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Wild and Free: a Screech Owl Named
Pinkey
(30-second Pearl, 8 minute compilation and slow motion videos)
PINKEY | PINKEY'S
STORY | CLYDE'S
TALES | CREDITS | WILDLIFE ORGANIZATIONS
Note: Standard, low and high definition videos will play
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video file you think may work and move down from there. For best results, right click
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'Save Link/Target As' option. ‘Extend
click’ on a Mac.
Pinkey's 30 second Pearl is now also included in a 8+ minute compilation, nestled with its four companion films in a rolling text story. We have removed all the individual companion videos from the website, except slow motion.
******** SPECIAL NOTICE ********
All of the Wild and Free films, including the 8+ minute compilation, are now done and will be premiered at an event on May 10, 2008 that also honors Clyde Hollifield. This event will feature wildlife tales in film, storytelling and song, along with live raptors and other rescued, un-releasable wildlife. Wild and Free event May 2008
“If you love somebody, set them free.” – Sting

Pinkey was a funny, orphaned screech owl baby. He and his wilder friend Little Bit lived in the tender care of Clyde, a certified wildlife rehabber. Pinkey developed a strong bond with his human “mama", yet both he and Clyde recognized and honored his growing urge to be WILD and FREE! Both Clyde and Pinkey are magical, endearing characters. Their uniqueness is revealed through our lucky glimpse into their relationship.
Pinkey’s story is
beautiful and tender. It may also
be controversial because his relationship with his rehabber
Clyde went beyond the sanctioned federal rehabilitation guidelines.
Clyde has rehabilitated raptors for about 25 years. He retired from
this much-loved but challenging work at the end of March 2007. The
regulations had become too confining and too expensive for a volunteer
who worked mostly with small owls. We at Little Pearls already knew
and trusted Clyde through our filming of his therapy dog Dr.
Willie. Willie
is also a beneficiary of Clyde’s rehabilitation skills. We
admire Clyde for his character and his many gifts, including the
way he relates to animals and to nature. When he said this baby owl
was special to him, we knew there probably was a “Pearl” in
the relationship.
Pinkey is a particularly appealing ambassador from
the world of owls because of his cute, goofy looks and behavior.
He was named for his fuzzy eyelids, which were pink when he was tiny.
Pinkey closed his eyes in an amusing way whenever he ate, and as
a baby bird, he was, of course, eating frequently!
There
have been several guiding concepts and questions for Pinkey’s
Little Pearl:
- Pinkey
is a stand-in for all wild animals. Can we help people connect
to THIS particular owl, thus encouraging them to care about and
connect more with other wild animals?
- Wild animals are meant to be wild – not our “pets.”
- Humans can be deeply touched by wildness, and even entranced
with a particular wild animal, without causing the animal to be “manned
down,” ruining his or her ability to be wild and free.
- Pinkey needed the extra support from Clyde to become who
he was truly meant to be. Clyde managed to help him through the
non-sanctioned method of “soft release” (explained
below). However, Clyde was also trained and certified in traditional
methods and knew how to apply them with great skill and creativity.
- We do NOT intend to encourage people to copy Clyde – DO
NOT DO THIS AT HOME!
- We DO encourage anyone who encounters an animal in need of help,
to do so in an appropriate way. We have provided links to wildlife
organizations which offer great information.
- Any of us can either learn how to help wild animals ourselves,
as Clyde did, or how to take an animal to a trained rehabber. We
encourage more people to learn about wildlife rehabilitation.
- Nature centers, wildlife education and rehabilitation organizations
and habitat preservation organizations deserve our strong support,
financially and otherwise.
Three Pearl companion videos from our two filming
sessions provide more glimpses into the relationship between
Pinkey and Clyde, and also into the process of “soft release.” It
was a privilege to be in the presence of Pinkey and his rehab friend
Little Bit, both of whom were returning only sporadically from
their sojourn in the woods at the time of the second filming. The
images in the Pearl itself and in the companion videos are from
Pinkey’s pre-release footage in late June 2005 and from footage
of Pinkey and Little Bit during “soft release” in early
August 2005. We have some amazing slow motion footage, including
Pinkey and a very bold hummingbird!

Pinkey and Clyde both worked hard on Pinkey’s survival skills.
Pinkey did in fact wean himself away from any dependence on Clyde,
except for occasional calls from the dark woods for awhile after
release. Little Bit was courted by another owl and disappeared
for good, shortly after we did the filming outside.
The fourth Pearl companion comes from unanticipated night
vision home video. Captured by Clyde 18 months after Pinkey’s
release, this grainy but touching video proves that Pinkey was
in fact living successfully in the wild on his own. He surprised
Clyde by coming back in January 2007 after a long absence, to tenderly
court an injured female screech owl in Clyde’s care. The
video is bittersweet, as the female named Princess was too restless,
kept re-injuring herself and eventually died. Pinkey disappeared for the next five months.

In the world of wildlife rehabilitation, there is more than one
approach:
- The
officially sanctioned approach, especially when a licensed rehabber
must abide by federal government permits and regulations: in
this approach, a close connection or relationship between human
and animal (talking to them, giving them a name, handling them
beyond what is necessary) is not allowed and is considered to
be potentially harmful. When deemed ready for release, animals
are set free and do not return. Therefore, unless they are tagged
in some way, their status cannot be observed. Clyde calls this
approach “hard release” because he believes it
is harder on the animal and less likely to be successful in many
cases.
- “Soft
release,” an alternative, grassroots approach that
is more like the natural parenting style of many people and animals: in
this approach, an animal or bird is treated in a way that encourages
trust. Clyde says this helps them feel safe enough to come
back for awhile for food, giving them time to grow in strength
and skills until they are ready to wean themselves away. He thinks
this gives animals a better chance to survive. It also gives
the rehabber a chance to evaluate how they are doing. Clyde says
they rarely return or get too comfortable with humans, as the
connection they had was with one human only: their rehabber.
Even that connection usually fades, once the animal is successfully
returned to the wild. Clyde does not believe this method increases
the chance of potentially dangerous familiarity with humans in
general. He has used soft release primarily with orphaned baby
raptors because they are social birds and need parental training
to learn hunting, other survival skills and confidence. With
older animals, whether sick or injured, it may not be as suitable.
Raptor rehabilitation as a science is only about 50 years old;
Clyde has done it for 25 of those years. He says rehabbers
are still learning what really works.
- Transcendent, unexpected
magic: this occurs when something rare and special just “clicks” between
a human and a wild animal in rehab. When it does happen, it offers
the potential for relationship on a deep level, even as the human
helps the animal become – or stay – wild. Such
was the case with Clyde and Pinkey.
As a species, we humans have had a complex and often confusing
relationship with nature. At this time in our history, many
of us are increasingly mindful of the ways we relate to animals,
plants and the environment. In terms of animals alone, there are
many questions:
- Are
they just resources or tools to be used – or enjoyed – by
us?
- How
much are they like us, these “other-than-humans?” What
are we doing when we attribute human qualities to them?
- Is there
a hierarchy of value, with humans at the top? Or are we related
to animals in a different way, with each of us having a unique
place in a relationship shaped more like a circle?
- Can
we “own” another part of nature? Or another living
being?
- Do humans – or
some aspects of us – long to be part of the “wild
and free” world, too? By becoming so “civilized,” have
we lost something of value?
- How
DO humans interact with Nature in ways that are mutually beneficial,
instead of harmful?
All these questions and more deserve thoughtful exploration. Perhaps Wild
and Free, its companion videos and its web pages can
be part of that process.
So, here we are, releasing
Pinkey’s Pearl and the
four companion videos as Spring gives way to Summer. This is
the time of year when many baby wild ones become lost from their
parents, then found and handled by people. It’s
a good time to make the point that wildlife are meant to be wild,
even if they need our help for awhile.
A postcript: Now Pinkey only visits once in awhile, calling from the trees to chat with Clyde. There is still a bond, but Pinkey stays out of sight. To become the owl he was meant to be, Pinkey needed extra help when he was young. Despite concern that his bond with Clyde could harm him, Pinkey has thrived on his own. Thanks to Clyde, he truly IS Wild and Free!
“In wildness is the preservation of the
world.” – Henry David Thoreau, from Walking
Linda McLean, Little Pearls, Summer 2007 (and later updates)
You can
help orphaned or injured wildlife in many ways: by
supporting educational and rehabilitation programs in your area; by
learning about how you might become a wildlife rehabilitator yourself;
by helping organizations protecting habitat; and by donating to
Little Pearls to help us get Pinkey's story out to the public.
CONTRIBUTE NOW
Everyone
can do something to ensure that our children will always have wildlife
to enjoy, and that wildlife can live as they are meant to live: healthy,
wild and free!
WILDLIFE LINKS
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PINKEY | PINKEY'S
STORY | CLYDE'S TALES | CREDITS | WILDLIFE
ORGANIZATIONS

LITTLE
PEARLS
PO Box 8641 Asheville, NC 28814 USA
828-658-9097
info@LittlePearls.org
Little
Pearls is an independent non-profit, approved
as a 501(c) (3) organization by the IRS in 2004.
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