Squawkers need love too
Dave Brooks
A little piece of advice: Romeo hates men.
There are dozens of wild birds and mammals to see at the Wetlands
and Wildlife Care Center of Orange County, but one particularly
grumpy goose at the clinic doesn’t take kindly to male visitors.
“I think he’s just trying to protect me,” volunteer Debbie McGuire
said while rubbing the squawking white goose that male volunteers are
urged to avoid because of his penchant for pecking and biting.
It is just one more tidbit to remember when visiting the
7-year-old center, set to undergo a major improvement this summer
after securing a $600,000 grant from the California Wildlife
Conservation Board.
Staffed by volunteers on a budget of donations, the hospital is
run through learning as much as loving. Volunteers are constantly
changing animal habitats and healing techniques based on their
observations of the 2,000 injured and orphaned animals -- 75% of them
birds -- that come to the clinic each year.
Born out of a 1990 spill that dumped more than 400,000 gallons of
Alaskan crude oil on the coast of Huntington Beach, the center was
created to provide a permanent facility to respond to injured
wildlife or future toxic spills.
“We realized at that time that we really needed something,” said
veterinarian Joel Pasco.
Today the center can care for more than 400 animals at once,
housing birds and mammals in an outdoor holding area, with specially
designed flooring to protect the animals’ feet and multiple water
channels to provide both fresh and sea water. The center is filled
with small circulating pools for the birds to swim and rest in, and
volunteers constantly work to filter and refill the pools to keep
them clean.
A large focus of the center is rehabilitation, but volunteer
veterinarians also do some treatments at the clinic.
On Tuesday, several volunteers worked busily to hold an unhappy
cormorant diving bird while a technician attended to its wing that
had been injured by fishing line.
“We put a towel over them while we’re treating him, so he doesn’t
know what’s going on,” she said “We found that cormorants are
particularly strong and they’re easier to control this way.”
Most of the animals are brought to the clinic by members of the
public, often after unexpected encounters.
“We once had a guy drive in with a great blue heron on his lap,”
she said. “The bird had been hit by a car and was still in shock when
he brought it in. Thank God it had a mild concussion or it might have
poked one of his eyes out.”
Volunteers at the hospital usually ask for a donation from anyone
dropping off an animal -- birds usually cost about $75 a piece to
treat. In total, the hospital spends about $6,000 a month on
operations, including $2,000 a month just on the water bill.
Those costs are only going to rise when the clinic undergoes a
$1-million expansion later this month. It will include new surgery
rooms, a laboratory, more recovery units and a special 100-seat
classroom and deck to observe the nearby wetlands. The city of
Huntington Beach has offered to pay for some improvements along
Pacific Coast Highway and the nearby AES power plant has offered to
pull its fencing back 30 feet to make room for the expansion. Besides
caring for sick and injured animals, McGuire said the hospital plans
to use the facility to train future veterinarians and implement a
closed-circuit television system so students can watch surgeries.
Volunteers also regularly speak at schools and give private tours to
teach people the importance of protecting wild animals.
“Our goal is to promote an a better understanding of wildlife and
work with the public to provide them with the tools they need,” Pasco
said. “The more they know, the more they can do protect these
animals.”
* DAVE BROOKS covers City Hall. He can be reached at (714)
966-4609 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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