IN THE CLASSROOM -- Winging it
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Danette Goulet
COSTA MESA -- Tragedy, better known as man, befell each of the
majestic winged creatures tethered at Davis Education Center on Monday
morning, stripping them of their freedom.
Slug is a screech owl who was shot through the right shoulder and eye.
Alice is an American kestrel falcon whose tree was put through a wood
chipper -- while she was in it.
Athena is a great horned owl who was hit by a car.
Isis, a red-tailed hawk, and J.R., a Harris hawk, were both stolen
from their nests when they were young and illegally raised by people.
Such actions have made the birds helpless without humans, because they
never learned to hunt -- a skill that would have been taught by the
birds’ parents.
None of these magnificent birds of prey, which were born to soar and
hunt, can survive in the wild any longer.
They are now cared for by the Orange County Bird of Prey Center and
act as educational tools.
Dave Raetz is an educator with the Inside the Outdoors program at the
Orange Country Department of Education who works with the center. While
they train and care for the birds, he acts as a handler and educator. He
brought the five birds to the school to teach children about them.
Raetz held J.R., the impressive Harris hawk, as Deena Franko’s
sixth-grade class eagerly approached.
He and the bird were greeted with immediate exclamations of “Holy
moly” and “Oh, wow.” A common reaction, it seems.
Children were instructed to look at J.R.’s eyes, beak and feet.
Looking at these areas allows one to differentiate birds of prey from
other birds that are predators, Raetz told students.
Having snared their attention with the hawk, Raetz put the creature
away and taught students about the various birds of prey.
He showed a slide show that didn’t skimp on the true nature of the
birds, as it showed a red-tailed hawk about to grab an opossum and
another dining on a rabbit. Raetz explained to a rather unconcerned group
why the rabbit’s death was necessary.
After the students sat through the slide show, Raetz had them up and
about. The students went to several stations around the room where they
picked through owl pellets, charted which bird’s wing span their own
reach matched and studied various bird skulls, wings and talons.
Their reward for being attentive was meeting the rest of the gang --
Slug, Alice, Athena and Isis.
Although all of the students were impressed, some were more so than
others.
As Raetz ducked to open the next cage after introducing the large
Athena, the great horned owl, 11-year-old Adam Jackson could be heard
praying: “Please don’t let this one be big.”
* IN THE CLASSROOM is a weekly feature in which Daily Pilot education
writer Danette Goulet visits a campus within the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District and writes about her experience.
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