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Nature News - A monthly e-publication from Liberty Wildlife


Our seasonal Orphan Care Center will be opening up on April 1, and we need lots of volunteers. Please consider donating some of your time to help the tiny baby songbirds that are brought to Liberty Wildlife in the summer months. Some are injured, some are orphans, but they all need your help!

Four-hour shifts are available from 7:00 am to 7:00 pm seven days per week. You will be working with a team to feed baby birds. We have training scheduled for March 24 at 10 am. You must be 18 or older to volunteer. Please call our hotline if you can help — dial 480-998-5550 and choose option 2 to leave a message for the volunteer coordinator.












Liberty Wildlife is now a proud member of Jane Goodall’s Roots and Shoots environmental and conservation program. We are inviting conservation-minded kids to join us for our first meeting on May 5 at the North Mountain Preserve Visitors Center from 9:00 to 11:00 am.

Space is limited to 15 participants; contact Barbie Baugh for more information regarding this exciting opportunity at barbieshop@aol.com or call 602-997-2750.

The monthly programs will be aimed at building leadership skills through service learning projects. Activities will include hands-on projects on the preserve, education presentations with live birds of prey, nature walks and service projects.

We invite you to visit the Jane Goodall Institute’s Web site to read more about the Roots and Shoots program and its philosophy.






People have always been intrigued by owls. There are about 133 species of owls worldwide, of which about 80 hunt strictly at night, most of the rest preferring to be active at dawn and dusk. Living in Arizona is an advantage for owl-watchers, since we can find more (13) species of owls in the southern part of our state during the spring and summer than any other region of the United States.

Click here for more information.









Liberty Wildlife’s annual fund-raiser is right around the corner. Here’s a chance for you to help Arizona’s native wildlife by joining us for a new and improved auction and dinner.

To find out more about this opportunity, click here.







Richard Louv, author, columnist and advocate of connecting children with nature, visited The Phoenix Zoo recently. He spent the day with zoo staff and in the evening spoke to a crowd of about 400 people.

Click here to learn more about Louv’s message.








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