5-24-11 Daily Wildlife Picture Golden Eagle Profile

5-24-11 Daily Wildlife Picture Golden Eagle Profile

5-24-11 Daily Wildlife Picture Golden Eagle Profile

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How Harry The Starling Liberated Liz From A Tiresome Telephone Call

Harry is a European Starling in Badger Run Wildlife Rehab’s Animal Ambassador program.

Video


transcript

The Animal Ambassador Program

Badger Run is dedicated to helping injured and orphaned wildlife return back to the wild, but sometimes that’s not possible. Simply the nature of their injuries can be too great, or as in Harry’s case, they may represent a threat to the environment. We use some of those animals as Animal Ambassadors.

Animal ambassadors are used in over 50 educational presentations each year to schools, science camps, and different venues where children learn about local wildlife and good stewardship of the environment.

Please help us and support The Animal Ambassador Program.

Video Transcript

Hi! I’m Liz Diver, president of Badger Run Wildlife Rehab and this is my friend Harry. He’s a European Starling.

They’re not native to North America. They were brought over several years ago by someone who thought it would be fun to have some of everything ever mentioned in a William Shakespeare work here in the new world. We believe they brought over about six of them and from those six Starlings we have the billions that we do today.

They’re very invasive. They’re wiping out our native Bluebirds and many other species. They’ll destroy nests. They’ll kill babies. They’ll take them over. So here at Badger Run Wildlife Rehab we do not rehabilitate and release Starlings, but we probably get twenty or thirty starling babies brought to us every year.

Now as cute as these little guys are… as I said we don’t want to release them. However, Starlings to make great pets.

Harry here can talk, as can most Starlings, about the same as a Parakeet or Cockateel. Harry has a unique talent and that is he has phone conversations. He will make the ring sound of the Badger Run phone, which is a coyote howl, and then he will carry on the conversation. “Hello. Uhuh. Okay. Yeah. Thanks. Bye.”

Now you may think that’s cute, but “So what?” Well it actually comes in very handy.

A few weeks ago I was out in the care center feeding and cleaning and trying to get everybody ready in a hurry so I could get off to work. When my phone rang and it was a friend of mine who shall we say… tends to be a bit long winded in conversation.

I though, “Oh no…” I said listen I’ve really gotta get ready. I’ve really gotta keep going can I put you on speaker phone and set you down?

She said “Sure.”

So I put her on speaker phone and I set the phone down and Harry was immediately intrigued by what this new shiny thing was on the counter.

So he went over to check it out and my friend said. “So… can you hear me okay?” and Harry
said, “Uh huh.”

So she proceeded to go on about her latest adventures and whether she was wearing green socks or blue socks and the entire time Harry sat by the phone saying, “Yeah. Okay. Uh huh. Okay.” and at the very end I stepped in and said, “Well it’s been great talking to ya, I’ve gotta go.”

To this day my friend has no idea that she had a thirty minute conversation with a starling.

Thank you for supporting wildlife, for supporting your local rehabilitators and for supporting Badger Run Wildlife Rehab here in Klamath Falls, Oregon.

Say bye Harry.

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She Needs Your Help!

Bald Eagle

This is a story that needs to be told…

This beautiful adult female Bald Eagle was found near Tulelake Wildlife Refuge, down on the ground. We could not find any injuries, so we suspected poisoning. A blood test revealed that she had 21 times the safe level of lead in her system. No, she hadn’t been shot, but she had been eating ducks and geese that had either been shot with lead shot or that had ingested it off the marsh bottom.

She initially responded well to medication that pulled the lead from her tissues, into her kidneys, where it was expelled in her urine. After two weeks of intensive treatment, she succumbed to a sudden heart attack, a side effect of lead poisoning. The lead treatment does not come cheap or easy. It is a 5 week process of catching her and forcing oral medication twice daily, at a cost of over $16 per day!

Unfortunately, we know that she is not the last case of lead poisoning we will see. Our immense thanks to USFW for helping with the cost of the medication, but we still need your help! Please contribute to Badger Run Wildlife Rehab and help us help them!

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