Resist the urge to touch baby birds is the message Oliver鈥檚 wants people to hear this spring.
Dale Belvedere, manager of the Oliver raptor rehab centre, said raptors including owls, hawks, osprey and falcons have either recently had their young or are about to, and often people see the babies on the ground and reactively think they鈥檙e in distress and need help.
鈥淓ven though they find them on the ground, they might not be injured. The babies are born three days apart. So, the first born is nine to 12 days older than the youngest. The older ones are ready to fly ahead of the younger ones and what happens is the baby sees the others learning to fly and tries it out and can鈥檛,鈥 she said.
鈥淭hey fall and people often find them under the tree, in a park, on a sidewalk but they can get back up in the tree using their talons. Once people pick them up and put them in a box, we can鈥檛 put them back because the mother and father won鈥檛 take care of them.鈥
Two years ago the rehab centre had to take in 44 great horned owl babies, for what Belvedere calls 鈥渂asically no reason.鈥
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鈥淯sually we might take eight babies a year. We were swamped down here. We want to keep things as natural as we can for the raptors and, although people are good-intentioned, they are actually hurting them by picking them up,鈥 she said.
Belvedere urged people that come across baby raptors (owls, hawks, osprey and falcons) to call SORCO first before they touch the bird to find out what they should do.
She also noted that often SORCO gets calls for other birds and that they really can鈥檛 help.
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鈥淧eople think we鈥檒l take anything or they are referred to us from different organizations. Unfortunately, they鈥檝e usually been through three or four phone calls and they鈥檙e frustrated because all they want to do is help the bird. Raptors are property of the B.C. ministry. Robins and chickadees and other kinds of birds are not endangered and there really isn鈥檛 anything we can do,鈥 she said.
SORCO Raptor Rehab was registered as non-profit society in 1998 and is licensed through the Ministry of Forest, Lands and Natural Resource Operations. SORCO rehabilitates injured and orphaned birds of prey for release back to the wild and offers a robust educational programming to educate the public about raptors roles. The rehab centre serves the Okanagan Valley and north to Armstrong and south as far as Castlegar.
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