Stories and news from the front lines of wildlife rehabilitation Contact us at info@birdallyx.net
California
Our latest episode of New Wild Review with guest Lucinda Adamson, Humboldt Wildlife Care Center's Assistant Rehabilitation Manager.
Reading a draft of an essay on ethics for our profession.
Our latest podcast, at last - an update on Summer, a big thank you to our supporters fro helping us out in our time of need, an avian botulism outbreak in the central valley, and a warming ocean spells disaster for us all.... stream or down load New Wild Reveiw, vol 4 episode 1! Want to help us rebuild our facility and continue our pursuit of excellence in wildlife care? Donate Today Some links related to information in the podcast:local coverage of leptospirosis outbreak in California Sea Lions https://krcrtv.com/north-coast-news/eureka-local-news/leptospirosis-cases-rise-among-california-sea-lionsthe wamring seas https://www.sfchronicle.com/climate/article/marine-heat-wave-18283742.php more sick sea lions https://www.sfchronicle.com/california/article/sick-sea-lions-18357033.php Oregon Dpet of Fish and Wildlife asks public to ignore suffering Common Murre chicks https://www.dfw.state.or.us/news/2023/08_Aug/081623.aspAvian Botulism outbreak in Tulare Lake https://wildlife.ca.gov/News/Archive/efforts-intensify-to-assist-avian-botulism-affected-birds-at-tulare-lake#gsc.tab=0
This podcast is the recording of a conversation over the internet (please forgive the occasional audio glitch!) with Veronica Bowers the founder and executive director of Native Songbird Care and Conservation in Sebastapol, California. Veronica is a leader in rehabilitative songbird care, a powerful advocate for songbird conservation and protection and a standard setter for excellence in wildlife rehabilitation. It was a great pleasure to sit down and talk with her about achieving excellence, maintaining high standards over time, mentoring those who are new to the field of wildlife rehabilitation and keeping oneself healthy and sane despite the stress, sorrow and trauma that are an inescapable part of this work. Pour yourself a mug of chamomile and settle in for a long chat with Veronica Bowers!
Our latest podcast, in which we discuss treating individuals of a controversial species.
It's been a long time since we've had an new episode of our podcast, for a variety of reasons! Tune in to hear what they are, and join us as we move from this very challenging year to embark on our most challenging year ever!!! The year of our big move! And as always, thank you for your love of the Wild and your support of our wildlife saving work!!!
Board of directors member and HWCC rehabilitator, Nora Chatmon (r) talks about human/wildlife conflict as Assistant Rehabilitation Manager, Lucinda Adamson (l) listens. For the latest episode of New Wild Review, four-fifths of Humboldt Wildlife Care Center's clinic staff got together in February to talk about our Humane Solutions program - a backstage unfiltered eavesdrop as we talk about our work, our frustrations and some of the misconceptions about our wild neighbors that work against peaceful co-existence... Rehabilitator and Humane Solutions consultant Brooke Brown. Nora Chatmon, Lucinda Adamson, Monte Merrick and Brooke Brown discuss our Humane Solutions program, in a backstage way... The discussion took off, lasting much longer than expected. In this epsiode, part one of our staff roundtable discussion, featuring Lucinda Adamson, Nora Chatmon, and Brooke Brown, we cover many of the frustrations - next episode the meaning, the awe and the victories - coming soon, the second half, in S2E3... We hope you enjoy this discussion and remember! - our successful work keeping wild families together comes from your support! Thank you!
2021 and hopefully new hope are here! For the first podcast of the new season, here's New Wild Review, vol 2 ep 1; - in which first we look at post release studies, and the limitations our obligations as caregivers place on invasive practices. Then we turn our attention to protecting wild families by protecting wild mothers - in this case skunks looking for mates and dens during the winter. Hope you find it informative and useful! Thank you for helping us get through a difficult year!!! DONATE today to help us rescue injured and orphaned wild neighbors.
Times are hard. Here are some poems about the Wild. Stay safe. Stay healthy. Dismantle whiteness.
In our latest episode of New Wild Review we look at the sudden changes the global pandemic caused by the outbreak of coronavirus disease - 19. As states, counties and municipalities move to slow the spread of the virus, through shelter in place orders and social distancing, essential services, including wildlife rescue and rehabilitation, continue. How does the pandemic effect our work? How will the pandemic effect wildlife? We don't know. But we can ponder it while we work.If you're at a facility that is open and admitting patients, check out this World Health Organization document on preparing your workplace to keep yourself and co-workers safe.
In our fourth episode, I read an essay, Letting Nature Take Its Course, which was first published on this website in 2016 and again in the beautiful magazine, Wild Hope in 2019. Also included in this episode is a reading of the poem, Deer Skull. As always, thank you for supporting our work. I hope you enjoy this episode. A significant amount of the music in this episode was cmpossed and performed by Erica McCool. more of her incredible music can be found here: https://pezhed1.bandcamp.com/
For our third episode, I sat down with BAX co-founder and co-director Dr. Shannon Riggs, to talk about her career providing medical care for injured and orphaned wild animals, the past, present and future of wildlife rehabilitation, and the never ending need for financial support. We also discover a shared opinion on the topic of Rage Against the Machine. Hope you enjoy the episode!
Hi Friends and Lovers 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 extinction. If we don't blow ourselves up in another war first." I felt that her despair was real and very familiar. So I wanted to address it without relying on platitudes... It became the instigator of our second podcast for our newy launched Bird Ally X: New Wild Review. It's a 29 minute "meditation" on our current world and the inevitable nature of despair. No answers are offered, but I hope that those of you in this field who feel hopeless at times are at least offered a branch to cling to... As always, if you like our content and appreciate our work, please support us. Thank you for your love of the Wild, and your support of Bird Ally X,Monte Merrick DONATE This podcast was written and produced by Monte Merrick. The music used in this podcast is from Dreaming Dead Sea (Uria aalge)
Volume 1, Episode 1 Natural history, daily work, and frequent sightings: Our first episode of our new podcast! In this premiere episode, we're sharing BAX co-founder Monte Merrick's talk on the importance of understanding the lives of wild animals in order to provide quality care for injured wildlife in care. This is adapted from a talk MM gave at an oil spill conference in 2007.
Earlier this Spring, three very young Allen's Chipmunks (Tamias senex) were found inside a truck that was being serviced in Oakland, about 300 miles south in the Bay Area. The truck had been in Humboldt County last so when the youngsters were taken to our colleagues at Wildcare in Marin County, they contacted us to see if we could raise them here, closer to their origin. For the next several days Wildcare staff provided 'round-the-clock care for the three babies who still had their eyes closed. There are thirteen species of chipmunks in our state - Allen's Chipmunks (also know as the Shadow chipmunk!) are found throughout the Sierra Nevada mountains and the Cascades, but only in our region, between the Klamath and Eel Rivers, do they live along the coast. They needed to come home. Arrangements for travel were easily made and soon they were back in Humboldt County. Soon after arrival at HWCC, their eyes began to open. Over the course of five weeks, HWCC/bax staff and volunteers took care of these three little members of squirrel family. As they aged, gradually they were weaned from a milk replacer onto a natural diet. At first they required several feedings throughout the day, with staff trekking back to clinic long past dark to do late night feedings, and arriving earlier than usual to feed them close to dawn. Everyday we make formulas for our patients to replace their mother's milk. Once a chipmunk knows where the food is, they eat very well. http://birdallyx.net/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/Chipmunks-April-may-2018-2-of-2.m4v A unguarded moment. Besides their nutritional needs and other aspects of their health care, we also had to provide an environment where they could learn to live on their own, find the food they would need, so they could succeed in the world their parents had planned for them - a world where they could meet their own kind, and have a second chance to live their birthright, wild and free. Once their eyes opened, we began to offer the young forest dwellers remnants of home and an expanded menu. While out of their housing to be fed, our patients are provided with any treatments they need. Daily weight checks at this time help us track their progress and health. Your support keeps our doors open and our clinic functioning. Without you, our wild neighbors would have nothing in thier times of distress. Thank you! Please donate what you can. Not yet fully weaned, they are given even more room, more comforts of home, and more diet options. For their last week in care, the young chipmunks were fairly independent. We'd moved them to outdoor housing when they were weaned where they were provided extensive privacy and natural foods such as berries, mushrooms, grass seeds and insects. After proving they could thrive in the more challenging environment, they were released. We released them on the bank of a forest stream. We left them with a small amount of seed to see them through the early stages of exploring their environment. We left them confident that they knew what to do next with their freedom. A last glimpse... we transported the chipmunks to their release site in the small shelter we'd provided them in their outdoor housing - now when they emerge the only difference will be freedom! Your support is what makes wildlife rehabilitation possible. Whether you are in Marin County and you support Wildcare, or you are on the North Coast and you support HWCC/bax, or wherever you are, without you the work we do - at home and in partnership with our colleagues across California - would simply not be possible. You make it happen with your generosity. Thank You!! Interested in becoming a sustaining supporter? click here
Spring is in full swing now and wild babies are showing up in the world, getting found by kids, cats, dogs, and other suburban challenges! Last week, a youg Black Phoebe, fresh from the nest, was found by students on the ground at East High, an alternative high school in Fortuna. Brought to our clinic, we quickly determined that the young bird was a fledgling, not injured. Although songbirds live among us, closer than almost any other wild animals, many people remain unaware that fledgling birds often spend up to a week not quite ready to fly, but more than ready to jump form the nest. This is a very vulnerable time for these little guys, but it's a time that every adult bird you see has passed through. Of course our modern world, with housecats, dogs, and cars lurking behind every moment, presents some dangers that natural life on Earth doesn't, but still the best place for a fledgling bird is with her or his parents. After giving this Phoebe an exam and some food, we started to arrange for the best possible plan - reuniting the family. http://birdallyx.net/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/feeding-BLPH.mp4 Black Phoebe eating mealworms while in our care ........... (video BAX/Lucinda Adamson) Two days later, we took the little Phoebe back to Fortuna, back to the exact location where s/he was found. Adult Black Phoebes were flying all over the area. A hole in the wall of an outbuilding appeared to have a Phoebe nest. Our staff placed the young bird as close to the nest as possible, off the ground and hopefully out of danger. Black Phoebe adults in flight - are these our guy's parents? (BAX/Laura Corsiglia) The young Phoebe sits waiting for parents. (BAX/Laura Corsiglia) Soon the youngster made a short flight to the roof of the building. Almost immediately an adult approached. Success! Soon the fledgling's parents were bringing food. We stayed to make sure that all was well and then left this wild family to their own world, right out in the open, in the middle of our world, yet so mysterious! Thank you for supporting our work! Your donation goes directly to our efforts to provide care for injured and orphaned wild animals, and to promoting co-existence with all of our wild neighbors. Please share our work, and if you can, donate today! All photos (BAX/Laura Corsiglia)
Raccoon (Procyon lotor) babies have a lot to learn. As adults, Raccoons hunt and forage for a wide range of food, from songbird eggs to berries to the salmon a bear leaves behind. Raccoons hunt small rodents, crunch on snails, and nibble the mushrooms on the forest floor. Raccoons are brave, resilient, adaptable and notoriously intelligent. Orphaned Raccoons in their housing, prepare for the wide and wild world. To help them recognize the real world when they see it, we've provided them an artificial river of concrete. We call it the Los Angeles river. No substitute for an ecosystem, but at least they know to look for fish in moving water. Raccoons have lived in North America for millions of years. This familiar wild neighbor has nearly as many names as there are indigenous languages. We use the Algonquian name, derived from arahkunem - which is said to mean "scratches with hands."(1) Locally, in Wiyot, the animal "with the painted face" is known as jbelhighujaji (pronunciation).(2) For a glimpse into their place in the ecology of Northern California, a Shasta story has Coyote and Raccoon living together each with five children. When a jealous rivalry ends with Coyote killing and feeding Raccoon to his children, one of Coyote's sons tells Raccoon's orphans what happened - they decide to kill all Coyote's pups but the one who told them. Afterward they flee with the spared pup into the sky. Coyote tries to follow but cannot keep up. The six young animals become the Pleiades, high above in winter when no raccoons are about, and down from the sky in Spring and Summer when raccoons emerge with young.(3) Taken to a remote tributary of a nearby river, rehabiliator Lucie Adamson and volunteers prepare to release the season's first six raccoons back into their wild freedom. Taking their first tentative steps into a world without walls. As kits, as soon as they began eating solid food, they were offered fish, mushrooms, plant material, small rodents, small birds, vegetables, fruit, eggs and insects, hidden under rocks and logs, hanging from branches. They know where to look for food. It isn't frivolous to consider the seriousness of raising orphaned babies of a species this complex, this storied, this ordinary, this mysterious. Here we are, as removed from "universal nature" as any species has ever been, yet it's up to us to provide an education for these wild young things. When we commit to the care of a wild orphan, we accept the responsibility for their wild education. To teach a wild baby to be wild requires an inhabiting imagination. We must see the world this young animal will see, and then provide the challenges that will teach the skills necessary to thrive in that world. When we commit to the care of a wild animal, we are committing to the wild, to nature - we are accepting Nature's terms - we are accepting, and in fact seeking, the blaze of reality. This is, as they say, a tall order. Young, healthy and in a lush and resource-filled environment, these orphans will soon find out they are home. Meeting nature's terms does place the rehabilitator in an awkward position. Our towns, our cities, ranches, forestry, fisheries, in short, nearly all of modern society struggles to co-exist with the wild. Promoting co-existence with wild animals - this alone puts a person outside of most of society's concerns. Just released, this Raccoon finds something to eat right away. To be an ally of the wild often puts a wildlife caregiver in opposition to the general dreams and desires of our human neighbors. Schools, shopping centers, highways, solar farms, windmills, none of these, no matter their merits, is a boon to the wild. Even though any of these promises to preserve the world, a wildlife rehabilitator doubts the proposition. Experience, or maybe intuition, knows that people don't preserve ‘the Wild.” The wild is the expanding universe and the cosmic sweep of galaxies,