I forgot to mention I got around to updating the community icon, banners, and we also have some helpful info added to the sidebar now as well. Be sure to check them out!
I forgot to mention I got around to updating the community icon, banners, and we also have some helpful info added to the sidebar now as well. Be sure to check them out!
Are you interested in adding info for other countries, too?
German language content about finding wild birds and what to do can be found here: https://wp.wildvogelhilfe.org/
They also offer a list of rescue places, mostly in Germany but Austria, Switzerland, and one station in Tirol are also mentioned. Some are bird specific - including owls.
I will always take whatever you guys have! It’s tough for me to find things on my own. Even with a translation app, it’s a matter of vocabulary.
Do I search for an animal hospital, shelter, rescue, rehabilitation center, and then does it serve all wild animals, owl, eagles, all raptors? There’s just so many combinations of words, and I don’t know how to string them together or find the most commonly used words, etc.
Hopefully your list will help me find a few new places that do frequent social media updates.
I’ll see if I can get that existing international rescue link updated so it’s simpler. This link goes right to a country list. Your list has more local results, but usually centers coordinate to play to their strengths, so getting in touch with one may not be the one you need, but they should be able to get you networked with the right group.
I looked through the first entries and most don’t even have a functioning webpage. Those who have pages are mostly wildlife parks that do advertising for visitors. I’ll use this comment to add FB links I found and looked promising. As I don’t have a Facebook account I’m blocked from taking more than a cursory look though.
Pflegezentrum für Vogelfauna Schloß Tirol https://www.facebook.com/gufyland/ Closed for visitors until April
Greifvogelstation Berg am Irchel https://greifvogelstation.ch/ https://www.facebook.com/paneco.ch/ (PanEco is a foundation financing the Greifvogelstation - at the moment they have a short ‘three memorable stories from 2024 film’ (SwissGerman only, I’m afraid)
Zwergohreule ( Eurasian Scops Owl) Rare bird in their area. Only the second of its kind to ‘visit’ the station. Crashed into a window, suffered a traumatic brain injury. Released after 4 weeks of care
Habichtskauz (Ural Owl) They keep a bonded pair that successfully raised a clutch of 5. The young birds were released into the wild (in Austria).
Steinkauz (Little Owl) This poor bird was found in a delivery of watermelons from Tuskany. Dehydrated and malnourished but they nursed it back into superb condition and were able to release it back into the wild.
Fürstlicher Falkenhof Schloss Schillingsfürst https://www.falkenhof-schillingsfuerst.de/ https://www.facebook.com/100063568933045/
Tbc
Got a few promising leads from the list!
I think someone recently shared some photos from Castle Tirol, as I recognized it at once when it came on screen.
I used the term Greifvogel to try to sign up for some private group feeds. Lots of hawks, but definitely some eulen.
This cutie was on the feed for Schillingsfürst:
Thank you again for the work you put in!
You give us so much, it’s only fair to chip in.
And that is a very cute owl :)
Greifvogel = raptor - I guess most places that employ a falconer will be qualified to also care for owls.
You mentioned in your other comment that you like to add places where people can visit and experience the owls. I guess there aren’t that many that do outside of wildlife parks.
Owls just aren’t traditionally used for hunting purposes in most places. From what I’ve read so far, most places don’t offer visits when they only rescue birds. Those birds are wild animals that will be stressed by visitors and if there’s a chance to release them, the less exposure they have to humans the better for them. Same goes for the season they raise birds of their own if they’re meant to be released to help the wild population.
In the US, there is separate licensing for rescues and for places that display animals. While most aren’t technically open to the public, they will have events either at the facilities or surrounding areas where they will bring out animals for educational purposes. The small park by my work is not a rehab, but they do have permits to display animals that are unreleasable, and they have farm animals, but also some owls, hawks, wolves, and a bobcat among other things. The Raptor Center is about an hour from me, and they have all our local birds of prey. I’m not sure if any in the display area are releasable, as a lot of them have been there for a few of my visits, but some enclosures seem to have someone different each time. Also one of the best educational events I’ve seen was put on by a place that I don’t think is open to the public at all, but they had a great presentation with a variety of owls, and we got to handle owl bones and feathers. All the reading I get to do tells me a lot, but being able to see behaviors in action or to feel the feathers and bones and see the scale of the anatomy really helps it all click in my head. Plus they are so cute to see and hear in person! So while they aren’t all open, many present opportunities to have some interactive experience.
One thing that I know is different between Europe and America is that flight displays are not allowed here, but Suffolk Owl Sanctuary in England advertises them, and the one Eagle Owl from the one German park certainly looks like it does from the photos as well.
While being able to see them isn’t a requirement for me to want to share things or encourage people to support them, if an opportunity exists to see something in person, I like to highlight it.
I’ve heard of a few people that have tried owl hunting, and they sound like very hard animals to motivate. We do have some raptor people at the beaches near me that partrol the seagulls that are where all the takeway food is. I usually see them with large hawks, and last time I did see it take down some gulls, but the one guy did have an Eagle Owl the one day. It was actually my first post here!
Aww, poor Wassermelonekauz! 🥺
Finding active lists of rehabbers is quite challenging and time consuming. Even when I could get state records of license holders, as you said, many are 1 or 2 person operations with zero web presence.
This is why I quickly gave up trying to make a list on my own!
I’ll check out the links you shared, they sound very promising. I also like when they’re places that people can go visit, because as much info as I can bring you, it still adds so much to the experience when you can see and interact with the live owls themselves.
I’m a little busy right now. But I’ll see if I can find the time to look through some entries that might offer content for you.
Some places listed are single volunteers or very small places run by people who do this in their spare time. Those places usually don’t have the resources and knowledge to care for special needs birds - which are raptors, owls, common swifts and some others.
Networking does indeed happen. I once found a group that connected rescues and voluntary drivers whenever an animal needed a ride to another place. They tried to concentrate their rescued baby animals by species. It helps them to learn how to socialise and they’ll have ‘friends’ around to not feel so lonely.
I saw the same thing with one person or husband and wife rescues out of their homes when I did the United States of Owls where I found a rescue or place to see owls in every state, and that really got me interested in promoting the rescues so much. It’s so much time and effort to do the work, and then they have to beg for money to do it. It seems crazy, and I like using my time here to promote the work they do.
The ones that have time for media are helpful to me, but that’s also why I don’t encourage anyone here to support any specific places, but rather whoever their local rescue is. I don’t know how bad economic disparity is in Germany, but with the shear size of some of our states, it leaves some people having to cover like a fifth of the area of Germany with just maybe 1 or 2 rescues, and that combination had to be very difficult!
My last dog was rescued by a network of volunteers. She was rescued from New Orleans, treated in Memphis, and then flown by a private pilot up to Philadelphia. The person just flies for fun picking up rescue dogs from around the country.
I just took a look at your link. It seems that page is in need of updating. I chose Germany and the first two places are in Spain (Seville and Las Palmas). For Germans it would have made more sense if they had listed Mallorca. A famous destination for party-happy German tourists and often humorously named the unofficial 17. state of Germany.
That’s funny! 😁
Getting more localized guides like what you shared is going to be much better, and I have your link to the mod to add.
If anyone else has a good source for their country, I’m sure we can get them added as they pop up.