this post was submitted on 30 Oct 2023
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Superbowl

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For owls that are superb.

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US Wild Animal Rescue Database: Animal Help Now

International Wildlife Rescues: RescueShelter.com

Australia Rescue Help: WIRES

Germany-Austria-Switzerland-Italy Wild Bird Rescue: wildvogelhilfe.org

If you find an injured owl:

Note your exact location so the owl can be released back where it came from. Contact a licensed wildlife rehabilitation specialist to get correct advice and immediate assistance.

Minimize stress for the owl. If you can catch it, toss a towel or sweater over it and get it in a cardboard box or pet carrier. It should have room to be comfortable but not so much it can panic and injure itself. If you can’t catch it, keep people and animals away until help can come.

Do not give food or water! If you feed them the wrong thing or give them water improperly, you can accidentally kill them. It can also cause problems if they require anesthesia once help arrives, complicating procedures and costing valuable time.

If it is a baby owl, and it looks safe and uninjured, leave it be. Time on the ground is part of their growing up. They can fly to some extent and climb trees. If animals or people are nearby, put it up on a branch so it’s safe. If it’s injured, follow the above advice.

For more detailed help, see the OwlPages Rescue page.

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WaPo Article

I encourage you to check out the full article, it has lots more of what they did to treat the owl and will give you a good idea of what rehabbers do to get an owl back out into the wild again. There's also a video of the bird's successful release to a safer place.

I forget if WaPo has a paywall, so let me know if you can't see it and we'll work around that. Otherwise, here's a tl;Dr for you.

It was the morning of Friday the 13th, and staff were tending the grounds of the National Gallery of Art Sculpture Garden when they spotted something amiss: feathers sticking out of the blue bristles of the gigantic typewriter eraser.

As they stepped in for a closer look, they realized a barred owl was stuck in the brush of “Typewriter Eraser, Scale X” — the garden’s six-meter-tall steel-and-fiberglass sculpture of the once-common office relic.

The bird was still. But as the gardeners approached, it turned its head and blinked.

“This is the first instance that we are aware of regarding wildlife getting caught in a sculpture,” Brett McNish, the garden’s supervisory horticulturist, wrote in an email. “Occasionally, we see hawks momentarily perched on other taller sculptures in the garden, but never on Eraser. This is the first Owl seen in the garden.”

“Our goal is, of course, to preserve and maintain the sculptures and plantings, while peacefully coexisting with the wildlife in the Garden,” he said.

But then came Friday the 13th and the extraordinary owl in the eraser. It was unclear how the owl got into its predicament, but staff sprang into action. “It clearly needed help,” McNish said.

“It was extremely lethargic, and it looked really sad,” said Jim Monsma, City Wildlife’s executive director. “An owl during the day should not just be lying there in a box. It should be trying to fly away. It looked like it had just given up: ‘This is all too much. I’m throwing in the towel.’”

Tri-State Bird Rescue normally will return an adult bird of prey to the area where it was found, but it avoids transporting younger raptors because they can injure their wings in the carrier. Besides, as juvenile birds of prey become adults, they often have to find territory away from where they were raised anyway, Smith said.

And so, on Monday, staff went to retrieve the owl from its enclosure.

Then, they released it from the grounds of the rescue center — surrounded not by art but by nature and forests, bursting with colors from the turning leaves of autumn.

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[–] M500@lemmy.ml 6 points 2 years ago (1 children)

What was the monument doing in rehab?

[–] anon6789@lemmy.world 6 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

It was attacked by an owl, that's no joke! Lots of pointy bits on them guys!

Typewriter erasers are an endangered species these days. Have you ever even seen one in the wild??

🤣