The 71-year-old man cradled a small, juvenile robin in his hand. He fed the bird soggy dog-food pellets with tweezers. The bird was injured badly. But not dead.
“Sssshhh,” he said as he fed the bird.
He’s rehabilitated hundreds—maybe thousands of birds over the last 20 years. About 100 million birds are killed annually in the US by window collisions. They call it a window strike. But when birds collide with windows many of them don’t actually die.
Often, Samaritans take injured birds and mammals to veterinary clinics. And usually, one such cheerful veterinary employee will accept the infirm, say, blue jay, and reply, “Uhhhhh… Thanks?”
Most people don’t ever think about where those birds actually go from there.
Well, they go to places like this.
The older man worked patiently with the robin, with his pet cockatiel riding on his shoulder, pirate-style.
Meantime, his co-volunteer tube fed an injured red squirrel. There are lots of animals in this place. It’s almost a zoo.
The tiny makeshift aviary, about the size of a workshed, contains
birds of every kind. Jays, robins, cardinals, finches. There were ducklings in kennels. Cages outside, with furry creatures. Even a homemade duck pond out back.
The older man teaches new volunteers their new trade. He shows younger recruits how to tube feed rabbits. How to massage an opossum’s abdomen to stimulate poop. How to determine when a bird has had enough to eat.
The volunteers become adoptive parents. They do everything.
Sometimes these volunteers spend eight hours out here, in this small, shed-like structure. This tiny volunteer outfit, based in Ohio, rehabilitates and releases nearly 2,000 animals every year.
Which is a huge number for such a small operation, considering that Ohio’s fancy Wildlife Center Hospital only treated 9,000.
It’s a full-time job, the older man says. Some birds require feedings every 15 minutes. Some mammals need to be fed every half hour, even during…