
The first week in June I had a red shoulder hawk in my car. This beauty had been sick and was rescued and rehabilitated at Moccasin Lake Park and was going back to the Raptor Center of Tampa Bay to stay in the flight cage for a few days to build up his wing strength before being released.

Three days later a baby Cooper’s hawk and a sick red tail hawk also made their way to the Raptor Center. Look at those big talons on the red tail hawk!

The next week I had a full car load. I picked up a sick vulture that had been rescued north of where I live and then headed to the Raptor Center to pick up more critters.

A pair of baby doves, a sick blue jay and a young pileated woodpecker all got loaded in my car to make their way to Penny, the rehabber in south St. Pete.

A pouch of juvenile possums also came along.

A few days later a juvenile swallow tail kite was rescued close to my house so I picked it up and drove it over to the Raptor Center. The brown specks on his head and white specks on his wings will go away when he is fully grown. He was also not old enough to have his “swallow” split tail.

I got a call that there was a kestrel with an injured wing on the ground at the Tampa airport. The airport maintenance guys were able to catch it and called the Raptor Center. I was able to meet them at the cell phone parking lot and drive it to the center. Nancy thinks the wing will be able to heal.

At the end of June I was transporting a hawk, a barred owl and 4 screech owls that had been to a vet and was going back to the Raptor Center. They were having a fundraiser near my house so I met them there at the end of the event to hand off the injured birds. They had brought their ambassador kestrel and great horned owl and had a crowd of people who were curious about the birds.


At the beginning of July I was heading down to south St. Pete to take some critters to Penny, the rehabber and the above peacock also made the trip. The peacock had been found nearby with an injured leg and the Raptor Center was sending it to a peacock expert rehabber in nearby Clearwater. Peacocks roam freely all over the Tampa bay area and get a bad rap. People don’t like them because they are loud and messy so they tend to get “injured” around the area. I recently wrote about them in this post.

I had to laugh as I was heading down Penny’s street a peacock walked right in front of my car. I was going slow but it might not have been lucky if someone was speeding through this neighborhood.

This was my cargo that morning. Three baby possums.

A week later I transported 3 screech owls to the Raptor Center that had been rescued.


Hello,
I think it is wonderful you are able to help with these rescues. There was such a variety of birds and critters needing help. I hope they are all able to be rehabbed and released back into the wild. Thank you for linking up and sharing your post. Take care, have a wonderful weekend.
Dina:
On Thursday, Sep. 26th, the day of the approach of hurricane Helene we were walking on the Tampa Bay waterfront in St. Pete near the beach volley ball courts (already scoured into water- and wind-blown pits with nets previously removed from the poles) as well as near the city swimming pool complex around Noontime. Suddenly we noted hundreds of frigate birds flying overhead in scattered flocks of of 25-50+, generally heading north, circling overhead then continuing on northward over Snell Isle and parts unknown. Group after group after group (kettles?), more than a 1,000 my guess over a 10-20 minute period before we walked back home windblown. We took pictures despite the 50-75 mph winds, not your quality, but fun for us. North Shore Park was already a shallow lake, almost from the tennis courts to the beginning of Coffee Pot Bayou, spilling over into North Shore Drive and the sidewalk at the seawall. We don’t think we have ever seen frigate birds in the St. Pete area, other than perhaps out near the Skyway Bridge area and Fort DeSoto Park and then usually individual birds, not flocks.
Ben Gooden
I have a friend near Lakeland and she said she saw the same thing. Hundreds of frigatebirds flying north. They should be going south this time of year. I’m sure that was great to see.
Bless you for all that you do for our feathered friends.
Worth a Thousand Words
The owls are gorgeous! I don’t think I’ve seen a screech owl. LOVE the cute little possums! Hope you were safe from the storm! Hugs!