Winter 2012 - West Virginia Raptor Rehabilitation Center
Transcription
Winter 2012 - West Virginia Raptor Rehabilitation Center
Page 1 Winter 2012 Volume XXX, Issue 1 The Falcon A Quarterly Newsletter for Our Supporters Our Mission We are moving and could use your help To rehabilitate and release injured, sick, and orphaned birds of prey while inspiring environmental awareness through education for the benefit of all living things For more than two decades the West Virginia Raptor Rehabilitation Center (WVRRC) has been nestled on a small piece of private property just off of the Goshen Road exit of I-79, south of Morgantown. At the time we moved there, and modified a small horse barn to meet our essential needs, Mrs. Elizabeth Zimmermann, a long time member and generous supporter, owned the property. She is still a financial as well as a moral supporter even though she sold the property to Steve and Mary Jo Hollenhorst many years ago. She still pays our monthly electric bill, as well as making a significant annual donation to our cause even though she now lives in Massachusetts. Her help and support will always be appreciated and she will be remembered as a true friend of the WVRRC, no matter where she is living or where we are located. It is unfortunate that most of our volunteers, both present and future, will not likely have the privilege of meeting this wonderful lady. By Mike Book INSIDE THIS ISSUE We’re Moving to the “Ridge” 1 “Mack” the Eagle 2 One + One Makes Three 3 The Barn Report Leave a Legacy 4 5 Charleston’s Sportsman’s Show 5 The Hollenhorsts have graciously allowed us to remain on this property from the time they purchased it until now. They have other Rehab Report for 2011 6 plans for the site and have asked us to leave. The timing could have been a bit better but we were planning to move soon anyway. For Education Program Schedule 6 years they have allowed us to call their place our home. Thousands of raptors Adopt-A-Bird 7 have been rehabilitated at this site and Membership Form 8 from here hundreds of thousands of people have been educated. The impact The Newsletter is going digital. we have made on the environment via environmental awareness will likely not Starting now we will post it on our be fully realized by most, but those we website @www.wvrrc.org It will be Final grading for have reached do indeed see the results. Our published quarterly and we will send our phase II facility volunteer educators have driven over 450,000 postcards notifying you of the posting on “The Ridge.” miles, at their own for a while until we get used to the expense, since our change. We can e-mail them to you if Future main meager beginning in you want but they are about 12mb. If entrance to 1983. The drive time alone, averaging you want it e-mailed send your “The Ridge” 40mph would be address to Sheila@wvrrc.org If you along Bunner over 469 days or want us to continue mailing it please Ridge Rd. just 11,256 hours. contact us. (see page 8) 4.8 miles from continued on page 3 I-79 Thank you Page 2 Mack The Eagle by: Liz Snyder, Director of Operations Well, it’s done. He's gone. Such a bittersweet experience, but I'd have it no other way. I considered him my bird. I remember very clearly that day in late May, when the DNR out of Braxton County called to tell us they had an injured bald eagle. This was my first introduction to Mack. Mack struck the windshield of a semi-truck (hence the name) and landed in the median of I-79 near mile marker 65. I met Jerry Duffield of the DNR at the Days Inn with a portable dog kennel. I peeked inside the crate Jerry had. Yep, it was certainly a bald eagle. Big. Brown. White head. Feet as big as my hands that ended in really long, sharp points. I told myself this was typical of the way life events unfold for me; I don’t start easy and work up – I start at the top of the raptor hierarchy, with the most difficult and dangerous, and work down. Well, bring it on. I put on the gloves, took a deep breath and opened the crate door and made my grab. After a couple minutes of attempting to get one of my gloves free of a talon, I just pulled my hand out of the glove entirely, put on another glove, and lifted Mack from Jerry's crate to ours with the glove still attached to Mack's talon. Once he was loaded into my vehicle, we were on our way back north. Mack was diagnosed with a broken left wing. A pin was inserted to stabilize his wing and the rehab began. He did really well initially, but for all the majesty and power attributed to his species, he was a lazy specimen. Mack needed a personal trainer to force him to fly. Mike decided to build a new eagle cage made of netting and cables. It was truly a Mack Mansion. Or the Taj Mack-hal. Constructed mostly during torrential downpours with much cursing directed at staple guns, cable ties, and large, unwieldy blue tarps, this was a magnificent 10x10x50 structure with perches at both ends. Mack was coaxed back and forth from end to end multiple times a day. I'm sure he was a very sore eagle at first, but it was soon apparent that he was regaining X-ray of Mack’s fracture with steel pin inserted. strength quickly. Toward the end of his stay in the Mack Mansion, he was executing fancy flaring flight maneuvers as he landed on the perches. It would soon be time for him to be on his way. Mack taking first steps to his release. As I squatted on the ground, beside the same crate I first put him in last summer, with my hand on the latch I could only think of how lucky Mack had been. All the people who took the time to assist him ranging from the truck driver who stopped, the state police who protected him until the DNR arrived on scene, the DNR for catching and containing him safely, the rehab volunteers for feeding and laughing at all his grunts and squawks as he grew stronger physically and in attitude. It all came down to me sitting here with my hand on the latch with a group of about 20 people on Veteran's Day (11-11-11), watching and waiting. (photos courtesy of Mary Moore Cole) continued on page 5 First free-flight down the road to freedom. Page 3 We are moving and could use your help – continued from page 1 At a meeting of the Board of Directors this spring we decided that we needed to make the move to our new property located on Bunner Ridge, just a bit further south of our present location. While we do not have the funds to complete our ultimate developmental plans for the 250+ acres we own, we will be able to have the basics needed so that we can continue expansion far into the future. Our move will be costly and we could use your help in defraying some of the expenses. Money or materials will be appreciated. Perhaps you would want to make a financial donation to build a new flight cage, depending on the size of cage, the materials for an eagle might be $1,500 or a screech owl might be as little as$450. All of those donating to build a new flight cage will have their names appropriately affixed and publicly displayed plaque to indicate the donation of money, materials or furnishing. There is more info on the website @WWW.WVRRC.ORG. You can determine the level of donation and pay thru PayPal, or mail the funds to our Center. Thank you all so much, and we’ll “see you on the Ridge”. Our New Address: 2290 Bunner RidgeRd. Fairmont, WV 26554 Our first structure under construction. $$$$$$$$ Not a stick farm; it’s actually the framework for our 23 new flight cages. Nice ones.. One + One Makes Three, At Least At Our Rehab Center It Does While we were moving we had to relocate, temporarily, some of the birds. I had our education great horned owl, Bubo and another big female great horned in this large flight cage at my house. Every night and every morning I would go to sleep and awake to the hooting of these two mature females. It is mating season too. I got home later one evening and it was dark so I prepared their rats, grabbed a light and went to the cage. When I got near the door one bird on the near perch flew to the other end. The other one was already there. As I started to open the door it appeared that the one had flown back to my end of the cage, turned and returned to the far perch. I put my light on the far perch, rubbed my eyes and counted three owls sitting together. In the 25 years we have been using this netting we have never had anything chew their way out of OR into the cages. The third bird is a male and all the calling the girls had been doing the three previous nights must have driven this guy nuts, so he came calling. His efforts have no doubt been rewarded. Bubo, if she lays any eggs, she could be a mother. And some unaware people think our birds are suffering from a sense of helplessness. Really Now! For heavens sakes, the bird broke into our cage. Page 4 The Barn Report—12/2011 by: Liz Snyder, Director of Operations Hello everyone! I hope you and yours had a delightful holiday season and are starting this new year with hope and enthusiasm for all the good things ahead. At present we are attending to the rehabilitation needs of two raptors: a red-tailed hawk with soft tissue and joint damage to it’s right wing, and a great horned owl with head trauma and an eye hemorrhage. The red-tailed hawk is lodged at the barn; the prognosis is not good as there was damage to the joint capsule and the bird is unable to extend the wing properly. We have test flown the bird on a line, and make an attempt on a daily basis to get the bird to fly from perch to perch, within the flight cage, but it would rather fight than take flight. The great horned owl remains under observation at our veterinarian’s clinic. We are also providing care for two non-releasable birds: a juvenile red-tailed hawk, and a peregrine falcon. All attempts to repair fractures and tissue/nerve damages were made, however, due to the fragile nature of raptor physiology/anatomy the rehabilitation is sometimes unsuccessful. If we do not keep the birds at our center, we will make every effort to see that they are eventually placed with a reputable wildlife facility. Within the last three month, we have transferred our nestling black vulture and our golden eagle to the West Virginia Wildlife Center at French Creek for permanent residency. You may know our seven non-releasable education birds currently serving as public ambassadors for the raptor species: Annie, Bubo, Neo, Owlice, Vader, William, and Thunder. The WVRRC is active in contacting and responding to contacts from various, Federally licensed education/ sanctuary organization who have a need for raptors in general or for a specific raptor, usually for use as an education bird. Our non-release birds are housed in outdoor flight cages at the barn until the appropriate placement is made. A new heater was donated to the WVRRC. Inside the ICU the physical aspects are operational and outside the electric fence is operational. Since 1994, it has been a goal of the WVRRC to develop our land on Bunner Ridge (just North of Fairmont, West Virginia) as the future site of a new environmental education and raptor rehabilitation center. We are finally making progress toward moving our facility to “the Ridge”. Colonel Jack “Hardrock” Bunner, who had a great vision for how to make wise use of this property for the benefit of the surrounding community, bequeathed this property to the Center. This site will house the continued rehabilitation of injured birds of prey, educational exhibits, classrooms, an auditorium and administrative offices. A trail system would also be developed and maintained for educational and recreation purposes. This trail will set the scene for many discussions on man’s relationship to air, water, land and wildlife. Many aspects of the programming will remain volunteer-based with staff support for coordination, The first structure at our new “Home on the Ridge” funding and development. Page 5 Mack the eagle – continued from page 2 I slowly pulled open the door. Mack stepped out of his carpeted crate (another thoughtful touch to give him traction during travel and exit), into the light. My heart sank as he took to the air in a less than desirable manner. His flight along the ground was characteristic of him during unsuccessful test flights and I was preparing myself to chase after him when he disappeared as he banked left. Then suddenly he burst back into view, vaulted himself up and over the dam and turned toward the right. He landed gracefully in a maple tree over a quarter mile away. We all watched him for awhile as he walked up and down the branch, fluffed his feathers, did a bit of preening and generally made himself at home in the tree after the longest flight he'd made since May. It was one of the most beautiful sights I had ever seen, a day of remembrance, I will never forget. The WVRRC has better than a 40 percent success rate in returning injured birds to the wild. I was honored that my first complete rehab cycle was a bald eagle named Mack, my bird, who beat the odds, with a little help. Special thanks to DNR’s Dwayne Duffield for his interest and concern throughout Mack’s rehab and for locating the perfect release site. We’re certain that he is out there somewhere doing what immature bald eagles do best plus he will likely look both ways before crossing the interstate next time. First landing site after his release over a quarter mile away. Want To Leave A Legacy For The WVRRC??? Charleston’s Sportsman’s Show With our relocation and new building being constructed on Bunner Ridge the WVRRC has taken one BIG step forward. Now, we all need to look to the future; where will we be in another 25 or 50 years? For pennies a day, you will be leaving a legacy with the WVRRC and assuring our future. Your legacy will not only help in the future but will help TODAY, with potential grants for the Center. In addition, all Legacy Members will have their name on the plaque displayed at the new Center, along with your own personal plaque. Call Bob or Jessica at 304-366-2200 to find out what YOU can do to help preserve your legacy with the WVRRC. On the morning of January 21st, a group of six volunteers from the West Virginia Raptor Rehabilitation Center along with the organizations founder Mike Book, made the two hour trip South to Charleston’s Civic Center to attend the WV Hunting and Fishing Show. Due to the freezing rain of the previous night, conditions at the Raptor Center’s barn were not ideal as the volunteers gathered the education birds. Despite the cold and the ice, they were able to collect Annie the Red-tailed Hawk, Neo the Broad-winged Hawk, Bubo the Great Horned Owl, Owlice the Eastern Screech Owl, and William, a Barred Owl. The only bird left behind was our Turkey Vulture Vader, whose large travel cage would not fit in the vehicle. The WVRRC’s Bald Eagle Thunder also made the trip. At the Civic Center, we had a large booth set up at the entrance. We were scheduled to be there from 10:00am until 2:00pm with an hour long podium presentation at noon. Due to our location, the hundreds of people entering the Civic Center could not help but notice us, most stopping to take a look at the birds Continued on page 7 Thunder, the American Bald Eagle, and Mike Book, Chairman, in Charleston at a recent educational presentation for the WV Trophy Hunters Association. Well Attended by: Cassie Moore Page 6 Rehabilitation Report Raptor Disposition—January 1 – December 31, 2011 SPECIES RELEASED PENDING 3 DIED or EUTHANIZED 0 TOTAL 0 TRANSFERRED 0 American Kestrel Bald Eagle 1 1 0 0 2 Barred Owl 1 3 0 0 4 Broad-winged Hawk Black Vulture 1 4 0 0 5 0 0 0 1 1 Cooper’s Hawk Eastern Screech-Owl Golden Eagle 1 4 0 0 5 7 5 0 0 12 0 0 0 1 1 Great Horned Owl Red- shouldered Hawk Red-tailed Hawk Sharp-shinned Hawk TOTAL 3 3 1 0 7 2 3 0 0 5 1 8 1 0 10 0 1 0 0 1 20 34 2 2 58 3 Education Program Schedule...so far WVRRC BOARD OF DIRECTORS Michael S. Book, Chairman Marilyn Bowman Robert Boyle Liz Snyder, Operations Allen Parks 1-21-12 - Hunting and Fishing Show in Charleston...done 3-1-12 - Robert Bland Middle School in Weston 3-17-12 - Kingwood Family Health Fair in Kingwood 4-20-12 - Lantz Farm in Blacksburg 4-21-12 - Earth Day @ The Clay Center in Charleston 4-16&17-12 American Electric Power in Beverly, OH 4-24-12 - Master Naturalist Class in Morgantown 6-2-12 - Canaan Valley 6-10-12 - Lower West Fork River Fest - Worthington, WV 8-18-12 - Birthday Party at Valley Falls State Park Page 7 Yes! I would like to adopt a at the level of My check for $ . is enclosed. Your Name: Address: Is this a gift? Yes No If yes, name for Adoption Certificate: Species Bald Eagle Vulture/Great Horned Owl/Hawk Screech-owl/American Kestrel Caretaker $250 $200 $150 Steward $100 $90 $80 Parent $30 $25 $20 Sportsman Show continued from page 5 take a look at the birds and to ask many questions. The visitors were extremely generous with their donations, and many shared their hunting stories with us. Thunder the Bald Eagle drew a large crowd as Mike held her and answered the flood of questions about her and other Bald Eagles. The volunteers in attendance took turns holding our bird representatives, giving the birds (and our arms) an occasional and much-needed rest. In order to keep such a curious and interested crowd safe, we spent much of our time guarding the cages and the birds from the wandering and probing fingers of our younger audience members. As the day wore on, our oldest education bird Annie made herself very cozy and began to lean against her handlers for support as she got tired. Owlice surprised the audience by using the bathroom several times dirtying not only the floor but the volunteers who were handling her as well. William whined and threw a bit of a fit, letting out a loud hoot, when he was first brought out of his traveling cage, but he settled down soon after. Neo and Bubo were both well behaved, except for an occasional bite given to the volunteers by Bubo. Much to the audience’s delight, Thunder would fly a loop at times while on her leash fanning the volunteers and the crowd with the air from her huge wings. It was a long program for both the education birds and the volunteers, and there was hardly a moment to take a break, but all of the birds at the show were big hits. By the end of the day our feet were sore, our arms were tired, and our mouths were overworked from speaking so much, but knowing how many people we were able to reach made it worthwhile. It was a great experience for all involved, and we look forward to going again next year. Cassie Moore, the author, and Neo with part of the never-ending crowd at the Civic Center. Page 8 Non-Profit Org WEST VIRGINIA RAPTOR REHABILITATION CENTER 2290 Bunner Ridge Road Fairmont, WV 26554 U.S. Postage PAID Permit #87 Clarksburg, WV 26301 Phone: 1-800-540-6390 (304) 366-2867 Fax: (304) 592-1482 Email: raptor@wvrrc.org Facebook: facebook.com/WVRRC Return Service Requested Please visit our website WWW.WVRRC.ORG Working to improve the environment for ALL living things. WVRRC MEMBERSHIP FORM Membership in the WVRRC is open to anyone who shares an interest in our mission. Annual memberships are available in the following categories: Student / Senior Individual Family $7 $10 $17 NAME: ADDRESS: Supporting Donor Sponsor Patron $35 $50 $100 $500 To Join: Please complete this form, enclose a check or money order made payable to WVRRC and send to: MEMEBERSHIP LEVEL: WVRRC Would you like your newsletter emailed? 2290 Bunner Ridge Rd. Email Address: Phone Number: Fairmont, WV 26554 OR Join online@ www.wvrrc.org