Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Chester's Friend Shikoba

Hello, Chester Owl here.

It sure has been nice and cool out lately. Bev said it is around freezing. Well I don’t know what freezing really is but it is cool. I stay warm by fluffing out my feathers, sit down low so the feathers cover my toes, and just enjoy the day.


My friend Shikoba is really sick. She needs to go to the veterinarian a lot. She gets special treatments because she has something called Aspergillosis. It is a very, very bad disease. It is a fungus that grows in her lungs. Owls usually don’t like Red Tailed Hawks, but Shikoba is another Educational Ambassador for Wildlife Rehabilitation & Release and a good friend of mine. Here is a picture of her from when we went to the Nevada County Fair together. I hear that WR&R is asking the community to help us pay for her veterinarian bills. If you can help we sure would like to hear from you. Just send your donation to:



Wildlife Rehabilitation & Release
PO Box 868
Penn Valley CA 95946-0989

Be sure to mark your donation “For Shikoba per Chester”. We will get a thank you note back to you. (And when Bev is not looking I will stick a picture of me in the note.)

Shikoba came to us because somebody, who really doesn’t understand, shot her. If you look at her x-rays, you will see at least 16 pellets in her. One is lodged near her brain and she can’t fly straight. She stays with a nice lady named Kari who is her handler. Please don't shoot at birds for fun. Get a nice metal plate and shoot at it. That makes a lot more noise anyway.

Red-tailed Hawks are found all over the United States. They are even found in Canada and up into Alaska. Sometimes they are called “chicken hawks”. They are recognized most often by their “red” tails. They are most commonly seen with a pale chest and a dark band across their belly. Shikoba, as you can see by the picture, is a “rufus morph”. She has quite a bit of rust or rufous color on her that matches her tail. She is really beautiful. Boy, if she were only a Great Horned Owl…

Oh, back to the Red-tailed Hawks. They are pretty big. They can weigh up to 3 pounds. Shikoba is almost as big as I am. Red-tailed Hawk feathers are considered sacred in some Native American cultures. They use them for ceremonies. By the way, did you know that you are not allowed to have bird of prey feathers? We save them at the Raptor Clinic and send them to the Native Americans. Shikoba's name came from the a Native American language and means "feather". Shikoba likes to eat quail, rats and mice. In the wild the Red-tailed Hawks will eat other small mammals, reptiles and birds. Yes, they even eat owls. Yuck!

This brings up another important thing. A lot of people will put out poison to kill rats and other small mammals that are causing them problems. Do you realize that if you poison a mouse there is a good chance that some bird of prey will come along and eat that rat and they will get very sick and quite often will die? Then because they die they aren’t around to eat more of the “little pests” and the pests start causing more problems for people. So don’t use any poison. Use traps. Then when you get a mouse, rat, gopher, etc. save it in your freezer and donate it to your local rehabilitation group. By the way, I love gophers!

This week has been pretty calm. It has been snowing and I don’t get to go on walks with Bev as much. However, friends of Bev keep giving her mice for Christmas presents for me. I like those people. So have a good week and I will be back soon with another blog!












CHESTER
The Great Horned Owl

No comments: