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| Kestrel - photo by Bert Mulder |
This month we have seen a variety of species of wild birds of
prey brought into the hospital. As you will read, most of them
were very severely injured or ill. Unfortunately rehabilitation
sometimes goes in cycles and this month was one of the more
difficult ones. We received 11 wild birds during the month.
There were two Barn Owls; one came to us
from Dorset with a fractured humerus and the other with an
injured pelvis or spine. We saw two Short-eared Owls
from Salisbury and Newbury. Both had wing damage too severe
to be treatable. Short-eared Owls do not come our way very
often and one of these had been caught in barbed wire causing
an open wound.
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| Barn Owl - photo by Thea Love |
This month has seen more
Sparrow Hawks come
into the hospital. Three of them had serious head injuries
or Frounce, which is a bad throat and mouth infection, none
of which were treatable. However one, which came from just
outside Winchester, was found trapped in a net over fruit
bushes on an allotment. It had a dislocated right leg and
possible ligament damage. It is on medication and is beginning
to show some improvement. It will take time to heal and it
is too early to know if it will be fit enough to return to
the wild.
Also this month we treated two Tawny Owls
and a Kestrel, all with wing damage. They
did not make it. The Kestrel and Sparrow Hawk reported on
last month are both continuing to recover now in the pre-release
aviaries outside.