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Nature News - A monthly e-publication from Liberty Wildlife


The Liberty Wildlife volunteers who devote hours of their week to care for the tiniest of our patients in orphan care are largehearted individuals with a soft spot for babies. But they must also be able to handle a demanding environment. Volunteers have dozens of baby birds under their care, and those babies must be fed every fifteen minutes throughout the entire day. To read more about the upcoming wild baby bird season and what it means at Liberty Wildlife, click here .






When we think of birds in winter, most of us picture avians of all species flying south, ostensibly to keep warm. Well, some of them do fly south, but temperature is only part of the reason.

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Ever wonder where Liberty Wildlife’s Education volunteers learn about the birds you see at the hundreds of presentations each year? While much information about hawks and owls can be gathered the extensive training program that each prospective handler must pass or from reading about them in several excellent guidebooks, nothing beats seeing raptors in their natural habitat and hearing about their daily life from experts who watch them every day.

Recently, Education team members Anne Peyton and Craig Fischer organized a weekend field trip to southeast Arizona for seven other volunteers to see these magnificent birds on their territory. The trip was guided by Sheri Williamson and Tom Wood of the Southeastern Arizona Bird Observatory (SABO) in Bisbee, a non-profit organization dedicated to the conservation of the birds of southeastern Arizona, their habitats and the diversity of species that share those habitats through research, monitoring and public education.

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On January 24, 2007 Liberty Wildlife received recognition for the long time support to the State’s bald eagle population. The acknowledgment came from the Arizona Game and Fish Department at the signing ceremony for the Conservation Agreement for the Bald Eagle in Arizona. .

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