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Owls special guests at senior community

No feathers were ruffled when Black Creek Wildlife Station took roost at Westwood Commons in January. Aurora, a partially-blind red screech owl, and Clacker, an injured horned owl, visited the DePaul Senior Living Community in North Chili along with wildlife rehabilitator Gary Zimmerman of Churchville and volunteer Nancy Foote.

Zimmerman has been involved in wildlife rehabilitation for 20 years. In the 10 months he operated the Black Creek Wildlife Station last year, Zimmerman said he rescued 130 birds, of which about 49 percent were able to be released back into the wild.

The goal of visiting schools, fairs, organizations and senior living communities like Westwood Commons is to educate the public, Zimmerman said.

Wildlife rehabilitator Gary Zimmerman holds a horned owl during a program at Westwood Commons.
Wildlife rehabilitator Gary Zimmerman holds a horned owl during a program at Westwood Commons.

“Everybody seems to migrate towards owls,” he said. “They are in this area, all over the place, but no one ever sees them and you can’t get close enough to appreciate them.”

The public can help create habitats for birds of prey in their own yard by avoiding cutting down dead trees which can serve as nesting areas for birds and a food source for wood peckers and other insectivores. If someone spots an injured animal or bird, Zimmerman said, he advises they stay away from the animal and immediately call a wildlife rehabilitator.

“I always tell people, do not attempt to do the things I’m doing with these birds with a bird found in the wild,” he said.

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