

If we want some piece of our amassed knowledge and skills to make it to our descendants, in other words, if we care about the future, then a contingency is needed that sees our work safely across the abyss of disaster and discontinuity. In times such as ours, we are trying to educate our children, rescue all who we can, preserve hard won knowledge, and leave what we have for those who follow us and who will be aided by our work.

The wild world awaits once you step out of the box….
Freedom freshly restored, the young gull surveys her suddenly widened surroundings.

Getting the gull back in her nest would have been the best outcome possible. It would have been easy enough to boat out to the platform and climb up with her, but the danger of disrupting the other siblings was too great. Instead we opted to care for the wayward chick. Once she was able to fly we would return her to her family, where she could learn firsthand the state of the art of gull knowledge of the bay.

One of the most significant tasks in caring for orphaned wildlife is to preserve their wildness. The first step in the preservation of anything is that we love, respect and side with who, or where or what is to be preserved. In the case of young gulls, it is critical that we take the necessary steps to protect the integrity of their wildness. Gulls, from hatching to adulthood, will readily adopt strategies to extract resources from human production – this is a wide ranging problem, often couched in terms of the problem gulls present people, when in fact, it is gulls who suffer. Who’s population is in decline the world over?

So we brought the gull into care. At HWCC we have an aviary purpose-built to accommodate gulls, pelicans, cormorants, and other species who live similarly near the coast – that is, stand around, float some, fly to higher look outs, and eat fish. While the she did not have the immediate company of other gulls, she did have cormorants and egrets as housing mates. Privacy was maintained. Handling was reduced. Fish, supplements and weekly physical examinations kept her on the right track. She grew on schedule.

We’d hoped that once she began to fly it would mean that her siblings back at her nest would also be flighted and that we could reunite her with her family. It was nearly two weeks before she was flying with enough vigor and agility – gull-like! – that we thought we could release her back to her parents’ further care. When we went back to her family’s nest, however, they were gone without a trace. There were no fledgling gulls anywhere. Her family was no longer an option. We’d have to make sure she could fend herself before she could be released.

Birds flying away: is there a sweeter sight than seeing our young take wing?

You can’t build an Earth, or even a coastline. A wild orphaned gull in captivity is missing crucial lessons that we have not been able to replicate. The best piece of our care has to be an orphan’s intact wildness, – a preference for her own kind. The greatest chance of learning what all of us must learn if we are to be wild and free is to have the example of our successful elders. For an orphan to have the teachers she needs, she must accept that she and they belong together. This is something that we can encourage and ensure. We can do everything in our power to keep wild animals wild. It works.

Soon the young gull was as ready as we could help her get. Any more lessons would be learned under the wide sky and above the bay, in the company of her kind.

Flying with strength, she explored.

The future is daunting. The best science of our time tells us that we face a calamity the likes of which industrial society has never known. There have been Pompeiis and Krakatoas in every age, on every shore, but not in the last 65 million years have we known global devastation like that which might loom.

If the human race is severely reduced in numbers and wealth and teeters on the brink of extinction; if we spend our days struggling to protect ourselves, our closest loved ones, feed ourselves; if our lives are consumed by a migration to some livable portion of the north or the south, what we know is that in that time, as in all times, there will be need to provide care for injured and orphaned wild animals, trapped in a destruction not their making, who we encounter along the way. There has never been a time when some people did not dedicate themselves to providing that care, and as long as there are people at all, there always will be.

After circling the area, our former patient finds her place among a mixed flock of other gulls.

I don’t think there is a single wildlife rehabilitator with her feet on the ground who thinks any of us are saving the world from its looming and mounting catastrophes through wildlife care. In fact, we know very well we are not. That knowledge is an ache we all endure, no matter where on the field of love for the wild we find ourselves. For wildcare givers, the Earth upon whom our patients depend is being made barren and still we must do our work. Just as anyone who cares deeply must act when the one for whom they care for is threatened. The day is fraught with the trauma and despair of an environment in chaos and still we must offer this one gull, just as we would offer our sister, a second chance.

photos: Laura Corsiglia/BAX





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