Park officers at Brinzal Owl-Rescue Park have
established an effective way to treat injured owls. Experts at Brinzal Park,
near Madrid in Spain, are recording a 70% recovery rate for their injured birds
(The Local Madrid, December 12, 2014). The owls include tawny owls and eagle
owls, as well as others in the region.
The Brinzal Owl-Rescue Park receives about 1,200
injured birds a year for treatment. The general public bring the injured birds
to the park because their personnel provide “physical and psychological
rehabilitation” for birds with a range of wounds. These can include broken
wings and legs due to falls, dehydration and shock, burns, and other injuries.
The physical rehabilitation involves a mixture of
specialized treatment with a ten-week period of regular pressure-point acupuncture
sessions.
The psychological rehabilitation involves
animal-to-animal support, as well as teaching the owls to avoid their
predators. They do this with recorded sounds of various predators, and through
different screeches the owls learn which animals are their enemies.
When the owls are
fully rehabilitated the park officers return them to the wild.
MARTINA NICOLLS is an international
aid and development consultant, and the author of:- The Shortness of
Life: A Mongolian Lament (2015), Liberia’s Deadest Ends (2012), Bardot’s Comet
(2011), Kashmir on a Knife-Edge (2010) and The Sudan Curse (2009).
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