volunteering, wildlife rehab, mild animal injury
I got to watch (though I haven't progressed to helping yet, heh) one of the vets prepping a barred owl for a radiograph. when she brought it back (limp and groggy, but after a couple of minutes it was groggily fighting her and deemed recovered enough from the sedative) I asked how it was doing. evidently it was hit by a semi (!) and ended up in the truck's wheelwell (!!!) and is apparently COMPLETELY UNINJURED. that is one *lucky* owl!
volunteering, wildlife rehab, mild animal injury
OH AND at one point I toured the empty enclosures with another volunteer--it was neat to be able to see them, we usually have to stay out when they're occupied--and we watched a half-dozen or so rats scuttling around the raccoon silos. very big, healthy rats. we need to rent a small coyote pack...
volunteering, wildlife rehab, mild animal injury
barred owls aren't migratory, but there have been several brought in recently; now's when they start getting territorial, and evidently it also makes them a little dumber--or at least less alert to danger than usual. :P
the rabbits, deer, and most of the raccoons and opossums are gone. there's just one batch of squirrels left. a lot of our workload is now cleaning and shutting things down for winter.